Land of fire and ice: Iceland
9 June 2025 – 8 days for £3,999 per person
18 October 2025 – 8 days for £3,699 per person
Join an unforgettable tour of Iceland’s majestic landscapes, timed to give you days filled with volcanic and geological adventure, and evening opportunities to see the aurora borealis (October). Discover the awe-inspiring might of our planet and marvel at the sights, sounds and smells of erupting geysers, hot springs and bubbling fumaroles.
Iceland is one of the most volcanically active places in the world, sitting atop the mid-Atlantic Ridge, where the Eurasian and North American tectonic plates meet. The country is renowned for its dramatic landscapes, including geysers, glaciers, waterfalls and volcanoes.
During the tour, get up close and learn about remarkable geological processes and volcanology with your accompanying expert, Dave McGarvie (June) or Tamsin Mather (October).
Dave is a volcanologist who has spent nearly three years doing fieldwork on 21 of Iceland’s active volcanoes. He will join for the full tour in June 2025.
Tamsin is a professor of Earth sciences at the University of Oxford; she will accompany you for the first three days of the tour in October 2025. She specialises in the role of volcanism in planetary scale processes throughout geological time and has shared her expertise on radio and TV, as well as at ×îÐÂÂ鶹ÊÓƵ Live.
During this time, Tamsin and Dave will offer lectures and walking seminars, engaging you in learning about the landscapes around you and how they were formed. You will also be accompanied by an Icelandic tour leader chosen for their broad knowledge of Iceland, as well as their skills in ensuring all guests have a thoroughly enjoyable experience. Their expertise not only covers volcanoes, geology and glaciers, but also Icelandic history, culture and politics.
In partnership with Intrepid Travel.
DAY 1: ARRIVE IN REYKJAVIK
Welcome to Iceland! Check in to the Hotel Reykjavik Saga and meet your tour leader and fellow guests, followed by a tour briefing.
In the evening, your accompanying expert will give the first of three talks on Iceland’s formation at the centre of the North Atlantic Ocean and the volcanic processes demonstrated across the island.
Your accompanying expert and tour leader will then join you for a group dinner in the hotel.
DAY 2: GOLDEN CIRCLE TO HVOLSVÖLLUR VALLEY VIA GEYSIR AND THE GULLFOSS WATERFALL
Today, you will visit Þingvellir National Park, the site of Iceland's first parliament, founded in 930, and a geological wonder where the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates are pulling apart. Next, head to Iceland's Geysir geothermal area, where you will see the Strokkur geyser shoot water 30 metres into the air. The immense beauty and sheer power of the Gullfoss waterfall, also known as Golden Falls, can be spell-binding. After seeing that, you will continue on to the Hvolsvöllur valley.
Tonight, you will check in to the Hotel Stracta, a four-star hotel near the south coast, for two nights. It is situated far away from the city and is an ideal location from which to observe the northern lights. If the skies are clear tonight, why not take a stroll out into the snow and look skywards for the dancing green shimmer? (October departure only).
Your accompanying expert will then give a second talk on their work around the world and the findings from their research.
DAY 3: HVOLSVÖLLUR AREA, INCLUDING THE GÍGJÖKULL GLACIER
After breakfast, meet your Superjeep drivers and head to the elegant Seljalandsfoss waterfall. Walk behind the plummeting stream without getting (too) wet, for a unique viewing angle.
After drying off, continue to the legendary Thórsmörk valley, nestled between three glaciers, with a stop at the Gígjökull glacier further up the valley. Here, you will be able to observe the rock destruction caused by extreme glacial melt during the 2010 eruption of the glacier volcano Eyjafjallajökull. It is truly a magnificent site. made all the more engaging by your accompanying expert, who will bring to life and explain the powerful forces behind the eruption.
In Superjeeps, you will cross the deep and roaring rivers that guard the wooded surroundings of Thórsmörk, and you will have time to hike around the area and admire some of the many viewpoints it offers. Thórsmörk is Iceland‘s most popular hiking area and visitors are captivated by its natural beauty and charm.
At the end of the day, return to the Hotel Stracta, where your accompanying expert will give a third talk on some of the amazing sites you will visit later in the tour.
