Sunday, 2 November 2014

What You Waiting For?

If you are unsure whether to apply for the Snorri Program, I am here to help you make up your mind: YES! 
Do it! 
Don’t wait another second, just fill out the application, I promise you won’t regret it!
If you are between 18 and 28 log on to your computer right now, or use your smart phone, and visit www.snorri.is and download the forms. This trip will transform you no matter what place you are in life. If you don’t believe me, watch the short video from 2014, my trip. You will be envious of the fun we had, but your trip will likely be at least half as great. Don’t worry, I am only teasing. Your trip will be unforgettable too!


Now, what that video can’t show you, is how it feels to stand on a rocky beach, listening to the cold Atlantic water splash sloppily along the shoreline, feeling the cool wind tug gently at your hair as it races into the fjord from the ocean. It cannot share with you the smell of cold salt water, of dried fish from the nearby packing plant, or the absence of any scent except for nature all around you. It cannot show you how powerfully emotional it is to stand on the beach where one of your ancestors arrived nearly 250 years prior, and where your other ancestors left from only 150 years ago, as they embarked for Canada. It cannot prepare you for how surreal it is to stand on the farm where your ancestors were born, or where they had their families, or where their lives ended. And it cannot give you that strange sense of home that you feel when traveling the countryside, while shaking hands with families who are related to you as far back as your great-great-great-great grandmother’s half-sister whom no one had ever heard of until they were contacted by the amazing folks at Snorri, and then looked it up on Íslendingabók to make sure it was true.

What that video cannot show you, I can only begin to describe for you. If you want to experience Iceland, to know where our ancestors came from, to see what it is they left behind, and to truly know your own history, you need to participate in this program. And if you’re older than 28, or you're not Icelandic, go on the Snorri Plus program – it sounds amazing too! And it’s organized by the same great people. So what are you waiting for? Fill out those forms, do your homework (especially the language prep.), and discover your story!
The deadline to apply for the Snorri 2015 Program is January 16, 2015.
The deadline to apply for the Snorri Plus 2015 Program is January 30, 2015.
Applications can be found at: www.snorri.is




** I chose this video to promote the application deadline, but it definitely applies to my inability to stay consistent on this blog! How ironic.

Saturday, 6 September 2014

The Waterfalls

Seljalandsfoss 
Driving the Golden Circle in the south of Iceland to the town of Vík we stopped at two beautiful waterfalls. I've seen only a few waterfalls in Canada, but the ones I saw were not this high nor this powerful. Except I did see Niagara Falls this past spring. That was an impressive sight. But these falls in Iceland, although they do draw many tourists, they still feel rugged and remote.

Skógafoss 
Iceland follows me around in everything I do now that I have been there. Yesterday I was having an internal debate whether I should buy tickets to see Bad Suns perform as the opening act for another band, which I have never heard of before. So I decided to watch a few music videos for the main act, New Politics, to see if it might be a good show. Well the first song I chose and watch a video for was this:

And the reminiscing continues ....

Friday, 8 August 2014

Reflecting

I have been back home for nearly 2 weeks and I have not managed to write a new post yet. The ideas are not lacking, but the processing of what I experienced and a lack of free time (somethings don't change no matter where you are!) are lacking. I am motivated to catch up this week and finish sorting pictures too!

In the meantime... here is a piece I wrote before going to Iceland, reflecting on my first and only trip to Gimli, Manitoba. 

