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Festivity in a Distinctive Setting

WHATEVER TIME of year you’re in Iceland, there’ll be something going on that will take your fancy. Sometimes it’s a familiar festivity in a distinctive Icelandic setting, and sometimes it’s a charming local custom that will grab your imagination. Then there are regular cultural and leisure events, indoors and outside, to keep you entertained and busy for the whole of your stay.

Check out these regular features on the Icelandic calendar (Dates are for 2004):

Jan.–May
Cultural season. After the Xmas break, the music, art and theater scene gets back into full swing with programs for all interest groups.

Jan. 18–Feb. 16
Midwinter feast (Thorrablot). An ancient Viking tradition – feasting on “delicacies” such as boiled sheep head and rotten shark meat as well as more edible goodies. Be brave just once a year.

Feb. 23–25
Bursting time. Fill up before Lent, with all the cream buns you can eat on “Bun Monday” and oversized helpings of salted meat and mushy peas on “Bursting Tuesday.” Then on Ash Wednesday, watch the children dressed up in the streets, singing and playing pranks.

Feb. 26–29
Festival of Light in Reykjavik. Dedicated to the theme of light and energy, an exciting public festival centered around Laugardalur Park.

Feb. 26–29
Food & Fun. An annual food festival featuring well-known visiting chefs competing right along with Iceland’s finest culinary masters. The festival is also a chance for restaurants to strut their stuff. A delight for the taste buds.

Mar. 1
Beer Day. Beer was only legalized in Iceland in 1989 and people celebrate the big day in suitable style on the anniversary every year.

Apr. 8–12
Easter. One of the peaks of the musical year, with diverse concert programs. Plus chocolate eggs of huge proportions, smoked lamb and a time for families to relax together.

Apr.–Sep.
Trout fishing season in lakes and rivers around the country.

Apr. 22
First Day of Summer. Icelanders still welcome the end of winter and start of summer – a national holiday – with colorful parades and entertainment in the streets.

May–Sep.
Whale watching season. With thousands of whales just off its shores, Iceland offers more chances of sightings than just about anywhere else in the world.

May
Bird time. Puffins, Arctic terns and rarer migrant birds zoom in from the south, bringing summer with them.

May 14–31
The 2004 Reykjavik Arts Festival: varied programme of cultural events with leading Icelandic and visiting artists. The Arts Festival will be an annual event from 2004.

Jun.–Aug.
Marathon time. Fresh air and scenery that’ll take your breath away, including: Myvatn Midnight Sun Marathon (north Iceland, June 20); Highland Marathon (34 miles of uninhabited landscapes between Landmannalaugar and Thorsmork nature reserves, south highlands); and Reykjavik International Marathon (several distances around the city, August 21).

Jun.–Sep.
Salmon fishing season. Clean air and rivers make Iceland one of the best places in the world for anglers. Make sure to book your rods well in advance.

Jun.–Sep.
Festival time. Communities all around the country stage fun celebrations on local themes.

Jun.
Festival of the Sea. Based on the old Icelandic tradition of Seamen’s Day, the festival takes place on the first weekend of June and honors those that make their living from the sea. However, the festival has been modernized of late. It now includes numerous cultural activities, parades, arts and crafts activities for kids, food fairs, sailing competitions; and new residents of Iceland are given the opportunity to share their unique cultures

Jun. 6
Seamen’s Day. First Sunday in June, with fun and games at every harbor in this country of fishermen and seafarers.

Jun. 17
National Day. Icelanders take to the streets to celebrate independence (since 1944). Colorful ceremonies followed by parades, street theater, sideshows and outdoor dancing in the midnight sun, all over the country.

Jun. 21
Summer solstice. Gatherings to celebrate the magic of the midnight sun on the longest day of the year.

Jun. 23–26
Arctic Open International Golf Tournament. In Akureyri just south of the Arctic Circle, tee off at midnight in bright sunshine and play through the night in a marvelous natural setting. Open midnight-sun tournaments are also held in Reykjavik, Hafnarfjordur and the Westman Islands.

Jul. 26–28
Reykholt Music Festival. “Classical music in a classic environment” in the beautiful church at the west Iceland site where saga writer Snorri Sturluson lived.

Jul.
International Festival of the Icelandic Horse. Annual event, camping with riding displays featuring the unique pedigree Icelandic horse.

Jul. 30–Aug. 2
Bank Holiday weekend. On the first weekend in August, almost everyone goes off to camp at festivals around the country – everything from family events to wild rock festivals.

Aug.
Flight of the Puffling. A sight not to be missed in Vestmannaeyjar off the south coast, when millions of baby puffins leave their nests and take to wing for the first time.

Aug. 6–8
Gay pride. Gays and lesbians come out in force and style to parade and party in Reykjavik.

Aug. 21
Reykjavik Cultural Night. To mark Reykjavik’s anniversary on August 18, bookstores and museums stay open into the closest Saturday night and artistic events are staged in the streets and at cafés, bars, and restaurants all over the capital, culminating in a massive fireworks display.

Sep.–Dec.
Cultural season and Festivals. Concerts, opera, ballet, drama, visual arts — you name it, it’ll be on the season’s agenda somewhere in Reykjavik. Every year Reykjavik also hosts a Jazz Festival (Nov. 4-9 in 2004) and a Film Festival — both of them international events with plenty of celebrated guests.

Sep.–Mar.
Northern Lights season.

Sep.
Sheep round-up. Colorful and lively time with plenty of song and merriment all around the countryside. Held at pens where farmers herd in the sheep they have rounded up from summer grazing in the wilds.

Oct.
Iceland Airwaves, a special music event in Iceland. Hear the airwaves come alive in Reykjavik as the hottest bands and DJ´s from Iceland and Europe meet for a sizzling concert event.

Dec.
Christmas. Icelanders go in for Christmas in a big way, with 13 separate Santa Clauses who play pranks and sing in the beautifully lit streets. Check out the delicious Christmas buffets and traditional festive season delicacies such as smoked lamb, ptarmigan and venison.

Dec. 31
New Year’s Eve goes off with a bang with the biggest firework display you’ll probably ever see, everyone takes part. There are public bonfires and the merrymaking lasts right through to the following year.


Want to know more?
www.IcelandTouristBoard.com
Call us: 212-885-9700

Press!!

Smithsonian

September 2002

The Blue Lagoon is an artificial lake by surplus water from the geothermic power station at Svartshengi on Iceland’s Reykjanes Peninsula, a volcanic region filled with natural hot springs. Rich in mineral salts and organic matter, the Blue Lagoon’s warm waters are renowned for their curative properties.

The New York Sun
June 20-22, 2003

The Earth too is a force here almost inconceivable to most New Yorkers – volcanic activity has resulted in islets appearing virtually overnight, and the land is about as exothermally alive as it gets, with geysers, mineral springs, lake-filled craters, lava fields, and glaciers dominating a nearly treeless landscape.



International Travel News
March 2003

The sun was out and it was a glorious day. After crossing the snow, we walked through a small meadow of wildflowers including lupine and yellow daisies. This colorful carpet was split by a gushing stream.


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