DAY 4: SOUTH COAST – SKÓGAFOSS AND KVERNUFOSS WATERFALLS, THEN JÖKULSÁRLÓN GLACIER LAGOON
Start the day with a trip to the eerily beautiful Skógafoss waterfall. It is one of the biggest waterfalls in Iceland, stretching 25 metres wide and 60 metres in height. You can get up close to feel its power and also climb a windy set of stairs up to a stunning viewpoint. On a sunny day, you should be able to spot rainbows in the spray. If you are feeling lively, you can take the 30-minute walk to Kvernufoss waterfall, the less visited but equally beautiful neighbour of Skógafoss.
Continue along Iceland's south shore to take in more of the country’s renowned natural wonders. From the stepping-stone rock formations of Reynisdrangar, the promontory of Dyrhólaey and the black-sand beach of Reynisfjara, this is one of the country's most scenic regions. En route, you will pass the lava of the Laki eruption of 1782 to 1783.
In the afternoon, you will visit the famous Jökulsárlón glacier lagoon, a stunning sea of floating icebergs with blues that contrast vividly with the charcoal-coloured sand of the beach.
You will rest for the night at the stylish Fosshotel glacier lagoon. Weather permitting, there will be another opportunity to step outside to witness the natural wonders of the northern lights, and this rural location away from town lights will make the phenomena much brighter.
DAY 5: VATNAJÖKULL GLACIER
Today, you will visit Europe's biggest ice cap, Vatnajökull, which has around 30 glaciers flowing out from it. It is sobering to think that the ice cap has been shrinking because of global warming, and in future years the glaciers may be gone. You will arrive by Superjeep, take a short 30-minute walk and, depending on weather conditions, you will either walk across some of the glacier or visit a stunning ice cave underneath it. No experience is necessary to partake in the hike, but if you would like to opt out, just embark on a hike to the glacier's tongue or return to the glacier lagoon at Jökulsárlón or Fjallsárlón.
Later on today, journey to the black-sand seaside town of Vik for lunch. With the sea on one side and high cliffs on the other, this quaint, dramatically positioned village is Iceland's most southerly mainland settlement.
In the evening, you will check into the family-run Hotel Dyrhólaey, near the town of Vik, but in a rural location ideal for experiencing the night sky.
Please note that the total driving distance is approximately 250 kilometres (lasting 3 to 4 hours). Today's glacier walk is dependent on weather conditions. In addition, in order to be able to fit the ice crampons, you will need to wear high ankle boots.
DAY 6: LAVA CENTRE, THE SECRET LAGOON AND REYKJAVIK
This morning, you will make your way to the Lava Centre, which is an interactive, high-tech educational exhibition depicting volcanic activity, earthquakes and the creation of Iceland over millions of years. The centre introduces the Katla Geopark, plus Iceland’s elaborate monitoring system for surveying volcanos and earthquake zones. After the visit, you will continue to the Secret Lagoon natural hot springs. Located in a small village called Flúðir, this will give you the opportunity to relax in the warm thermal waters before travelling to Reykjavik and checking back into the hotel, where the remainder of the day will be at your leisure.
DAY 7: REYKJANES PENINSULA
Head out to the Reykjanes peninsula. It is a land-based, highly volcanic counterpart of the mid-Atlantic ridge, where two tectonic plates part at an average rate of more than 2 centimetres per year. Four volcanic systems and fissure swarms line the peninsula and contain open fissures, high-temperature geothermal fields and volcanic fissures.
The final itinerary will be decided on the day, but is likely to include Gunnuhver (mud pools and steam vents), Stampar (volcanic fissures), the bridge between continents (where two continental plates are diverging) and Seltún (a high-temperature geothermal area). Although there is currently no fresh lava at the recently erupted Fagradalsfjal volcano, we also think this is well worth a visit.
On the final evening, there is a farewell dinner with your tour leader in the hotel, to celebrate your exploration of Iceland.
DAY 8: DEPART REYKJAVIK
Today is the departure day and time to say "sjáumst". Your group departure transfer will take you to the airport for your flight home.