I visited Akranes in Iceland last year in February on a rather cold and very snowy day but I just thought it was an incredible place, I’d love to visit it when the weather is better! it isn’t that far from Reykjavik now, thanks to a fantastic new tunnel beneath Hvalfjörðu, the Fjord of Whales, so it is only about thirty miles form the capital.

It’s quite a small place with just over six and a half thousand people, but as Iceland has a small population it is actually the ninth most populated settlement in the country. It has a long history as it was settled in the ninth century by two Irish brothers, Þormóður and Ketill. Maybe they were Vikings originally, maybe their forebears came from Scandinavia, but in Akranes the Irish connection is recognized by a festival every year. The reason I went to Iceland was that I was with my Gaelic group who were looking at the connection and links between the two countries.
http://www.irskirdagar.is/pages/vefur09/tungumal/enska/
Fishing has always been important in the town’s history and it still is today, but there is also a big cement works.

As with many places I’ve visited, I would love to go back. We went to see a stone with Icelandic and Gaelic inscriptions, but there are other things I would like to see. I’d like to visit the museum of Icelandic stones, I’d like to visit the folk museum at Garðar and Gardalundur park, I’d like to just wander about getting a feel of the place and maybe find somewhere to have a coffee and maybe lunch!


Lovely photos, great photo diary!
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Thanks!
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Wonderful! I would love to visit–the sense of ancientness is compelling.
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Iceland is a fantastic country…. I so want to revisit, Alice!
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I’m looking forward to visit this place in summer. Your photos made me much more curious! Have a nice day! 🙂
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I hope you’ll plenty of pictures too! Enjoy it!
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Reblogged this on Snjólfur Eiríksson and commented:
Undur og stórmerki dagsins. Fann fyrir tilviljun frásögn erlends ferðamanns sem heimsótti Akranes á síðasta ári, og vill koma hingað aftur.
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