Wet day in the Alps

Millybrown
Mark Hillmann
Thu 19 Jun 2008 13:09
Not really, but with snow on the mountains just above the town and the colourful buildings Seydisfjorder has the distinct feeling of an alpine ski resort on one of those days when the weather is too bad to get up the hill - but flooded to about 2,000m.  All the creative writing below is because the rain keeps me in the cabin.
 
The houses here are timber frame ones from Norway, similar in style but different construction to the Faroes where they all have in-situ concrete walls.  Both have the bright and varied colours, much of it coated steel sheeting. 
 
This picture is the East of Iceland Technical Museum based around the old Johanns Hanssonar boatyard.
 
I had heard of this yard in England, where the British trawlers would bring boats needing major repairs: "My engine needs fixing, I will go across to Iceland".  Now I believe they take them to Denmark - much the same as popping down to the local Ford dealer.
 
I went in and looked round yesterday, it shows post 1880 development and is staffed by a holiday student in the summer seasonal way.  Needing a weight to sink my watermaker, I went back today and the director came out of his office and we rummaged around for something the right weight.  I said Lorna did cataloguing for the Tullie House museum in Carlisle; now if she wants to catalogue the entire contents of this grey shed...  It is full too.
 
You can see the large areas of blue behind the buildings. They grow across the lower slopes here and are regarded as a weed.  When I first saw it, I could only think it was a blue rock, but no, it is lupins, healthy and in full flower.  Round some older gardens you get head high flowering rhubarb, so the weather must be warmer than this usually.
 
Just round the corner there is a sculpture in cables.  The plaque gives its phone number and says it was erected in 2006 to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the first telegraph cable from Scotland to Iceland.
 
I have had success with gas here, they have the same small propane bottle that fits in the boat gas locker but Calor does not supply in the UK.  In Norway we got one, the smallest propane bottle instead of the largest camping gaz bottle which also available here: Could someone tell their web site and help desk back home?
 
Also success with battery charging:  With a big alternator, voltage has always come straight up to 14v with the engine running.  Here  the cabin heater is started each time I start the engine to keep the snow out.  I began to think something was wrong as the  voltage was low and dropped again quickly.  But no, I tightened the fan belt and it is all OK again. 
 
Oh - a couple of messages to Adam:  The sound system is working, with the mp3 player currently providing the Dalston male voice choir through the stereo,  and although they had the most snow here last winter for many years, it has not inspired the ski area above Seydisfjorder to stay open in July.  Snow board not needed. 
 
Reading this again it uses "I" on land when there is no crew, but "we" at sea.  May I assure Lorna that all my efforts to recruit a young blond Icelandic girl crew have been unsuccessful.  Milly Brown is alive at sea and "we" seems natural.