Sæból at Ingjaldssandur in the Westfjords of Iceland - my Grandmother's Birthplace
I want to dedicate this 200th travel-blog of mine here on Guide to Iceland to a very remote valley in the beautiful Westfjords of Iceland- the birthplace of my maternal grandmother, Kristbjörg Guðmundsdóttir.
This remote valley is called Ingjaldssandur and is located in Önundarfjörður fjord.
To reach Ingjaldssandur we drive on the northern side of Dýrafjörður fjord, pass Núpur, drive into Gerðhamradalur valley and up on Sandsheiði heath, on a narrow, winding gravel road, and down into Brekkudalur.
Top photo: Sæbólskirkja church
Driving into the fog on the mountain not knowing where the next turn was!
We had a family reunion back in 2010 at Núpur in Dýrafjörður close by Ingjaldssandur and spent one day at Ingjaldssandur, which is called Sandur for short by those who know it well. My mother and I arrived early and drove to Ingjaldssandur to check it out.
She had never been to the Westfjords before and after my grandmother left her birthplace and met my grandfather in 1943 in Reykjavík she never returned to her birthplace in the Westfjords.
I was always told as a young girl that we could not go to the Westfjords as the roads are high up and winding and very bumpy gravel roads.
Well, since the reunion back in 2010 I have spent quite a few days in the Westfjords of Iceland and always look forward to revisiting it in the summertime.
The emergency shelter
On the day my mother and I visited Ingjaldssandur for the first time it was overcast and we drove so high up the windy road in the mountain pass at Sandsheiði heath that we were way up in the clouds - it was quite scary as we didn't know the road, which takes you some 530 meters above sea level!
We thought to ourselves what on earth we had gotten ourselves into and when we saw the orange emergency shelter in the clouds we almost lost our courage - but there was no other way than to go straight forward... into the fog... not knowing what lay behind it.
The view of the lovely Ingjaldssandur
Fortunately, by then we were close to the descent from the mountain and soon we were out of the clouds and the beautiful valley of Ingjaldssandur opened up. Finally, we were able to see the birthplace of my mother's mother :)
I was so happy when I spotted the lovely little white church - of which I had seen so many photos.
The day after the whole extended family (some 170 people) drove over this mountain in beautiful weather - it was quite strange seeing a long line of cars driving up this winding mountain road - so remote in the Westfjords of Iceland!
The view of Ingjaldssandur
Ingjaldssandur was once home to more than 100 people including a family of 10, to whom my grandmother belonged.
My grandmother, who was born on the 1st of April 1923, was born in a turf house at Sæból, right by the open sea - and later on, a concrete house was built, which is still standing.
All Icelanders used to live in a turf house, rich and poor, and it wasn't until the mid-20th century that the last inhabitants moved out of the turf houses - things sure have changed in my country.
And they changed relatively quickly as my generation, who was born in Reykjavík city, thought it was so strange that people had actually been living in these turf houses.
With my mother at Ingjaldssandur back in 2010
I wonder what it must have been like living so close to the open sea, especially during the long, dark, and cold winters with the icy wind blowing from the open sea.
I want to tell you the story of just one family of many, who have lived in this remote place through the centuries. Just imagine how many other stories there are to tell from the thousand years of habitation in Ingjaldssandur!
My great-grandparents, Guðmundur Guðmundsson (1889) and Ingibjörg Guðmundsdóttir (1890) had met at Hvanneyri in West Iceland, where my great-grandfather was studying to become an agriculturist. She had already graduated as a "rjómabústýra" - manager of a creamery, from Hvítárvellir in Borgarfjörður and worked at the creamery at Hvanneyri.
My great-grandparents who lived at Ingjaldssandur
Ingibjörg was born at the beautiful Hellnar in Snæfellsnes, but Guðmundur was born at Kleifar in Seyðisfjörður in the Westfjords and lived in 8 places in the Westfjords before he moved to Sæból.
I have written another travel-blog about when he got caught in a big avalanche in 1910 in Hnífsdalur in the Westfjords when he worked as a fisherman on the motorboat Vonin.
When the land at Sæból at Ingjaldssandur became available Ingibjörg moved away from her family in West Iceland to reunite with her fiancé and become a farmer in this remote valley way up in the Westfjords. They had hoped for land in the fertile Borgarfjörður, but no land was to be had there.
Sæbólskirkja church back in 2010 when it still had the neon cross. It was changed back to a Celtic cross the following year
Guðmundur and Ingibjörg had 8 children together; 7 daughters and 1 son, and all but their son and the eldest daughter were later to move to Reykjavík and the surrounding areas in South-West Iceland.
