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Iceland98
I made it to Iceland this last summer. An incredible
country; thinly populated with beautiful volcanic landscape covered by...
horses! In Iceland there are horses everywhere The ratio of
horses to people is about one horse for every two Icelanders. There
are stables and fields of horses everywhere that there are people. There
are tracks along roads and highways verywhere. Trails criss-cross
the fjords and disappear up the valleys to remote places that are
beautiful beyond description.
It is a special place with its combination of remoteness, natural
beauty and its horses. Not that I have fallen over the edge of the
world up there; however, in my tour, I have certainly been smitten by Iceland!
I lived for more than a month in Iceland hosted by two different
horsemen during my visit. Both are full time professional horse people.
One, Hrodmar Bjarnason owns a horse trekking or tour business called Eldhestar
which outfits wilderness tours mainly for foreigners. The other is
one of
Iceland's top horseman, a man named Baldvin Ari Gudlaugsson.
He rides and trains top breeding and competition horses in Iceland and
is well known and respected for his talent and his horses. He owns
and shows a number of the best horses in Iceland.
In staying with Baldvin Ari during the summer months of June and July,
I tagged along in his shadow and went with him to his work with horses
each day. He keeps a stable of about 15 stallions that we would ride
and 30 mares and geldings also in his training. His work is quite
a systematic process of riding through the list of horses. Many of
the horses are younger promising horses that he is presenting at shows
to finish them as top rated horses. In the end, these horses then get sold
and exported to horseman, typically in Europe who are looking for good
horses. The stallions that he has in his care go through the same
process as the other saddle horses but several of them stay with him for
longer where the breeding is sold from them also as a livelihood for him.
He keeps at least four of the top rated stallions that are in Iceland.
They are truly noteworthy animals, brilliant in movement, powerful, yet
noble in character.
As part of the training and conditioning, every few days they take
a herd of 20 or 30 horses and drive them along up into the mountains stopping
at staged corrals along the way to rest and trade mounts before continuing.
We started the one evening around 7:00 and rode under the midnight sun
until 1:00am, leaving the horses up in a mountain pasture to rest for that
day. The following day we then went back and drove them back down
to the stables... all the time riding through this beautiful landscape
which rises straight up from the sea to snow capped mountains with waterfalls
and rivers running through it all.
Such a life they live!
Living on caffeine, at night, I was able to attend a national conference
on Icelandic culture that by luck was held this month while I was there.
Every night there was folk music, choral, orchestra, folk dance etc which
I jumped into. It was great fun and I met a number of Icelandic
people this
way. Of course I was the odd American at these events; however, they
were humored by my participation.
One night a radio interviewer came through and my Icelandic friends
pointed him towards me. For about 2 moments I was famous on their
national radio!
I was in Akureyri in the North for most of my trip. Towards the
end, I joined my wife, Jennifer and our kids and several friends back in
the south near Reykjevik for a week of horse trekking with our friend's
tour company Eldhestar. The tour then ended in the north again in
time for Iceland's biannual national horse competition which we were then
able to watch.
For a nation full of horseman, this show was like a calling to Mecca
for the faithful as Icelanders came from all directions to encamp on the
plains of Eyjafjordur to revel in their horses together.
Summer is a glorious time to be in Iceland. Iceland is such a
clear and vital place. It is a place where all the elemental forms of nature
are lively and pure right there in their natural landscape. Humidity
in the pleasant summer of the north, unlike home here, is not the problem!
My salute home for last summer became: summer regards to all you hot
stuffy friends and family from this cool and pleasant north!
Doug Hamilton
Doug
and Jennifer ride and keep a herd of Icelandic horses at their farm
in Fairfield, Iowa.
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