The Highlands

The great Highlands

Enchanting wilderness

During the past few decades, highland excursions have become increasingly popular. Walking enthusiasts quaff the fresh mountain air, while others prefer drives along unmade trails in jeeps and other rough terrain vehicles. A third group likes to combine highland jeep tours with hiking.
The highland scenery in Þingeyjarsýsla district is stark and diverse and offers visitors countless options.
Near and far highlands

The highlands may in fact be separated into two categories the near highlands and the far highlands. The former term refers to the highland areas closest to populated districts. In this category we find a large number of mountains that offer interesting trekking challenges. This applies, for example, to the highland terrain west of Skjálfandi bay, jeep excursions to Flateyjardalur valley and walking tours from there into the Fjörður area, hiking terrain in Kinnarfjöll mountains, the Þeistareykir area, the mountains in the Mývatn area and the highland tract in the eastern part of Langanes point. All these areas offer diverse landscapes and panoramic views of the surrounding scenery, an invigorating experience that inspires the traveller with ‘joie de vivre’.
The far-highlands signify the highland terrain north of Vatnajökull glacier. Some would call this “the real Icelandic highlands” which contain a large number of locations that enthral those who love the wilderness and its adventures. The Highlands In their stark beauty, these barren expanses offer countless routes of adventure. Some of these possibilities are described in more detail below.

Gæsavötn are two shallow lakes to the east of Tungnafellsjökull glacier. There is some vegetative cover around the lakes. The ruins of a stone and turf hut were found here in 1932; perhaps a testimony to outlaws or an ancient shelter for mountain travellers.

In ancient times a common route between north and south Iceland lay across the rocky desert of Sprengisandur where Kiðagil was a popular place of rest, a kind of mountain oasis. The memory of this resting place has been rendered immortal by the following lines from a well-known Icelandic ballad by poet Grímur Thomsen: “If Kiðagil I could descend / I’d give my best steed to that end.”

Dyngjufjöll mountains are located to the north of the glacier Dyngjujökull which extends north from Vatnajökull. This is a barren mountain cluster encircling the 50 km2 Askja caldera. Subsidence in Askja’s south-east corner has formed a smaller caldera now filled by Öskjuvatn, Iceland’s deepest lake, with a maximum depth of 220 metres. The crater Víti, next to Öskjuvatn, was formed in a huge explosive volcanic eruption in 1875. The warm water in the crater is suitable for bathing and is popular among visitors.

Ódáðahraun is Iceland’s most extensive lava field, a practically continuous desert from Vatnajökull glacier northwards to the mountains in the Mývatn region. The most renowned of those is Herðubreið, a table mountain 1682 metres in height, long referred to as “the queen of Icelandic mountains” and recently elected Iceland’s National Mountain by popular vote.
Approximately 5 km north of the mountain are Herðubreiðarlindir springs, a green oasis in stark contrast to the bleak surrounding desert. Conspicuous among the lush Herðubreiðarlindir flora are clusters of garden angelica, several willow varieties and colourful aggregations of arctic riverbeauty. Herðubreið and its surrounding area was declared a nature reserve in 1974.

Kverkfjöll mountains are a huge mountain range at the northern extremity of Vatnajökull glacier. The region is characterised by alternations of ice sheets and clusters of natural hot springs, with the most prominent, Hveradalur, being the among the greatest high temperature geothermal areas in Iceland. In summer regular tours are operated to the Kverkfjöll region from Akureyri, Húsavík and the Mývatn District.

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