
As the ferry departure was only in the afternoon, I had the time to explore the whole town and its surrounding area. A small hill close to the town, Helgafell, provides a great panoramic view on the hundreds of isles and the peninsula itself.




This is the point, where the paved road turns into a gravel one towards the West. About 50km more until Látrabjarg, and the conditions are not exactly the best for a city car (like the one I had). These tracks are full with potholes, the skipping stones can damage the car, and the loose surface can result skidding. If these were not enough already, these roads are usually narrow, and blind summits are common. As Yessica, a fellow blogger, describes it perfectly, the "zigzagging network of narrow, cliff-hugging gravel roads ensures that only local villagers or brave tourists dare enter" The Westfjords. It might sound dangerous at first, but you can get used to these conditions... after a few hundred kilometers.
And the scenery is worth it...


However, this region is visited mostly for its birdlife and the fearless puffins. You can get so close to these colorful pigeon-sized birds, that you can nearly touch them. The thousands of birds are nesting on the steep cliff face, that rises some 440m above the churning sea. I got to know from Anton, during couchsurfing, that a couple of days before my visit, someone fell off the cliffs, because the soil was too loose. This is not the sort of information you like to hear, especially not before your visit. At least it made me more cautious about where I step, as I tend to forget about the dangers when I am absorbed in taking photos.
But let me show you a few close-ups of the puffins, a selection of the hundreds of pictures I took in about an hour.
/click on the pictures to see them in bigger size/
The night, after this eventful day, was spent at the Hvallátur camp ground, in the car again, a couple of km from the cliffs.
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