Inspired by Iceland
SEEDS 66. Djúpavík. Where the Northern Road Ends!
West Fjords
SEEDS Iceland
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From 21.08.2011 to 04.09.2011
Type: Environmental / Construction
Number of volunteers: 10
Language: English - high proficiency is not required
Accomodation: Local summer house
Participation fee: 180 EUR
Extra: Kayak trips in the fjord, visit to the area, isolated pool in Krossnes & other activities

WORK/PROJECT: In Djúpavík there is an old abandoned herring factory which needs to be maintained, the main tasks this year will be to clean its rooftops. The building is used now by artists and to host diverse cultural events. Furthermore volunteers will be cleaning the coastline between Djúpavíkkurkleif and Stekkjarnes. And finally, if time allows, volunteers will be help locals with some gardening work.

ACCOMMODATION: Volunteers will be hosted in a local summer house, sleeping on bunk beds in shared rooms. Please bring your own sleeping bag. Volunteers will receive food and be in charge of the cooking and cleaning activities. Equipped kitchen and washing machine are available. Do not forget some traditional/typical food from your home country for the international evening.

LOCATION: Djúpavík is located at the head of Reykjarfjörður on the Strandir coast in the Westfjords region (Vestfirðir), in the municipality of Árneshreppur. It is perhaps one of Iceland's most remote areas, it is a sheltered bay in a remote region, largely untouched by modern developments where silence reigns and nature continues to shape a rugged, mountainous landscape. The distance from the capital is around 360 km.

You can hardly get further away from the bustle of the towns to enjoy life in the beautiful and peaceful landscapes of this remote area. The bay Djúpavík is among the least frequented parts of the country. The roads up there are only open during the few months of the short summer; it is one of the remotest corners of Europe, where the coastline is covered with vast expanses of driftwood that originated on the other side of the Arctic Ocean, in Russian Siberia; the region is stunningly beautiful and somewhere to really experience Iceland's wildness.

There has been small farming communities in the district for hundreds of years, but the story of Djúpavík really began in 1915, when Elías Stefánsson started a herring salting station; that worked until 1919 when he went bankrupt; then a herring factory built in 1934 changed the lives of the people for a few years until the last big catches were landed about 20 years later.

Djúpavík is dominated by the huge ruins of its old herring factory and the rusting shipwreck of the 100-year-old former passenger and cargo ship Suðurland. When the herring industry was at its height in the mid-1940s, hundreds lived in this remote location, women salting the fish, men turning the remains into animal meal and oil. The factory went bankrupt in 1954 following a disastrous collapse in fish catches, but the huge costs involved in demolishing the building -once the largest concrete structure in Europe- means that its huge shell remains, reminiscent of a Hollywood set.

Few years ago, world-famous Icelandic band Sigur Rós held a small number of concerts in Iceland. The venues were specially chosen, and the old herring factory in Djúpavík was one of them.

TERMINAL: Closest international Airport: Keflavík/Reykjavík (KEF)

SEEDS organises the 'minibus option', a shared transport from Reykjavík to the camps and vice-versa, which apart from being cheaper and more convenient, allows volunteers to meet fellow campers and have a relaxed trip, while stopping on the way for interesting and tourist sites.

AGE: 18+

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