A couple of fixie riding, sneaker wearing hipsters visited Iceland and made this cool video.

Waterfalls: Gullfoss, Skógafoss, Seljalandsfoss, Goðafoss, Dettifoss, waterfalls Lakahraun lava fieldMývatn lake, Jökulsárlón glacier lagoonSnæfellsnes peninsula, Geysir geothermal area, Krafla geothermal area, Blue Lagoon, Kjós farm area and Skaftafellsjökull glacier.

(Source: donbell)

The giftshop and café by the Gullfoss waterfall in Iceland always has some quote on on their open and closed sign. I went there the day after the attacks in Norway and then it said in Norwegian: “I dag er vi alla norsk” or “Today we are all Norwegian”.

The giftshop and café by the Gullfoss waterfall in Iceland always has some quote on on their open and closed sign. I went there the day after the attacks in Norway and then it said in Norwegian: “I dag er vi alla norsk” or “Today we are all Norwegian”.

(Source: alexweisler)

The famous Gullfoss (Gold Waterfall) typically has a rainbow above it. However if you don’t see one, just paint it in.

The famous Gullfoss (Gold Waterfall) typically has a rainbow above it. However if you don’t see one, just paint it in.

(Source: kelseyaslaug)

Gullfoss, the golden waterfall in South Iceland.

Gullfoss, the golden waterfall in South Iceland.

(Source: Flickr / jon_oskar, via uniformitarianism)

Gullfoss is one of the mighty waterfalls of Europe and part of the “Golden Circle” making it perhaps the most popular tourist attraction in Iceland. The falls are in the Hvítá River and have an average flow of 140m3 a second but during glacier floods it can rush up to around 2000m3 per second. The upper drop is 11m and the lower 21m. Early in the 20th Century there were serious plans of harnessing the energy in Gullfoss but luckily no powerplant was built and today the waterfall is protected.
theworldwelivein:

Alone at the Raging Waterfall of Gulfoss (by Trey Ratcliff)

Gullfoss is one of the mighty waterfalls of Europe and part of the “Golden Circle” making it perhaps the most popular tourist attraction in Iceland. The falls are in the Hvítá River and have an average flow of 140m3 a second but during glacier floods it can rush up to around 2000m3 per second. The upper drop is 11m and the lower 21m. Early in the 20th Century there were serious plans of harnessing the energy in Gullfoss but luckily no powerplant was built and today the waterfall is protected.

theworldwelivein:

Alone at the Raging Waterfall of Gulfoss (by Trey Ratcliff)

(via hellonoona)