 

The Land, the Home, the History.
The cold lake water swirled around my knees, the warm summer air kissed my bare skin, and I started to feel it. 
A sense of home.
A sense of belonging to something that is created by blood, not by choices or beliefs.
I first felt that feeling standing there, in Lake Winnipeg, naked at three in the morning. It was still dark outside, the stars glowing like white embers across the black sky, the distant horizon a smoky grey smear. My focus was also smeared, from the beers I had stopped counting at my cousin’s bonfire. I had snuck away from the circle of flames, laughter, and music with my weekend romance, with the full intent of skinny-dipping in the lake. At knee-depth I froze from the temperature, the view, and my own swirling thoughts. My lover was whimpering, at ankle-depth, begging me to abandon the chilly lake for his warm arms instead. I made a desperate plea to my own brain, to remember in the morning the newly sensed emotion, so I could explore it fully with an alert mind.
When I opened my eyes again, I could tell it was still early by the weak sunlight streaming in through the truck windows. I lay still, straining my ears for sounds of activity. None reached me. Everyone from the neighbouring cottages had been at the bonfire, enjoying themselves into the hours of dawn, so it was no surprise that no one was stirring yet. Sunday was going to be a very quiet day. I sat up slowly, ignoring the remaining fog that lingered behind my eyes. Very carefully I found my shorts, my shoes, and my lover’s sweatshirt to ward off the morning chill. Creeping out of the back seat of the truck, I escaped without waking the sleeping giant, sprawled across the bench.
I decided to walk into town to clear my mind. I came to Gimli to connect with my roots and I had started to do that. Since I was a little girl I knew that my ancestors came to Canada from Iceland. But why? Through conversations with my family and reading on the subject, I learned that my family left Iceland because of a massive volcanic eruption that destroyed the farms and livelihoods of many Western Icelanders. They came here for a fresh beginning because restarting back home seemed impossible.
I thought about their struggle, about their journey, as I walked along the public beach at the edge of town. A few older ladies were already stretched out on the sand, bathing in the sun. It was close to eight in the morning, not that early for the people who had not attended my family’s party the night before. I shoved my fingers into my shorts pocket and found a ten-dollar bill. I gave thanks to Freyja and suppressed a giggle. I would not be able to concentrate without my morning coffee.
I wandered through the streets of the small downtown, a stranger to everyone. It was the weekend of the Icelandic Day, or Islendingadagurinn, also known as the ‘Ding Dong’ in my family. This weekend always brings hundreds of people from outside the area. They come for the carnival rides, for the parade, to see the Viking battle re-enactments, the music and the food. But I wondered what it would be like on any other summer weekend. Would everyone know everyone else? Was it as tight knit a community as it once was?
I stopped at the restaurant in the centre of town and ordered a coffee to go. With my morning dose of caffeine in hand I walked down to the marina to pass by the large Viking monument. At the base is a plaque that reads “Vikings: Discoverers of America 1000 A.D.” I frowned because I knew it should read: “1000 A.D.: America discovers Vikings”. I did not really think anyone still believed that America was ‘empty’ when settlers first arrived. Then again, the statue was erected in 1967, and attitudes had changed since then, had they not?
I kept walking along the path, thinking. As I approached the marina entrance I stopped at another plaque that briefly described the history of the area. I felt stunned as I read it. One part specifically held my attention: “…the reserve [New Iceland] was essentially self-governing … enable[ing] them to preserve their language and cultural identity”. I took Indigenous studies in University and I had listened to the stories of Elders. I knew about the struggles Canada’s Aboriginal peoples have faced in preserving their languages and their cultural identities. I knew first hand from classmates the struggles communities are facing in asserting their ability and right to self-governance. At the time when my family was granted these safe-guards, simultaneously Native communities were losing those same rights.
I felt conflicted as I walked down the length of the pier.  
New Iceland was created between 1875 and 1876. During this time the nation of Canada was signing the Numbered Treaties with various First Nations in order to open up the West for settler migration. The Indian Act came into effect in 1876. While my ancestors were granted land, cultural and language freedom, the decades of horror and destruction wrought by residential schools was about to begin. Did the New Icelanders know anything about this? Did they understand how privileged they were? And yet privileged is such a limited word given the immense hardships the New Icelanders faced, from poverty and famine to harsh new climates and disease.
I hold my coffee firmly in my left hand as I scale the slanted cement wall of the pier. I want to sit, dangling my feet over the water. I want to feel both the sturdy cement under my legs and the uncertain feel of gravity as I balance on the edge.
I stare out at the calm grey waters of the lake. I can see the faint edge of the far shore. What I know of Lake Winnipeg is that it is far longer than it is wide, and that the water is very shallow. My cousin told me that the beaches are never the same from day to day. Sand gets pushed around creating new sandbanks and new divots every morning.
The sloppy sound of water pushing against the posts of the pier fills my ears as I think over the information I have gathered this weekend. I know that the reason I am there, in Gimli, learning about my family is because of the generosity of the Canadian government of that decade long ago, but it is also because of Treaty Number 5 that allowed that land to be given to my family.
For several generations my family lived and farmed a piece of land near Gimli. And now my family comes here every summer to enjoy the land. This is the closest thing I have to a home territory. Even though I have never seen this lake before, I feel connected to it, connected to something bigger than myself, more meaningful than property or wealth. I am on the land that gave my family a new beginning. It is the reason I am alive. But it is also land that is a part of someone else’s history too. There must be so many stories about this place from long before my ancestors ever stood foot on the soil.
Is that what it means to be Canadian? No matter what histories we have on this soil, there are infinite stories that took place here before we came. No matter where we feel at home the most in this country, our homes also belong to others. This must be common throughout the world, with human beings constantly moving about.
Knowing that my home is not mine alone does not bother me. Instead I feel more connected, more obligated to take care of it, to respect the land, the water, the air. But how does this matter if I am still an outsider here? I do not live in Gimli. I live in Ontario. But I was born and grew up in British Columbia. So where is home for me?
A sailboat glides across the water, far out on the lake. I watch it while I drink.
I do not know where my home is. The questions makes my head hurt. Is it too grandiose to say my home is planet earth? But no matter how lost I feel, I know I will always find the sense of home, on the shores of Lake Winnipeg.

