Vestmannaeyjar

Vestmannaeyjar (Westman Islands) is a town on the island of Heimaey. Heimaey is the largest of 15–18 islands in the Westman Islands archipelago, just off the south-west coast of Iceland's mainland. Vestmannaeyjar has a population of around 4,200.

Many visitors are attracted to the island in order to discover the effects of the 1973 volcanic eruption. An interactive exposition takes visitors to the "Pompeii of the North".

Understand


The Westman Islands were formed by submarine volcanic eruptions along a 30-km-long fissure lying south-west to north-east. The largest island is Heimaey, 13.4 km². Most of the islands have steep sea cliffs, and are well vegetated. Bird-hunting and egg-collecting are traditional to the islander's culture.

Read
Read John McPhee's The Control of Nature to understand Heimaey's volcanic significance.

From Landeyjahöfn
The car and passenger ferry Herjólfur has scheduled trips daily between a harbour, on the mainland coast south of Hvolsvöllur, 11 km from Heimaey. When weather and harbour conditions permit, Herjólfur operates on this much shorter run, making four or five return journeys daily. Fares are lower on this faster route, and the one-way trip requires approximately 30 minutes. The ship takes up to 500 passengers and 50 cars. On board there is a cafeteria.

Buses from Reykjavik to Landeyjahöfn via Selfoss are operated by Sterna:.

Telephone: or  E-mail:  Website: www.herjolfur.is (in English)

From Þorlákshöfn
When meteorological conditions are not suitable, and the vessel can not reach Landeyjahöfn, which occasionally happens in the winter time, Herjólfur operates between (pronounced "Thorlawkshoefn") and Vestmannaeyjar. Herjólfur's trip on this route takes 2 hr 45 min and sleeping quarters can be booked. This journey is more expensive.

To get to Þorlákshöfn, either drive west from Reykjavík through Þrengslin to the south coast, or take bus 3a from the BSÍ bus terminal in Reykjavík. The bus leaves Reykjavík approx. 1 hour before Herjólfur leaves dock.

By plane
Eagle Air (Ernir; ) flies a daily scheduled air service in the summer between Westman Islands and Reykjavík. The flight time is 25 minutes.

Get around
Heimaey is a rather small island, only 7×4 km, so everything is within walking distance. There are hiking paths all over the island so any reasonably fit traveller should be able to enjoy the sightseeing on foot.

Cars can be hired at the airport or in the town. Prices start from about 8 000 kr a day.

Guided bus tours, boat tours and hiking tours around the islands are also available. Information on these tours can be found at Víking Tours and Eyjaferðir.

See


Drop by, the place by the harbour where past and present meet, where the lava flow stopped in 1973. There you will find a Norse timber church, the only one of its kind in Iceland, a gift from the people of Norway, and Landlyst, the second oldest building on the islands, now housing a small medical museum.
 * , the only natural history museum in Iceland worthy of the name: watch fish and other creatures from the sea swim, crawl or creep in their aquariums, a fine display of stuffed birds and one of the best collections of Icelandic minerals anywhere.
 * , the only natural history museum in Iceland worthy of the name: watch fish and other creatures from the sea swim, crawl or creep in their aquariums, a fine display of stuffed birds and one of the best collections of Icelandic minerals anywhere.

In case you have a helicopter at hand, you can see a lonely lighthouse -. Built in 1939 on top of a high rock, there's no way to access it from the sea or land.

Do

 * Hike up to or the smaller  volcanos, where you can still smell sulfur fumes and feel warm ground.
 * Hike up to or the smaller  volcanos, where you can still smell sulfur fumes and feel warm ground.
 * Hike up to or the smaller  volcanos, where you can still smell sulfur fumes and feel warm ground.
 * Hike up to or the smaller  volcanos, where you can still smell sulfur fumes and feel warm ground.
 * Hike up to or the smaller  volcanos, where you can still smell sulfur fumes and feel warm ground.

Take a walk on Iceland's most recent lava field, many meters above the street level and buildings that used to be, where you will find signposts to mark their former place and aid the imagination. A fine walk would include the “geothermal” area, where the returning islanders constructed a heating system for their houses using the heat from the cooling lava, then eastward to Prestavík and Viðlagavík and then end in Gaujulundur, a lava garden, an oasis in a desert. A part of the lava field is used for Motocross, so take care when you walk there.