Guðmundur and Ingibjörg got married in Sæbólskirkja church in 1915 and lived for 31 years at Sæból in Ingjaldssandur on farming and fishing. In 1946 they moved to the southwest corner of Iceland, where most of their daughters already lived and for some time they worked at Kolviðarhóll.
Their only son, Sigurvin, bought the land from his parents and continued to live at Sæból.
A family photo of my maternal grandmother's siblings and parents - the last sibling died in 2022
Guðmundur wrote his memoirs, which are invaluable to us, his descendants. He was also an excellent poet and wrote several poems about Ingjaldssandur, where his love for this valley shines through.
My grandmother, who is 3rd from the left in the upper line in the photo above, first visited Reykjavík in 1939 at the age of 16.
In 1940 my grandmother returned back to the Westfjords, only to find out that she was pregnant at the age of 17, without even knowing about it until she gave birth to a baby daughter one night. My great-grandparents raised her daughter, Guðrún Björk (my aunt) and she lived at Sæból until she was 15 years old.
My grandmother to the right in the photo and her sister Árný at the hospital in Ísafjörður
My grandmother stayed at Sæból in Ingjaldssandur until 1942, when she went to work at the hospital at Ísafjörður, the largest town of the Westfjords.
In 1943 she returned to Reykjavík to work in the kitchen of Tjarnarkaffi restaurant.
There, back in 1943, when she was 20 years old, she met a scrawny-looking fellow, Jens Pétur Thomsen, whom she was told to feed as he only weighed 47 kilos at the time, she told me.
My maternal grandparents
Pétur Thomsen was 1/4 Danish, which makes me 1/16 Danish.
He and my grandmother stayed together until he died in 1988 (she died 20 years later in 2008) had 2 children together, and worked as photographers in Reykjavík.
These lovely people were of great importance in my life :)
Ingjaldssandur
Now back to Ingjaldssandur... this remote place was only accessible in the wintertime by boat and later by plane. The valley has mountains on 3 sides and the open sea - it must have been very secluded back then - and still is in the wintertime.
They could also "ganga fjörurnar" walk on the beaches when the tide was out.
In my great-grandfather's memoirs, I read that often drift ice from Greenland would drift to Ingjaldssandur, and my great-grandfather mentions how interesting it was to see these huge icebergs so close to land.
One year the drift ice carried with it around a hundred trees, most of them 19 feet long! The trees were a great asset back then as Iceland is severely lacking in trees. This wood was used to build houses and as firewood.
On the beach at Ingjaldssandur
Sometimes the drift ice brings with it stray polar bears to Iceland, but I am glad that didn't happen to my family at Ingjaldssandur! But while visiting Strandir in the Westfjords I heard an account of a polar bear at Ingjaldssandur, which was killed and filled with straws.
Even though my grandmother lived by the open sea she never learnt how to swim - it was not customary back then to teach people how to swim, now every child in Iceland learns how to swim and almost every town and village in Iceland has got its own geothermal swimming pool. These swimming pools are very characteristic of Iceland.
Sæból at Ingjaldssandur
Only one farmer is left in Ingjaldssandur now, who lives in the valley all year round, Elísabet Pétursdóttir or Bettý, is her name. She moved to Sæból II back in 1989 and lives in the house built by my great-uncle Sigurvin.
Do pay her a visit - she knits and sells woolen goods, like sweaters and socks, which she knits during the long, dark winters - so if you want to buy an authentic piece of Icelandic woolen goods then you will find the real deal at Sæból at Ingjaldssandur :)
My husband playing with Bettý's dog and bottle lambs
I read an article in Bændablaðið in October 2018 that Elísabet had finally got a connection again to the outside world. She was without a TV connection for 2 years and didn't have the best internet and phone connection.
Now there are plans of putting fiber optics in the valley.
I was happy to see that Bændablaðið - the Farmers' Magazine used one of my photos of Ingjaldssandur in their article :)
Beautiful Sæbólskirkja church
At Sæból in Ingjaldssandur, almost right by the sea, you will notice a lovely white church, Sæbólskirkja church, consecrated on the 29th of September 1929. The churchyard was consecrated in 1932.
I find the Celtic cross on Sæbólskirkja church so pretty - it is so characteristic of the church.
The first mention of a church here is from around the year 1200. I found a memorial stone in the old churchyard with a plaque. There it says that the last church to be built on the old church site was erected in 1858.
Inside Sæbólskirkja church
That church blew away in a big storm on January 25th, 1924. I remember my grandmother telling me a story of a big storm back in 1924, which swept the older church away and broke it to pieces.
At that time my grandmother was only 1 year old. That big storm was called Halaveðrið.