Monday, 7 July 2014

East Coast Living

I am currently living on the East Coast of Iceland. For the last ten days it had been over cast with only pockets of sunshine and lots of rain. I am also struggling with a stubborn cold. Today is the first day in 3 weeks that I can honesty say I have done nothing. And I hope it helps because I missed an opportunity to ride horses this afternoon! Iceland is not like Canada where you can just go out and buy Tylenol or Advil at the grocery store. Here I can only get nasal spray and cough drops unless I see a doctor, which I am hoping to tomorrow.

But even with a runny nose and hacking cough (sounds attractive doesn't it?) I am seeing so many things and meeting so many people. Family and friends. At the end of each day I am far too tired to write entries here, so I figure when I return home to Canada and upload all my picture I will be able to share more stories and information. For now I write when I find these rare moments, and when I really want to share something. Like this! Our group made the newspaper!

Sunday, 22 June 2014

Árni the fisherman and aluminum smelting

I met a relative of mine a few nights ago: frændiminn (the word for a close relative, either an uncle or cousin. His family is part of my closest kin here in Iceland.) He is a journalist, and from some of the stories I heard from him his work is pretty interesting. One of the environmental stories he shared I will recount below in a fictional version because I have not fact checked the information nor am I confident that I can recall all the facts accurately. And I heard subsequent stories from others with similar details from others, so I cannot claim that all this information came from any one person. I do want to learn more facts during my stay here.

Leir took a bus to a pub in one of the suburbs. He wanted to escape the ever pressing wave of tourists that flooded the streets of downtown Reykjavík. There were still tourists in this part of town, but not so many as the centre. He took a seat along the bar. Two tv's were mounted from the ceiling, one showing world cup football, the other played the evening news. An image of long cement buildings, a factory of some sort he presumed, was on the screen. He must have been staring at the tv, because the man next to him said something in Icelandic to him. Leir shook his head, Ensku? He asked.

