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Iceland

  • Apr 2
  • 2 min read

A place of genuine contrast — glaciers and volcanoes, hot springs and cold seas, vast open landscapes still being shaped by what lies beneath them. It sits on a fault line between two tectonic plates, and it shows. Few places on Earth feel this raw, or this alive. The journeys we design here move through that full range — from ice and lava to ocean and highland — combining active exploration with moments of stillness in some of the country's most remote and affecting settings. 




Chasing the South Coast Waterfalls

Iceland's South Coast is, among other things, a place built for chasing waterfalls. The trail from Skógafoss follows a river upstream through a canyon where the falls come one after another — some famous, some tucked away, some with no name at all. A few you'll find by accident. The less you know going in, the better.



Glacier Kayaking

The glacial lagoon at Jökulsárlón sits at the edge of Vatnajökull — Iceland's largest glacier — where ice breaks from the glacier face and drifts slowly toward the sea. Kayaking through the lagoon puts you at water level with blue and white ice formations that shift with the light and the tide.



Iceland From Above

A private flight over Iceland's volcanic interior — geothermal vents, ancient lava fields, glacier tongues pushing toward the coast. The only way to hold the true scale of this landscape in a single perspective. We combine the flight with a landing at a location otherwise inaccessible on foot.



The Blue Lagoon — Wonder in the Lava Field 

Iceland's most famous geothermal waters have earned their reputation. The Blue Lagoon sits in the middle of a lava field on the Reykjanes Peninsula — milky blue, mineral-rich, and remarkably restorative. One of the few wellness experiences in the world that feels entirely of its place. 



E-Biking the Highlands

There are few better ways to move through Iceland's interior than at the pace of a bicycle. Routes cross black-sand plains, coastal stretches, and rugged trails that open onto landscapes most visitors never reach. The landscape reveals itself differently from the saddle.

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