The Westfjords are the raggedy fan almost hand shaped land mass at the very north west corner of Iceland. It is an extremely remote area in what is already a truly remote island. At the very tip of the Westfjords, at their most remote point, is the Hornstrandir reserve. There is no permanent human population here, no roads, just wild, magnificent nature at her absolute rawest. There is no set itinerary and we choose where to go each day with everyone on board. Below is a summary of some of the options we have to choose from. It is truly magnificent here. Welcome to NW Iceland!
Isafjordur
This small remote outpost is where the sailing adventure starts and ends. When you first arrive it’s all about getting you settled on the boat, your clothes packed away and walking you round the boat so that you start to feel familiar with the equipment and the boat more generally. We know many of you won’t be regular sailors at all, so there is no expectation to know anything and you’ll get full explanations and the chance to ask as many questions as you need.
You’ll also be issued with lifejackets, foul weather clothing and, due to our extreme location, artic immersion suits which keep you toasty warm and which you’ll come to love! After hot tea, we’ll start to learn the key drills, including how to use the winches and ropes safely and how to rescue a casualty from the sea should they fall in.
Once we’re all ready, we’ll slip lines and head out into the bay from Isafjordur and pretty much sail off into the middle of nowhere!
Hornstrandir
We’ll sail around the headland that separates the Westfjord’s settled southerly regions from the emptiness of Hornstrandir, and you’ll be blown away by the true, extraordinary size and scale of this region and the abundance of sea birds, including skuas, Arctic terns and fulmars that circle all around us. There are are often huge numbers of puffins here and you can’t help but laugh with their awkward flying and walking style and huge orange beaks.
Sailing east, we sail past a craggy double rock arch and into Jökulfir∂ir. We will likely have dolphins and seals accompanying us along with more puffins riding the Icelandic waves. We can anchor here for a magical night. This far north, there is almost no darkness, just a short twilight.
Drangajökull glacier and the surrounding areas
Beautiful enough the night before, the glacier always looks even better after a good night’s sleep. You’ll see it glinting away in the sun to the east, and the waterfalls on the vast cliffs across Leirufjör∂ur. We can take the RIB ashore here and walk east along the fjord towards the glacier. There are often eider ducks here, are a fat seabird, more penguin than duck. You may see clumps of their famous down here, yet it sells for thousands of pounds back in Europe and the far east.
We’ll aim to hike to the top of Drangajökull. En route, we’ll hike through meadows speckled with purple seathrift, orchids, buttercups and cottongrass, baby blueberries, more like flowers than fruit – and bitter wild sorrel. When we reach the glacier, it’s like walking on a steep, very slippery carpet of soft white crunchy cereal. 900m above sea level we reach the top, with the most extraordinary vistas. Snowy outcrops, mountains and the valley curving back below us to the yacht. Soak it all in – these are magical moments
Hesteyri and surrounding areas
Hesteyri, a tiny settlement that is a ghost town for most of the year. It’s over sixty years since the last permanent residents abandoned fishing and subsistence farming for an easier life in Ísafjör∂ur; now the families of the original inhabitants occupy the tiny tin-and-clapboard houses for just a few months each summer. Taking the RIB to the small jetty, we can walk around the shoreline around to the lichen-rusty ruins of a Norwegian whaling station, deserted even longer than the village. It’s lovely to explore he tumbledown relics of the whaling station: huge vats for rendering the flensed blubber, squared chimney for the furnaces.
Lónafjör∂ur
Moored in Lónafjör∂ur, we’ll be so remote and far from any settlement. It’s a beautiful place to kayak or explore in the RIB and we can often find fresh mussels here and catch a fish for an impromptu seafood feast. There are hundreds of seals here and they find the yacht irresistable. they will swim up close, nose poking out of the water and have a good look around. Lónafjör∂ur is truly one of those places of vast size, absolute silence and magnificent nature. You never forget it.