"Ah, English, I asked if you knew of the smelter?" The man said.
"Oh, no. What is the story?" Leir asked him.
"It's controversial. But I let you know some of the secret details." He said, flashing a sly smile. "It's an American company that built it, back in 2003; moved it from some developing country to here.  Thing is, no one will say the details of the deal they were given, and believe me, it must have been a very good detail to move it all the way up here."
"So no one knows the details? Surely something must have leaked?". Leir asked.
"Of course there are rumours, like free electricity, no taxes, and so on. A couple years before they came, a new, large hydroelectric dam was built on one of the rivers. There was opposition to that but the developers and the government built it anyway. It's all very odd because that region had no unemployment at the time. Fishing was booming, jobs in town were good. A few young people were leaving for Reykjavík but they weren't crying for jobs."
"Okay, sounds normal. Why is it on the news now?" Leir asked with interest.
"Scientists have found high levels of flouride in the soil and surrounding sheep farms. Yet the company denies any contamination and the government refuses to investigate. But a news team did a special on it once, revealing the contamination problems. Now there is a proposal in parliament to hold, something like an inquiry. It's a sore on the east coast for us."
"Sounds like a lot of problems we have back home where I am from. Do you have some sort of personal connection to this story?"
"Yes, I am a fisherman. But I had heart surgery last month, so I am staying with my daughter while I recover."
"That's a big procedure. Are you sure you are ready to be at the pub?" Leir asked him, doubtful. He was not doctor but he was certain recovery from heart surgery could take at least two months or longer.
"Oh yeah, I'm fine." He smiled, drinking his beer.
Leir decided to test one of the few phrases he knew in Icelandic. "Hvar heitir thu?" (what is your name?)
"Ég heiti Árni." The fisherman said, raising his glass to Leir's. "Skoll!"
"Skoll!"

Saturday, 21 June 2014

Feeling Dauntless

It has been non-stop activities and learning since arrival.

There are swimming pools everywhere! It is amazing! There is a swimming pool near our guesthouse that has hot tubs on the roof. It is a popular place, the hot tubs, people gather there to have meetings, and socialize. I still feel trapped in an English bubble and am looking forward to my homestay to really learn the language.

It is still disorienting to hear birds chirping and have daylight streaming through the windows at midnight, and not recognize my body's messages that it is tired and wants to go to bed.

Other random points about what in is like here:
The hot water smells of shower or rotten eggs
The streets are really, really clean
Homelessness is very minimal and there are ample shelters available
There are no squirrels but cats roam the streets all the time and none are strays, they all have official homes
Birds are different, there are different species of ducks and gulls and song birds
The three types of Icelandic beer that I have tasted seem like pale ales, so I am definitely missing me some good Publican House beer
The rain feels lighter somehow, even getting soaked after standing in rain for 3 hours, it is not as heavy as the torrential downpours we get at home
Street art is everywhere and it is often beautiful
There are many young couples with children, especially on the streets of the National Day, there we children everywhere, it was nice to see


Today (Saturday) we went river rafting. It was on the Hvít Á ( White river)  which is fed by a glacier and runs to the ocean. It was soooo exhilarating. We even had the opportunity to jump off rocky ledges of 7m and 10m. I jumped off the 7m because it was a once in a lifetime experience, of course, but 10m was too thrilling for me! The water was freezing, but it was soooo worth it.

Tomorrow we are driving along the south coast to see one of the glaciers and volcanos. Should be fun. 

Resumen de mi viaje uno

Amigos, en este momento, se entiendo tu lucha con la lengua en Canada. Tengo sentidos muy fuerte de una extranjera, aquí en Islandia. Es extraño porque esta isla es mi tierra madre y no siento que es mi hogar. No es una sorpresa en realidad. Nació en Canada, entonces mi corazón está en Canada, no aquí. También estoy en la ciudad, y ademas esta un lugar de mucho turismo. No me gusta la industria turística. Hay tanta gente de gran ignorancia, y ahora, estoy un miembro de ese club. No me gusta este hecho. Siento frustrada con mi ignorancia.

