Welcome to Iceland! That's the slogan some Icelandic travel websites use to greet foreign tourists. It seems to be working as waves of tourists are visting Iceland in record numbers.
Some go on glacier walks, take Northern Lights tours, the braver ones explore ice caves and trek to remote volcano sites. But there's a growing number of incidents involving tourists who either aren't prepared for Iceland's sometimes harsh northern latitude conditions or, worse, refuse to heed local weather advisories.
So Iceland's volunteer search and rescue teams have been especially busy this winter.
Alda Sigmundsdóttir, the blogger behind the Iceland Weather Report, says this has been the coldest, most storm-ridden winter in a decade.
But a recent incident really put the growing problem of stranded and helpless foreign tourists on the public radar:
"I can understand when tourists go out into the Icelandic weather and don't quite know what to expect — get themselves in a sticky situation and have to be rescued. I get that not everyone realizes the implications of travelling in Iceland. But this really gets up my nose," Sigmundsdóttir says. "Rescue teams are currently trying to reach two men who were traversing Vatnajökull glacier on cross-country skis and got caught in a nasty storm that I understand is blowing in Iceland as we speak. They have lost some of their equipment, including their tent."
Of course, such rescues are fairly routine. But this one comes with a twist.
"One of their fellow travellers had to be rescued a few days ago, as he was ill," Sigmundsdóttir adds. "So rescue teams went up there and got him. At the time they expressly told the other two that the weather forecast was terrible, and that they would do well to accompany them back to civilization. They refused. And now they have to be rescued. "
According to Iceland's Search and Rescue organization there are a few common sense guidelines to keep in mind when travelling around Iceland.
"When Icelanders say don't travel, there's going to be a storm, they [tourists] think it will be like back home, and it's usually quite a bit different, and worse," says Sigmundsdóttir. So she has a couple more suggestions. First, check out the Iceland's Safe Travel website, and secondly, "always heed the warnings of the locals!"
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