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4 Reasons Why Iceland
Belongs on Your Bucket List

Iceland doesn’t do subtle. It’s a country of geysers erupting 70 metres into the air, fascinating Viking history, thrilling glacier adventures, and rushing waterfalls hidden inside caves. Here’s why it already deserves a spot on your bucket list!

1. SEE NATURAL WONDERS IN A NEW LIGHT

Iceland puts on a geological show unlike any other on Earth. Visit Thingvellir National Park, where you might expect green fields and serene nature. What you get is a once-in-a-lifetime experience – the chance to stand where the American and Eurasian tectonic plates are slowly pulling apart, adding roughly two centimetres of new ground every year.

Then comes Strokkur and the Geysir geothermal field. You gather around Strokkur with your group and watch as a blue translucent bubble slowly swells and then erupts into a column of boiling water firing 20, 30, sometimes 40 metres into the air, hanging there for a suspended moment before collapsing back to earth in a curtain of steam. The word geyser comes from Geysir, the larger and older vent beside it. Iceland sits directly on top of a volcanic hotspot, which means geothermal energy bubbles up everywhere — and Icelanders have turned this geological quirk into a national art form.

The Blue Lagoon‘s milky, mineral-rich water sits inside a centuries-old lava field, and the contrast between the steaming water and the jagged black rock surrounding it on every side is something photographs cannot prepare you for. Soaking in this warm, icy-blue water is an experience you won’t find in spas back home! The sensation loosens any tension, and the silica and mineral-rich waters leave your skin feeling silky smooth.

Further north, Lake Mývatn is a geological wonderland where pseudo craters dot the shoreline. Twisted lava formations create a labyrinth you can wander through, and mud pools bubble and hiss at Námaskard like the earth is trying to get your attention. The Ring Road is home to so many geographical marvels you won’t find anywhere else.

2. LIVE AMONGST LEGENDS

Iceland is home to many legends and myths. Lake Lagarfljót is home to Iceland’s own infamous lake monster: the Lagarfljótsormurinn, a serpent-like creature that locals have reported spotting for centuries and that remains part of living folklore today. Here, the line between myth and landscape dissolves completely.

Then there’s Hraunfossar, where the adventure goes underground. The lava fields surrounding the waterfalls are said to be inhabited by elves and hidden people — the Huldufólk — whose presence locals take seriously. The caves themselves earned their dark reputations. The lava field was once a refuge for bandits on the run, and according to folklore, the tunnels are also home to trolls. Even the waterfall’s very origin is disputed. An ancient Icelandic saga credits a sorcerer named Músa-Bölverkur with diverting the river to its current course. In Iceland, walking into a cave means walking into a story.

3. WITNESS THE STORY OF ICELANDIC RESILENCE

Before Iceland became a sought-after destination, it was a cold, windswept rock where people survived on whatever they could pull from the sea. Iceland’s people built themselves up in one of the harshest environments on earth, and that story is everywhere you look.

One fish changed everything. At the Herring Era Museum in Akureyri, you can taste that history. The museum walks you through the entire herring era, from the boats and barrels to the boom towns that sprung up overnight along the coastline. Winner of The European Museum Award, this museum shows the artifacts and collections that drove the center of Iceland’s industry.

Visit the world’s oldest parliament at Althingi, established in 930 AD, where political decisions were made in open air. See a sweeping panaroma of the geographical rift, lake, and lava fields stretching out below you. Learn why horses are deeply revered in Iceland, and how they became a national symbol as well as the subject of many myths and legends at Lýtingsstadir.

Travel back even further in time at the Eiríksstaðir Living History Museum, where the sights, sounds, and crafts of the Viking Era come to life. History doesn’t sit behind glass here. You walk into a reconstructed longhouse, smell the smoke from the hearth, watch craftspeople work with the same tools and materials used a thousand years ago, and somewhere between the firelight and the sound of the wind outside, the distance between you and the ninth century collapses completely.