Espero que cuando ir a visitar mi familia en el este, sentiré  más conexiones con la tierra y la historia. No quiero pasar otra semana en la ciudad, bebiendo, bailando, y gastando dinero por cosas simples/inútiles. Prefiero hablar con la gente de la isla... no con las turistas y no con los trabajadores de empresas locales que quieran dinero. Quiero escuchar los cuentos, y las memorias reales.

También quiero investigar la factoría de aluminum cerca del pueblo donde voy a vivir por tres semanas. Espero que mirar las ballenas en el mar, porque me voy a vivir cerca de una fiord de ballenas. El nombre del pueblo, es para un especie de ballena que nada en el fiord.

Thursday, 19 June 2014

Update teaser

I spent over an hour today talking about the environment and the aluminum smelters here in Iceland with a local. There are three companies operating here: Alcoa, Rio Tinto, and Bechtel. If you know me, then you know how exciting that was and how I likely have TONS of information and thoughts to share on this topic but it is 11:30 pm (still daylight) and I don't have the time nor mental energy to delve into it now. Stay tuned for the full discussion tomorrow....

Dark Water

The second night here we went out to a club called B5. It was fun. We partied hard. that's all there is to be said about that. SO here is the new music video from my Dave Icelandic band:
Agent Fresco!!!!

Feeling foreign for the first time

In the past few days I finally felt like a foreigner. Having to ask everyone in shops if they speak my language is something I have never had to do before. I feel ignorant, frustrated, and ashamed at times. I wish I had more time to prepare myself in the language before arriving here, alas I have to struggle along with my lessons here.

I know I feel as many of my friends have felt in coming to Canada and having to learn English here. And it is an awkwardness that I want to feel to really understand their journeys, but that does not make it any easier in the moment.

It is not just the language, the money is different in appearance and value. About 1 Canadian dollar is worth 105 Icelandic Krona. Coffee is about $4.70 and beer is about $10. Food is fairly expensive but much of it is imported and with the krona so weak, it is easy to understand why.

Things will get better as I become immersed in the language and start my summer work a week from Friday.

Tuesday, 17 June 2014

Leir watches ducks

Leir spent more time than he expected to sitting on the bench, watching the ducks. He'd seen ducks before, but these ones were huge. They were at least twice the size of regular pond ducks back home. Mentally noting the differences between his familiar ducks and these foreign ones, Leir sat there for fourteen minutes comparing the different hues of beige and brown in their feathers, their larger bodies and beaks, and their larger webbed feet too. He could only compare the females because no  male specimens were available. The ducks drew him in because they appeared so familiar upon first glance, but then the differences slowly disturbed him. 

It made him think of his ex-girlfriend. They had been so in love in the beginning, but after many months and a few years, everything had changed. What he thought he knew about her turned out mostly wrong. The little things that he initially adored turned into the things that drove him crazy. And her seemingly deep love for him also turned viciously sour. When they broke it off the only thing he could think about was to get as far away from her, and as far away from all the ashen memories as possible. So he bought himself a plane ticket to a remote country, a land where the sun never sleeps in the summertime, and a place where he could be alone to regain his sense of self: Iceland.


So there he sat, thousands of miles away, watching Icelandic ducks that reminded him of Amy. He felt pathetic. Getting up, he chose to walk back to the heart of the downtown, rather than away as was his original plan. He decided he wanted to lose himself amongst strangers rather than be isolated that day. There were always tourists in the downtown, and with World Cup soccer in full swing, any of the pubs would provide him the distraction he so desperately sought. 

Sunday, 15 June 2014

Vilkomin til Íslands: Waterslides and Handball

I arrived!
Left Toronto at 9pm last night : arrived at 6:20am this morning... It was a 5 hour flight and I may have slept 2 hours. I wish I could say I am wired with excitement but all I want to do is sleep. We have an orientation meeting in about an hour, then we go swimming, then go to an international handball match: Iceland vs. Bosnia. I fear napping to only wake up feeling much worse. Better to push through the day and sleep early tonight.

