The waterfall, I was told, was called Oxararfoss.
It was not the largest waterfall I saw while I was in Iceland; that was Skogafoss, down in the south of the country, where I walked along the rocky beach below the cliffs until I came to the edge of the falls and let myself be drenched in the spray. Nor was it the waterfall I got to experience most intimately – that was Seljalandsfoss, where I walked up a flight of sturdy iron steps that leading behind the waterfall and found that on the other side, the trail’s improvements ended and all that awaited me were a series of sharp, water-slick rocks that had been worn away by the weight of other human feet.
By comparison, Oxararfoss felt small and domesticated. As, I suppose, it was: Oxararfoss had been sculpted by human hands during the settling of Iceland. The settlers diverted the river Oxara sometime in the 10th century and sent it tumbling over the continental ridge that forms the edge of Thingvellir, where the Icelandic parliament was established around the year 930. The resulting river traces a path through Thingvellir before emptying in Thingvallavatn, the largest lake in Iceland.
I didn’t know any of that at the time – a woman from Ásatrúarfelagið, whose midsummer blót I had come to see, told me of the waterfall’s history after I descended the trail back to the clearing where Ásatrúarfelagið had camped. The only thing I knew about the waterfall beforehand was that it existed: I had seen it, just for a moment, from the road leading out from Thingvellir, with only the crest of the falls appearing from behind the rocks. It seemed isolated from the rest of the valley at that distance, but in reality, a well-maintained wooden path led up a hill to the waterfall from the ground, and there was even a platform built out into the stream so visitors could get closer to the waterfall itself: another place where humans have altered the landscape to better fit our needs.
Still, fabricated, manufactured, artificial: these distinctions all disappear when one is in the presence of a waterfall.
A waterfall is nothing but water, rock, and gravity – three of the most unremarkable components of life on this planet. But their admixture entrances me like nothing else; the wonder of their constant movements, the calculation of how long and how much they have flowed, the study of the ways tiny clefts within the rock manifest later as massive columns of white water before they crash into the surface. Those things are harder to see with the massive waterfalls – they are too tall to observe easily. But as I stood before Oxararfoss, I could look for the details, could contemplate them, could empty myself of myself in their presence.
I stood there for ten or fifteen minutes, perhaps. Not much more than that. I was expecting my ride back to Reykjavik to arrive, and didn’t want to be lost up in the hills when he came, so I turned back. (He didn’t arrive for another two hours, but that’s neither here nor there.)
Rain fell in a lazy drizzle as I walked upon the wooden platforms leading back down to the campsite. Although I had been in Iceland for almost two weeks, cold rain in June still felt like a novelty; I closed my eyes and moved on with a smile. Oxararfoss still roared behind me.
Out of the wordless joy inside my mind, a thought surfaced: It will be wonderful to walk this trail again someday.
Then I stopped walking and opened my eyes, saw again the black and barren rocks of the continental divide and the wide gray sky. I saw the wet planks of the trail ahead of me, where I had been walking.
My grandfather had gone into the hospital just a few days before I left for my trip – he stepped on a nail and then, despite his diabetes, never went to the doctor until he couldn’t bear it anymore. He thought he would be in the hospital for an afternoon – a dose of antibiotics to knock down the gangrene in his foot and then he would be back home.
They cut off his leg just above the knee.
My grandfather was a carpenter, the kind who never really retires; as recently as two years ago, he got in trouble with the City of St. Louis for leaving a two-story-tall ladder propped against the rear of his house, just in case he felt the urge to go tar the roof again. There would be no more of that.
My grandfather will never see this, I thought to myself, that moment on the trail.
This shouldn’t have been a shocking revelation – my grandfather hadn’t gone anywhere more than a couple of hours away from St. Louis in twenty years, even before the surgery – but it was. He would never see Thingvellir. Even if I showed him the photographs, or explained to him the history of Iceland, he still wouldn’t understand what made this place important to me: that I had come here on pilgrimage, searching for gods hiding among the rocks and water and gravity. This was a part of my life I have kept hidden from him, and probably always will.