My great-grandfather describes this storm in detail in his memoirs. Many church objects were lost :(
Inside Sæbólskirkja church
The noted State architect Guðjón Samúelsson designed the new concrete church and the noted sculptor (which I adore) Guðmundur Einarsson from Miðdalur created the bowl in the baptismal font.
The artwork of Guðmundur is very valuable today. I own two pieces by him which I inherited from my grandfather.
The baptismal font - ceramic bowl by Guðmundur from Miðdalur
Belonging to the church is a paten from 1736 and an old copper chandelier from 1649 can be found in the church - which is very old for Iceland.
14 Danish names are engraved on the chandelier - it is believed to have been a donation from a ship crew, which got saved from danger at sea by Ingjaldssandur.
There are many such stories in Iceland, of foreign ships being saved - or lost at sea - by Iceland.
The old copper chandelier
Jón Sveinn Jónsson, the farmer at Sæból, carved the pews and altar rails.
I love visiting these small farm churches, to me, they are pure gems dotted around the countryside.
I sit inside and make a prayer and think about all the history made in these churches.
My uncle, Rev. Birgir Thomsen in Sæbólskirkja church
Above is a photo I took at the family reunion when my uncle, Rev. Birgir Thomsen, held a service for his relatives in the Sæbólskirkja church during our visit to Ingjaldssandur.
The cross of light is dedicated to Rev. Sigtryggur Guðlaugsson (1862-1959) from Núpur, who is believed to have made 900 trips over Sandsheiði heath to serve his congregation during his 33 years of service!
Sæbólskirkja church - corrugated roofs are so typical for Iceland
When electricity came to the valley in 1967, an electric cross was put on the church. But the weather being as it is at Ingjaldssandur then the light bulbs kept exploding.
So in 2011 when Sæbólskirkja church was being repaired a new Celtic cross was erected instead of the electric cross.
I don't know why Guðjón Samúelsson chose a Celtic cross for Sæbólskirkja, but prominent shapes in Sæbólskirkja are the arch shapes.
Maybe he wanted an arch-shaped cross as well to complement the arch-shaped forms in the church. Celtic signs are also carved and painted on the pews in the liking of the Celtic cross.
Celtic carvings in the pews
When Guðmundur Hagalín lived at Sæból, he visited the burial mound of Ingjaldur Brúnason, the settler of Ingjaldssandur. The burial mound is located on Mt. Barði.
The story goes that in burial mounds money is hidden and they are not to be tampered with.
Guðmundur once started searching for money in the burial mound; he looked back to Ingjaldssandur and saw that the church was on fire!
Inside Sæbólskirkja church looking out
He hurried back to Sæból, but when he got back there was no fire. Since then the burial mound of Ingjaldur has not been tampered with.
There are several such accounts of churches being on fire when spots with spells on them have been tampered with.
(From the book Álög og bannhelgi by Árni Óla)
Ruins at Ingjaldssandur
Ingjaldssandur got its name from the settler of this area, Ingjaldur Brúnason. His great-grandson was Ljótur hinn spaki - Ljótur the tame, who lived at Álfadalur at Ingjaldssandur and got killed there.
There is accommodation available at Sæból farm III with all the modern amenities.
I would love to stay here for the night to get away from all the stress factors of modern life and experience the silence and tranquillity in a remote valley in the Westfjords of Iceland.
Family reunion at Ingjaldssandur
One day of the family reunion my extended family - the descendants of my great-grandparents who had lived at Sæból in Ingjaldssandur - visited Ingjaldssandur and spent a whole sunny day in the valley.
On that day this remote place came alive again, much like it must have been back when there were 100 people living here.
My photos above and below are from the family reunion - notice the pink sand, which is characteristic of the Westfjords.
Family reunion at Ingjaldssandur
The whole of Iceland, apart from the Westfjords, the Snæfellsnes peninsula, and Akranes town, has got black lava sand beaches. I remember listening to my grandmother in awe when she told us about the PINK beaches of her birthplace - how I wanted to see this pink sand, especially as pink was my favourite colour back then :)
We were so lucky that the weather was so fine, sunny, and lovely all day long, that we could have a barbecue and picnic outside by the community meeting house Vonaland.
My second cousin Ingibjörg waiving from Vonaland. My great-grandmother's name, Ingibjörg, lives on in my extended family
Once a year there are festivities in Ingjaldssandur by Vonaland during the first weekend of August when the Sandaballið ball takes place and the valley fills up with people having fun.
I so want to join one year, but my husband is an entertainer so it is difficult as he is always working during this long weekend, which is the busiest travel weekend in Iceland.