I am sitting in the kitchen of the Odin Guesthouse, which is like a B&B or hostel type environment. Most everyone is snoozing, so quiet alone time is welcome. I'll have lots to share tomorrow but for today, let me back track to leaving Toronto. WOW terminal 3 at the C gates, you look like a scene from the future. I approached a bar where everyone sat at the counter with iPads in front of them, stating at football on the tv, not talking to each other, not even talking with the servers. Food, drink, everything is ordered via the iPads. But it only took me 10 minutes of sitting there in confusion to figure this out. I felt like an idiot, watching everyone's motions to figure out the mystery of how certain people were being served but no conversation actually occurred. And then I saw the Italian victory over England and I knew it would be a good day!

So after a stressful day of ready goodbyes and over tiredness, I am ready for adventure! I am on GMT time and using Viber for international texting. Get the app if you want to be in touch... Or use the usual methods of internetland.

Bless bless,
Natalie.


Monday, 2 June 2014

Destination Determined

As part of my journey I will be living with distant relatives for the 3 out of the 6 weeks that I will be in Iceland. Today I received word of who those relatives are and where that will be. I will not be naming my family members on this blog, but I do have the privilege of attending sessions on genealogy while I am there. So if family members want to know what it is that I learn, you know how to reach me, although I am not sure if it can be expanded on what is already known by key members of our family already.
For the rest of you, well, all the details of my family tree are not important. I will share my experiences, my happy, funny, sad, and even terrible moments as I go along. And lots, and lots, and lots of photos!

What I do know: I will be staying in a small town on the Eastern coast of Iceland, called Reyðarfjörður (Ray-thar-fyore-thur). On the ocean! I am so delighted. As for the family (and families) that will be hosting me, I will share that we are linked via my great-great-great-grandmother's family line. It may seem a distant connection, but it is strong enough that they are willing to welcome me, a stranger, into their homes and lives for three weeks. I have a feeling we will all get along fame-ously!



 Today I was also given my work assignment for those three weeks. I get to work in a kindergarten class for three weeks. It sounds like it is school and daycare together because I was told that I get to work with kids between the ages of 2 and 6. I am thrilled about this placement because it means I will really get to immerse myself in basic Icelandic language. I am sure I will learn a lot from the kids.

12 days to go ... and now I have to start packing. I've never lived out of a suitcase for that length of time. If anyone has any tips I would be grateful!



Saturday, 31 May 2014

A Fortnight Away

 In exactly one fortnight, I will be bound for Iceland. 
The land of the ice and snow, the midnight sun, hot springs and ...
 my ancestry.  

I currently live out of boxes in one small bedroom of my family home, after recently giving up my apartment. Between my hectic work schedule, pet/house sitting gigs, scheduled meetings in Toronto on my days off, and spending as much time with my boyfriend and close friends as I can before I leave for six weeks – I have no idea how I will be ready. When am I going to find the time to pack? More importantly, what am I going to pack?

Don't let me fool you into thinking I am anxious. 
I was, until the other day when I learned where I will be living whilst in Iceland for six weeks. 
Now I am excited; actively releasing any expectations that creep up so I may experience anything and everything that I can. 

I am launching this blog to keep both loved ones and interested ones connected as best I can while abroad. But I have never been any good at maintaining a journal, so to keep myself interested, I have  decided to "bring along" one of my favourite fictional characters to write about: Lena. Some of my posts will be usual blog entries, written about myself and what I have done. Others will be works of fiction, short stories, about Lena, if she were to travel to Iceland and follow in the footsteps that I will be walking in. 

I may also write a few posts in multiple languages to practice my Icelandic and to entertain my Latin friends with my slowly perishing Spanish grammar. 
Should be fun!

And so, in:
 Fourteen days//Catorce días//Fjortán dögum
I will be on a flight to Iceland. 
My first time outside of Canada and the USA. 

Let the road begin. 
http://static.panoramio.com/photos/large/47686128.jpg