Day Trip to Greenland

athena53

Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Joined
May 11, 2014
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When I mentioned this in Upcoming Travel, some members asked that I let them know how it went. I'm in Reykjavik for a week and took this trip yesterday. All in, it was a little over $600. I am SO grateful I have the resources for experiences such as this.

First, my favorite picture-me with the town of Kulusuk (pop. 240) in the background. Sorry it's sideways.

32025-albums218-picture1511.jpg


Second- the whole album.

Early Retirement & Financial Independence Community - athena53's Album: Greenland

Finally- the narrative.

The day did not start off well. I called the taxi company and they said one would be there soon. After about 15 minutes of waiting out in cold, cloudy damp conditions I called them. Oh- my cab had picked up someone else. Sorry. They’d send another driver. Ten minutes later I was wondering if I should just start walking (this was the small domestic airport, only 2.8 km) and my driver called. The dispatcher had given her the wrong street, due either to my faulty pronunciation of the street (Brekkustigur) to the dispatcher’s poor hearing. She arrived a few minutes later and cheerfully drove me to the airport, slamming on her brakes at one point when someone came down the road leading to the airport on the wrong side of the road. British, maybe? I told her that if she were a NYC cab driver she would have leaned on her horn and shouted nasty words at the other driver.


(Fast forward to my arrival back at RKV: I chose to walk it and arrived at my apartment 35 minutes after landing. Good decision.)


In the waiting area I met a group of 5 people heading off to a ship in Kulusuk from which they’d go kayaking every day. They’d brought dry suits and spray skirts. The accommodations sounded like something I saw the day before in the mockup of the crew cabin of a fishing trawler at the Maritime Museum. No, thanks.


The Kulusuk Airport was loaded with all kinds of pretty things for sale, including sealskins and reindeer skins. They ran around $100 each. Prominent signs in the airport noted that they had been hunted by Inuit with permission under an international treaty with careful focus on sustainability. The signs also subtly accused Greenpeace of hurting the local economy with its propaganda.


Kulusuk is actually an island with a population of about 240 (and decreasing). The residents are mostly hunters- in fact, I’d seen some dead seals by the shoreline at one point. We visited small museum, where the guide pointed out an anorak made of a combination of polar bear and dog fur. When the dogs are too old to work or die from other causes, he said, they put the fur to good use.


We did a lot of walking, up and down scenic hills, into town and even down a glacier at one point. I had had a light breakfast, there was nothing but empty calories (candy and chips) available at either airport and no food on the flight. I was relieved when we stopped at a grocery store, but supplies there were quite limited. Happily, I found a can of tuna with a pop-top lid (imported from Thailand!) and a loaf of crusty bread, and improvised a sandwich. It cost me 53 Danish Kroner (Greenland is a Danish territory). I didn’t care what the exchange rate was- I was hungry. Turns out my lunch cost about $8.50.

We were offered the chance to go back to the airport by water- for another $40, most of which went to the hunters who would use their boats. They didn’t have to twist my arm. They drove slowly (8 knots/hour) so we could take in the sights and admire the icebergs, and we arrived in plenty of time to make the flight home.

Some science-geek things to note:


The aerial shot of the algae surrounding the shoreline coming back into Reykjavik- possibly runoff from fertilizer used in the farmland?



They tell me the glaciers are not only receding (expected in summer) but melting, but that the most noticeable effect of global warming is more volatile weather- June and July there were only 11 days without rain.


The piping is for the municipal electrical supply, Can't put up lines; they'd blow down. Ground too hard to dig,


Note the guy awaiting us at the airport. Noise mitigation is to put his fingers in his ears.


I LOVED this trip. You need to be mobile and agile and next time I'd bring more food (I did have a couple of protein bars with me) but highly recommend it with those caveats.
 
Thanks for a great report. Definitely on the list for my next Iceland visit.
 
Great, thanks!
 
The title alone was cool: Day Trip to Greenland

and the pictures were even cooler. :flowers:
 
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