I began to walk again, and soon came back to the campsite, where there were hot dogs and cans of Egil’s Pilsner waiting. I opened one of those green cans, named for the poet and warrior Egil Skallagrimsson, and walked out a ways into the fields. It was nearly ten o’clock in the evening, but then, there is no such thing as nighttime during the summer in Iceland.
I looked back to the ridge above the clearing. I could see the wooden trail leading up to Oxararfoss, but it turned a corner near the top of the hill and vanished behind the rocks; the waterfall itself was entirely hidden. I would only see it again from the car as we left Thingvellir, tumbling over the rocks and down into a valley whose bottom I could not see.
(Author’s note: This column is the first in a series of pieces about my time in Iceland. I have chosen to anglicize the Icelandic names of places, though with a heavy heart, since I just spent two months learning how to pronounce them. For reference, the Icelandic names for the geographical features are Öxarárfoss, Skógafoss, Öxará, Þingvellir, and Þingvallavatn.)
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My deepest sympathy about your grand-dad. Mine suffered a similar amputation in the Fifties, and it too could have been avoided. With the state of medicine at the time he would have lost only a few toes, but there had to be a family conference over it, and by then… I hope yours is able to have a more active post-op life; prosthetics have advanced in fifty years. Blessed be.
He’s unfortunately as stubborn as they come, and hasn’t been willing to do the physical therapy to get to the point where they could try out a prosthetic. Maybe eventually he’ll come around.
Thank you for your sympathy.
You are getting good at making stories of you experiences. Story telling is an art form in itself. In the process you are becoming a good writer as well.
By the way, I am diabetic myself. It has to be treated as serious and I take it that way. Even so, I have had five operations on my right eye in a little more than a year, so that while I can still see well enough to get around, I no longer can read with that eye. Some day an operation is going to be necessary for the left eye and I have the eye surgeons scared of doing a simple cataract operation least it become a problem like the right eye.
So the day may come when I will have to give up reading and watching movies, so I read as much as I can and watch movies as I can, so that I will store up plenty of stuff to remember.
So stubborn though your grandfather may be, tell him to take being diabetic seriously. It is too dangerous to not pay attention to. It can kill people.
I’m very much looking forward to the rest of this series on Iceland! I love the way you tell stories.
Also, I’m very sorry about your grandfather. One of my aunts has diabetes and does not take it seriously as well, and it scares the daylights out of me. She’s gone into comas on three separate occasions, but still subsists on a diet of fast food and is haphazard about taking her medication.
Sounds like an amazing time and experience. I hope to go to Þingvellir some day, it captured my imagination the moment I first found out about its existence.
(I try to avoid anglicising names, it seems disrespectful to me.)
We actually had a discussion about it. My tendency is to keep them in the original, but it’s standard AP style to anglicize the names, and admittedly, it could be confusing for readers who are unfamiliar with the orthography to keep them in the original. (Just last night, my friend’s mother saw a postcard I brought back from Þingvellir and exclaimed, “Oh! It’s from Pingvollum!”) I think the compromise we have here – anglicized in the body, with an explanatory note – does a decent job of respecting both the original language and the nonspecialist reader.
I will follow in your steps in November. I am going ‘home’ to Iceland to connect to my roots. I envy you in your studies of Icelandic in formal setting. Here in SC it is a constant battle to practice between myself and my wife, with a few others that I run into. Be well and travel often. Gypsey
About your waterfall story–just wow!
I love photos of waterfalls, but for some reason, have never encountered any in the element.
About your grandfather: my father’s mother was a trial to her medical team and family: she was very non-compliant. There were complications already when she developed gangrene–can’t recall the details 40 years forward, and no one who’d know is left to ask. I think her leg was cut off just below the knee. The operation was a success, but the patient died, because she “turned her face to the wall”, as the ballads say.
May your grand-da’s stubbornness dissolve into compliance and reason, and may he live for happier times in better health. May Hecate illuminate his crossroads so that he may make the best possible choice(s).