| Ready for the cave |
We started out our adventure today by driving to a cave called
LeiƵarendi outside of Rekjavik.Unfortunately I haven't been feeling well the past
week so I stayed behind with Ms. Elaine to write the blog post I have been desperately
trying to avoid. I was hoping that there would be a gift shop nearby with a cafe
to get so tea for my throat but this "tourist attractions" they call a
cave is actually an intricate hole in the ground in the middle of no where. They
happened upon this cave when the roof fell in and left a hole for an entrance which
demanded our group to head out with flashlights, gloves and helmets. It sounds very
safe and I thoroughly regret missing out. The group is supposed to be back in a
hour so at minute 61 Ms. Elaine is starting up the engine and getting us to the
nearest police station or Starbucks (whichever comes first). The tour guide said
the some parts of the cave are 5 meters tall and other parts are only a half of
a meter tall, this should be interesting for our 6 ft. plus friends James and Carl.
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| Inside the cave, in one of the more constricted sections. |
As we sit here marveling at the luxurious Icelandic landscape
Ms. Elaine and I saw a rare and majestic butterfly which is our first sighting of
any form of life. It's completely silent outside because there are no bugs to chirp,
no birds to sing and no plants for the wind to blow through. I could even go for
a coyote howl right now. But thankfully the group has returned and everyone has
made it back safely.
| The group, mostly, at the Blue Lagoon. |
The blue lagoon was a decadent way to end our pilgrimage in Iceland. We enjoyed the warm silicon enriched water which
was milky white and rubbed white mud on our faces to exfoliate our skin and such.
The view was incredible and we saw that God's
creations come in all shapes and sizes.