The Waterfall Ósómi
The waterfall Ósómi
When visiting Ingjaldssandur don't forget to walk behind the hidden-away waterfall, Ósómi. Ósómi means indecency in Icelandic, but it can also mean the Resonance of the mouth of the river or the source, which I find to be more likely in this case.
It is best to leave the car by the bridge at Þverá river and walk down by the river, which creates beautiful smaller waterfalls until you reach the part of the river where you can actually walk behind the waterfall - see my photo below.
The waterfall Ósómi
The weather was so smashing that I decided on washing my hair in the waterfall - I just stuck my head in and let the water do the work - it was just heavenly.
It made me wonder if my grandmother and her sisters had done the same thing and I am sure they did. If only these surroundings could talk, I bet they had many a romantic story to tell ;)
I wished I had paid more attention when my grandmother was telling me stories, I remember a lot, but as I had never visited Ingjaldssandur back then, then I didn't know the surroundings.
The waterfall Ósómi
What I remember her telling me is the elves (hidden people) which she had seen and talked to! And her eldest sister even wrote down her encounter with an elf woman she met in the valley.
Back then it was nothing out of the ordinary to have encounters with the elves. I am still hoping to be able to see an elf one day in nature. I often converse with the beings in waterfalls, but I have not yet seen an elf in nature.
There is a "álagablettur" a spot with a spell on it at Ingjaldssandur. There are many such spots all over Iceland, which we Icelanders respect and would never think of tampering with.
As we all know that if you tamper with the spell of such places bad things will happen. Often elves live in these spots and by f.ex. by moving the grass we disturb the elves or ruin parts of their homes.
Ruins at Ingjaldssandur
Here in Villingadalur at Ingjaldssandur lived Jón Jónsson from Sæból (around 1886). Jón didn't want to believe in such old stories and moved the spell spot and gathered the hay; this was strictly forbidden.
The same year, on the 20th of December, Jón got killed in an avalanche. A search party of 4 men also got caught in an avalanche and two of them got killed.
(From the book Álög og bannhelgi by Árni Óla - from the manuscript collection of Magnús Hj. Magnússon).
Ingjaldssandur
I found another account in the same book about a rock with a spell on it. The rock was by the door of a sheep barn at the farm Háls (close to Ósómi waterfall); it was forbidden to tamper with it or move it or else the sheep would die.
The rock caused problems for the farmers as snow would gather by it in the wintertime.
A farmer, Vilhjálmur Jónsson at the farm Háls, didn't believe in this old tale and moved the rock. The following winter after a sudden thaw the sheep barn got filled with meltwater, which killed all the sheep bar one!
Vilhjálmur moved away from the farm after this incident.
The road leading to Ingjaldssandur
After visiting the waterfall it was time to return back. On top of the mountain was a sign saying that the descent was 12% over 4 km.
And just look at the height of the poles which measure the depth of the snow, they are as tall as I am (1.66 m)! Now we can see why there is no driving to Ingjaldssandur in the wintertime during heavy snowfall!!
My last photo is taken on the other side of the mountain as we were returning back down the winding road and into Dýrafjörður fjord.
The view of Dýrafjörður returning from Ingjaldssandur
If you rent a car in Reykjavík and drive up to the Westfjords, then Ingjaldssandur is located some 496 km away from our capital city. There are many interesting stops on the way, so I would advise you to make the most of the journey and spend several days exploring the Westfjords.
If you want to visit the Westfjords then there are plenty of tours to choose from once you are there.
I have joined some of them, f.ex. the Natural Wonders of the Westfjords, where you visit one of the largest sea-bird cliffs in Europe and get up and close with the puffins, and the fantastic Tour of the Kjaranbraut Avenue and Dynjandi, the Jewels of the Westfjords.
And if you want to know more about the Westfjords of Iceland then I have written several travel-blogs about this wonderful place:
Arnarfjörður - the Sea Monster Fjord in the Westfjords of Iceland
The majestic Dynjandi Waterfall
The Natural Wonders of the Westfjords of Iceland - Látrabjarg Bird Cliff & Rauðasandur Beach
Kjaran's Avenue - the most dangerous Road Construction in the Westfjords of Iceland
Calm Water Kayaking by Ísafjörður - the Kayaking Centre of Iceland
and...
A puffin posing at Látrabjarg sea cliff
Hot Pools in the Westfjords of Iceland
A Visit to Kollsvík Cove in the Westfjords - the smallest Settlement in Iceland
Here you can see the exact location of Ingjaldssandur on the map. The distance from Núpur in Dýrafjörður to Sæból in Ingjaldssandur is 23 km on road 624.
Have a lovely time in the beautiful Westfjords of Iceland :)
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