Whale watching/sea angling: sightings of whales, dolphins and puffins (depends on season) are frequent around Vestmannaeyjar. Trips can be booked directly with companies at Vestmannaeyjar Harbour.

Climb (Home rock), the highest rock formation on the islands. Its highest peak is no more than 283 m. It is not a lengthy or arduous climbing as ladders have been placed in the most difficult areas. And the view from the top is magnificent, whichever direction you prefer to look.

Go round the on your own two feet or by car and have a look around one of the cleanest harbor areas in Iceland. The harbour is usually teeming with activity, not least Friðarhöfn (Peace harbor) when the catch of the day is being landed.

Visit Landakirkja, the local Lutheran church and the oldest building on Heimaey. It is a church with a pulpit in the centre, right above the altar. On Sundays, everyone is welcome to attend the service.

Visit the scene of Tyrkjaránið (the Turkish plunder): Lyngfellisdalur, Ræningjatangi (Robbers spit), Prestasteinn (Priest rock) Sængurkonusteinn (Childbirth rock), Fiskhellar (Fish caves) and Hundraðmannahellir (the Cave of Hundred). The local theatre company does a production of Tyrkjaránið 1627.

Horse riding is a popular activity amongst locals as well as visitors. Two companies offer 1- to 5-hour-long trips.

See the volcano film.

Annual social events

 * Þjóðhátíð, Vestmannaeyjar's national festival, is unquestionably the best known festival in Iceland, attracting the greatest number of mainland visitors. Held in Herjólfsdalur on the first weekend in August, it is a 3-4 day outdoor festival where having a good time is everyone's easily fulfilled aim. The whole weekend is packed with entertainment of all description, including the traditional bonfire, fireworks and the famous "hillside sing-along". Specially built structures fill the valley, not to mention the large white tents of the locals who literally move house during the festival and prove their famed hospitality by welcoming guests to coffee, smoked puffin and other delicacies.


 * Celebrating the end of the eruption has become a fixed event in Vsetmannaeyjar's social life. It is held on the weekend following 3 July, the day in 1973 when the eruption was officially declared at an end. On Saturday night the island's pubs open their doors and floors to musicians of all descriptions who are encouraged to sing and play to their hearts delight. A great number of former islanders choose this weekend to come back home for a visit.


 * The thirteenth day of Christmas is traditionally a festive day in Vestmannaeyjar. A torch-lit parade of fascinating creatures: The ancient Icelandic ogress Grýla and her less than lovely husband and sons, as well as elves, fairies, demons and trolls join the locals at a huge bonfire and splendid fireworks.


 * Sailor's Day, although a national day of festivities, has always been particularly dear to the hearts of the people of Vestmannaeyjar, not surprisingly so, considering their history. Festivities are held on the first weekend of June with a full programme on both Saturday and Sunday, emphasising seamanship connected sports as well as various entertainment for the general public.


 * 17th June, Iceland´s national holiday. This day was for a long time not given as prominent a place in Vestmannaeyjar as on the mainland. The islands' own national holiday in August was a considerably more important event in islanders' minds. Iceland's national holiday is now celebrated with a parade and outdoor festivities.


 * The puffling time is an annual event, unique to the Westman Islands and a particular favourite time of year for the children. It is impossible to put a more precise date to it than early to mid-August, as it is determined by the pufflings themselves. Leaving their cliff nests, they fly into town attracted by the electric lights and discover a harder and considerably more complicated world than they have been used to. Everywhere, however, saviours are waiting: The local children, armed with their cardboard boxes, prepared and ready to gather the lost and totally bewildered pufflings, rescue them and take them down to the shore to release them into the sea. Families have visit Heimaey to take part in the puffling adventure, a unique event, full of joy.

Sleep
Among various B&Bs, there's also the right next to the golf course.

Surtsey Island
is a small island created by a submarine volcanic eruption lasting between 1963 and 1967. In fact you probably won't be able to put your foot on the island, because it is kept as a natural laboratory in order to study its colonization by flora and fauna, so only a limited number of scientific visits is allowed. For the same reason, it was inscribed to the UNESCO world heritage list in 2008.

However, you can spot the island on a clear day from the top of Stórhöfdi Hill in the southern tip of Heimaey, probably one of the windiest places on our planet. If you are arriving in Heimaey by plane, this might be another opportunity to see this young piece of land.

Another option to observe Surtsey from a slightly closer distance is to join an organized tour (try to ask at Víking Tours in advance, as this tour is not in a standard offer).