Ísafjörður Airport in Iceland
Ísafjörður Airport in Iceland
Ísafjörður Airport in Iceland
Welcome to the Night's watch
I've played enough KSP to know that's a good location to crash.
Looks tough to go around
Or land when the wind shifts direction.
Or land when the wind isn’t shifting directions.
But after you land, where do you go
Isafjordur town. It's like a mile up the road.
For a dip
Along that road out the bottom of the picture around the bottom of the fjord to the town of Ísafjörður which is not far out of view on the left.
Bet it's windy
It can be. I had to wait until the next day for a flight before because it was way too dangerous to take off.
The plane was shaking all over the place on the runway. It's only little propeller things that go there. Think it was a Fokker 50.
Love myself a cool, arctic breeze
Steep hills right by the ocean definitely do tell a clear story, don't they? Just the sort of place where air smacks into an unmovable object and creates swirls.
I love smacking an unmovable object. Especially one that jiggles.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9QbWCB8AzLA
Pilot POV landing.
What is the missed approach procedure for this airport?
Don't
I checked on google maps and it wouldn't be a problem. About 1km away, there's a recycling station and a cemetery with lots of room.
Pull the flight yoke back like you're trying to relocate it to the aft part of the cargo compartment and gun it. The air definitely looks cold and dense enough to do some impressive things with your aircraft, but I wonder what the elevation is.
Should be about sea level.
(The top of the cliff is, assuming Google maps is halfway accurate, about 600 meters)
Left! Immediately!
Not missed approach, but Wikipedia talks about an aircraft that had an engine explode on takeoff from here. The pilot decided that it would be better to fly to the next airport over rather than attempt to land here.
I'd hate to land there when it's foggy
What time is sunrise this time of year?
Feb. 12.
Left hand pattern.
Cool as hell.... Would drink a warm cup of coffee to it...
I thought this looked familiar!
We drove past this airport on our way to Dynjandi waterfall - I saw a video of this waterfall online and it largely inspired our entire trip to Iceland (plus cheap direct flights in the peak of Icelandic tourism in the beforefore times, pre-COVID.)
That afternoon we also went and visited the Icelandic Sea Monster Museum in Bíldudalur.
But hands down, our favorite part of our trip was visiting a hot spring spa that also specializes in baking rye bread 🤤
We spent half of our trip exploring the Westfjords, I'd love to go back to Iceland someday to do more exploring in other parts of the country. And to go back to Laugarvatn Fontana!
I hope you didn't miss the amazing fish restaurant there, Tjoruhusid. This restaurant quite literally converted me into a seafood lover. Check out the reviews on it, if you haven't heard of it.
I'd go back just to eat here, haha. I spent a few months in the Westfjords. I'd love to go back. I was out in the middle of nowhere, though, most of the time.
Dang, we definitely missed that restaurant! I'll add it to the list because I'm determined to go back to Iceland some day.
It's the Antarctic ice wall!
Enlighten me as to why this airport is equited as opposed to using aircraft that can land on water
Likely for the same reasons that any airport near a body of water is built. Layman's guesses would be ease of embarking/disembarking, less likely to be affected by weather, standard airplanes are more common...
It's Ísafjörður (ice fjord).
Username checks out
Thank you. Fixed.
Almost!
Icelanding spelling seems like a nightmare. Not like English is any better tho
The only good thing about English spelling is I don't have to worry about diacritic marks
Slowly learning Icelandic, with vague intentions of moving there. Icelandic is fairly phonetically written: most letters produce the same sound no matter their location. By comparison, spoken English has changed drastically from it's written equivalent: there have been spelling reforms in Icelandic, and basically none in English
Its actually not even that hard. You have to learn a few extra characters but they make sense.