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Glacier Hike at Sólheimajökull

A must do activity in southern Iceland
Horse Riding Iceland

Duration: 3 hours

Departures:  Everyday. 

Meeting point: at Troll Expeditions Solheimajokull

What do you need to bring? warm clothing, waterproof pants and jacket, head wear, gloves and hiking boots with stiff soles are recommended.

What is included? Experienced Glacier Guide & Safety Gear (Helmet, Harness, Ice Axe, Crampons)

Difficulty: Moderate

Minimum age: 8 years

Glacier Hike also available at Skaftafell. Book it here.

 

You can rent waterproof jacket, waterproof pants and hiking boots if needed.

14.900 ISK per person

Grab your hiking boots and get ready, because you’re going to hike Sólheimajökull glacier in southern Iceland.

 

This is a comprehensive glacier tour, where you’ll learn about these massive natural phenomena from your guide and be provided with all the necessary equipment to get some exercise in full comfort and safety. This tour is for anyone looking to experience one of the natural wonders of the earth. You’ll meet your guide in the Sólheimajökull parking lot and then make your way to the ice itself, a brisk 30-minute walk to get the blood flowing. (The glacier was once closer to the lot, but warming weather and the glacier's own movement has caused it to recede into the distance.)

 

Sólheimajökull is a part of Mýrdalsjökull, one of the biggest glaciers in Europe. It is featured in detail in the 2012 documentary "Chasing Ice," an award-winning investigation of climate change. Once you reach the ice, you’ll be given plenty of time to marvel at the eerie silence and feeling of isolation, as if you and your fellow hikers are alone in a vast, empty world of ice and snow. You’ll view millennia-old blue ice, created when oxygen bubbles are trapped in the snow and compressed into ice by the enormous weight of the glacier pressing down upon it. You’ll be able to gaze deep into a glacier moulin, a vertical shaft like a well, which can go all the way to the bottom of the glacier. What’s down there? The ice cap sits on top of the mighty Katla volcano, one of the largest and most active volcanoes in Iceland. On a clear day, you may also be able to see Eyjafjallajökull, another glacier to the east which famously brought European air traffic to a halt in 2010 when its eruption filled the sky with fire and ash.

 

Price only 14.900 ISK per person!

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