Iceland is home to a number of curious natural spectacles
providing a constant source of surprise to visitors all year round. You can
experience it yourself by travelling with Glacial Experience on a private tour.
Apart from the long, dark nights of winter and those
sensational northern lights, which illuminate the night skies between September
and April every year, Iceland is one of the few places in the world where you
can observe the midnight sun. During the summer months (from mid-May to
mid-August), Iceland is flooded with daylight for almost twenty-four hours a
day and for a short span of time in June, the sun is still visible at midnight
– a phenomena known as the midnight sun. The light is mostly direct but there
are a few short hours before dawn when the sun remains dipped just below the
horizon casting an enchanting glow in the skies behind the mountains and beyond
the sea.
The midnight sun, which can be observed in Iceland and other
countries with high latitudes such as Greenland and Norway, happens as a result
of the Earth’s axis which is tilted towards the sun during the summer. The
effect is reversed at the South Pole, and also during the winter when it’s
tilted away from the sun giving us those long dark days instead.
If you’re wondering how on earth we sleep, the answer is we
either use blackout blinds or sleep masks. Sometimes we don’t even bother and
stay awake to enjoy the midnight sun and those few magical hours before dawn.
For
more details visit our site: Iceland highlands tour, Iceland
private tour,
Gullfoss waterfall tour, Iceland Super jeep tour, South Coast tour, Luxury travel Iceland, Ring road tours & Reykjavík tours.

No comments:
Post a Comment