The Eastfjords of Iceland by gravel bike
In the autumn of 2021, Benjamin Hardman, Chris Burkard, Steve Booker, and I sat out to cycle the Eastfjords of Iceland, unsupported. Why the East? Well, there are a few reasons such as its mouth watering topography and its gravel roads that skirt the beach but the chief reason is as follows: They are still unknown to the rest of the world.
Contrary to the Westfjords, the Eastfjords are not on every ‘must see’ blog about Iceland. Aside from the town of Seydisfjordur, with its rainbow sidewalk, there isn’t much out there about this area which is exactly why we’re here. It turned out to be such a memorable trip that I turned into a new book.
This is an excerpt of Vol 03 of Adventure Buddies which drops on November 15 (along with Vol 02)
“Adventure is giving adult means to childhood dreams.”
Sylvain Tesson, French Explorer
Its with with that quote in mind that we did the first pedal strokes out of the sleepy town of Seydisfjordur. It was a pretty glorious September day, the sun was out, and the road was almost dry (which is a luxury when riding in Iceland in the fall) as we began the lengthy climb out of the fjord.
Being now used to the Montana weather I’m not one to be opposed to a bit of rain here and there. Day two however, delivered a perfect Icelandic ‘Skitta-mix’ (Shit mix in Icelandic) of rain and wind that I never experienced before. We got an early start to avoid the bulk of the storm that was fast approaching, and I’m going let you into a little secret: there is always a storm approaching in Iceland, but we still got totally drenched, and blown off the road a handful of times. Our frame bags turned out to be very powerful sails in the sideways wind which made the handling of the bikes a bit… erratic.
Nevertheless we made it to our hotel just in time before the 60mph wind gusts started. There were so fierce that the waterfall behind the building started flowing upside down, the wind lifting its flow into the sky.
In the morning of our third day, after being gently rocked to sleep by the storm, we woke up to zero winds and clear skies. Iceland in a nutshell.
A few hours into Day three, we ran into these natural hot springs outside of Djúpivogur. It was a treat to get out of the headwind for a ‘hot’ minute.
We had already been cycling for 85 miles, most of them into a gruelling headwind, but Chris suggested we do a four mile detour to go ride on the beach near Hofn. You know, ‘that beach’. Sometimes in life you only have one shot at doing something, and when is the next time I’ll be within pedalling distance of this beach I’ve so frequently visited by car. I obliged, and I’m glad Chris insisted because, what a sunset it was…
Our last day wasn’t a walk in the park either. The weather had worsened and there was a fresh dusting of snow on the peaks above us. The headwind? Still blowing.
Still it was a relatively shorter day with about 45 miles to cover so we raided the breakfast buffet at the hotel, shoving three or four croissants in our pockets, saddled up and got on our way.
On the end of Day Four, with frozen toes and soaked pants, we reached our final destination — the Glacier Lagoon.
These images and journal entries, along with many more, will be included in the “The Eastfjords — by Sail Boat & Gravel Bike” limited edition photo book that releases on Nov 15 on Adventure Buddies. If you’re subscribed to my newsletter (thank you), you will get an invite to order before everyone else. If you are not a subscriber, feel free to subscribe below to get the order email.
Lost Valley - Where the National Park Isn't
Here is a story that has been in the making for more than a year… In fact, I became so enthralled with this trip that I turned into a photo-book titled “Lost Valley — Where The National Park Isn’t’" which is releasing on November 15 on Adventure Buddies. This is an excerpt of it with some juicy nuggets, if you will. The book will be 64 pages long and features many, many more photos.
In the summer of 2021, my friend Isaac Johnston and I were so fed up with how crowded our backyard had become since the beginning of the pandemic that we had to do something about it. For reference, we both live in Montana’s Flathead Valley, which is known for being the gateway into Glacier National Park, and upon close inspection we realized that everyone was congregating in the same places. The spots that were on Instagram, AllTrails, and blogs…
The beauty of that is that if you just ‘pull up’ a map and start looking the opposite direction of these spots you land on an insane amount of space to roam free, un-encumbered by the droves of people also trying to have a nice time outside.
Our thinking was simple but effective: If there are more than 500,000,000 acres of public land within the U.S, why are we all stuck in the same 100,000 acres? Why don’t we go the opposite direction of Glacier National Park? And that’s exactly what we did.
DAY 1: #3 NO TRESPASSING
Because we’re walking straight south towards the river in an area that has no marked trails, we’ve had to jump a few fences. We still haven’t seen anyone, just wildlife.
In one of our fence jumping episodes, we’ve run into a man called Wacey Cathy who owns a cattle ranch. Instead of kicking us out of his ranch he’s offered us water and showed us around.
Since there are very few people down here they’re actually happy to meet us. The less of us around, the more we have time for each other it seems.
Funny anecdote about us trespassing into Wacey Cathy’s ranch — Isaac ended up coming back and making a film and photo series about their family. You never know where these trips will take you…
DAY 2: #6 RIVER FORD
Isaac thought it would be fun to ford this smaller arm of the river and I agreed. Since there was nowhere to go on the other side, he forded back and I got some photos. This is a common pattern of our trips together — his appetite for trying things always makes for good photos or at least stories.
DAY 2: Entry #10 BIG BOI CAMP
We sat up our second camp right on the shores of the river, as is tradition, so we can have unlimited water for drinking, cooking, and our evening tisanes. As we’re sitting on our pads, we hear a ruckus in the bushes below. There is no doubt, a large animal is approaching behind us and the night is falling…
DAY 3: Entry #16 WILDFLOWERS
Around mid-day the sky is entirely covered in clouds and the light is so gloomy it looks like its going to rain. Luckily, the dirt road we’re following is littered in mood-lifting wild flowers. Only a few miles to the end.
These images and journal entries, along with many more, will be included in the “Lost Valley — Where The National Park Isn’t” limited edition photo book that releases on Nov 15 on Adventure Buddies. If you’re subscribed to my newsletter (thank you), you will get an invite to order before everyone else. If you are not a subscriber, feel free to subscribe below to get the order email.
So, who’s planning to get the new book?!
Introducing Adventure Buddies, The Zine
Nearly three years in the making, 250 un-released images, 500 miles on a bike across the Montana Wilderness. That is my new zine, “Adventure Buddies: #01 Road To Friendship”, in a nutshell.
It is going to be a very limited run and the first 300 copies are going to be very special. If you don’t want to miss the release please sign up here.
Since our falling out in early 2018, my friend Isaac Johnston and I were looking for an ‘epic’ shared adventure to take our friendship to new depths — the kind of expedition that would put us through the lowest lows and the highest highs. From my experience, it is in these situations that we grow the most.
We had grand dreams of South American travel but the reality was that in the summer of 2020, we couldn’t travel anywhere… So I dusted off my idea log and found this idea to cycle across Montana, North to South, using the most remote trails that existed. Isaac was so enthralled with the idea that he built a rough itinerary over a weekend. Our grand adventure became real, very quickly.
The plan was to load our bikes to be completely self sufficient for the longest amount of time, stop when we were hungry or tired, set up camp by a water source, and bring the least amount of camera gear as possible. Oh, and have a good time… In the end, it’s only cycling.
The zine is coming out mid June of this year and I’ll be sharing more updates in the coming days. This won’t be a pre-order— the entire run is being printed right now and will ship within 3-4 days after the launch. In the meantime, here are a handful of frames of the layout!