4. ADVENTURES AT EVERY TURN

Iceland’s unique terrain is full of excursions that can’t be matched. Ride a Jeep across Vatnajökull, Europe’s largest glacier, while mountain peaks rise on every side and ancient valleys plunge below. This massive ice cap takes up 8-10% of Iceland’s surface and dazzles you with blue and white reflections. This isn’t a postcard view from a lookout. You’re on the ice, surrounded by a landscape so vast it barely seems real.

Thread through floating icebergs at Jökulsárlón Glacier Lagoon, seen in James Bond movie Die Another Day. From your boat, spot massive icebergs that are 1,000+ years old and stand as tall as multi-story buildings.

Walk through Raufarhólshellir, a lava tunnel that stretches 1,360 metres underground, carved by molten rock that stopped flowing thousands of years ago. The lava stalactites hang overhead, the walls catch the light from your headlamp and scatter it into golds, reds, and deep purples, and you feel your inner explorer has come to life. A glacier tour, a lagoon full of ancient icebergs, and a lava tunnel older than recorded history — Iceland is the only place that hands you all three.

Other experiences you’ll have along the Ring Road

Whale Watching

Humpback whales are frequent visitors, while minke whales often dart playfully near the surface. If you're lucky, you might even spot the elusive blue whale — the largest creature ever to have lived on Earth. Between whale sightings, keep watch for harbour porpoises dancing in the bow wave and seabirds wheeling overhead.

Godafoss

Godafoss translates directly to Waterfall of the Gods, and the name is not an accident. According to Icelandic legend, when Iceland officially converted to Christianity around 1000 AD, the lawspeaker Þorgeir Ljósvetningagoði threw his statues of the Norse gods into the falls to mark the end of the old religion. Whether you believe the story or not, standing in front of a horseshoe cascade that thunders 12 metres down into glacial blue water, it is not hard to see why someone chose this particular spot to make a point.

Reynisjafara

Here the sand is volcanic black, the basalt sea stacks rise from the Atlantic like ancient sentinels, and the waves crash against the shore. It is consistently ranked among the most beautiful beaches in the world, and the colour palette here is entirely its own with its black sand and white surf.

Skogar Museum

This open air folk museum brings together more than 18,000 artifacts spanning centuries of Icelandic rural life, from traditional turf houses you can walk through to fishing boats, tools, and textiles that tell the story of a people who made something out of very little.

Deildartunguhver

This is Europe's most powerful geothermal spring, pushing out 180 litres of boiling water every single second, and the heat and noise of it hits you before you even get close. The ground around it hisses, the air fills with steam, and the sheer force of what is happening beneath the surface is impossible to ignore.

Dimmuborgir

Dimmuborgir translates to Dark Castles, and once you see it, the name makes complete sense. This sprawling field of twisted lava formations was created around 2,300 years ago when a lava lake collapsed in on itself, leaving behind a labyrinth of pillars, arches, and caves that look like something out of a Norse myth

Iceland is one of those rare places that exceeds the hype. Whether you’re floating in steaming geothermal water, crawling through ancient lava, or watching a whale surface off the Arctic coast, every single moment is worth writing home about.

Discover the Land of Fire and Ice and create memories that will last a lifetime! Reserve your spot below.

Ethereal Iceland

Few places on earth immerse you in the magic of nature like Iceland. Feel your eyes widen in awe as you see Strokkur shoot a column of boiling water into the arctic sky. Stand above the seam of two continents in a vast rift valley at Thingvellir. Watch as the Golden Waterfall plunges into two-tiered depths, the thunder so powerful you feel the vibration deep in your chest. Inhale the crisp air above Vatnajökull Glacier, refreshing and invigorating with each breath. Sink into the warmth of the Blue Lagoon and feel its geothermal power coursing through you. Iceland offers an experience unlike any other — mystic, elemental, and impossible to forget.

Departures:
May, June, September & October 2027

13 days

All-Inclusive

$13,995CAD

Book now

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