Surviving the horrors of Greenland (what no-one else is willing to tell you)
I’m curious: what’s your favourite thing about Iceland?
How about the violent, endless winters and the brutal, arctic weather? The barren, burnt, infertile landscapes? The bountiful feasts of rancid, rotten shark? Or perhaps it’s the slow-to-fade stain of misery left by brutal Danish colonialists?
Well, if you like those things about Iceland, you’ll love how much worse they get in Greenland.
When medieval barbarian Eric the Red became the first European to discover Greenland, he literally could not find a single appealing thing about it. He granted the land its name and lied while doing it. He intentionally misled good people to get them to travel to a strange and dangerous land, for his gain and at the expense of their lives.
Now, in the tradition of their brutal, murderous ancestor, the modern-day Icelanders at Guide to Iceland are doing the same.
‘5-day summer package, with a day tour in Greenland!’ ‘Icelandic summer in depth, with Greenland day tour!’ These titles, meticulously styled to invite the adventurous and cultured traveller, are nothing but money-grabbing lures. Each tour description is filled with manipulative language, and a series of exaggerations and mistruths. The titles should make this obvious; there is no such thing as an ‘Icelandic summer’, let alone a Greenlandic one.
The only true detail mentioned is that a journey to this barren, icy place will be ‘a once-in-a-lifetime trip’. Do not take this as a selling point, however. It should be considered a threat.
Greenland is a harsher, colder, more barren version of Iceland. As discussed in 'the UGLY Truth About Iceland', this little country is harsh, cold and barren enough. To be fair to Greenland, it has less explosive eruptions, but it makes up for it by having more polar bears, less means of escape, and, absolutely worst of all, no wifi.
I know that many reading this are lost causes. Iceland’s Orwellian propaganda machine is doing its job well. More and more hapless people are flocking here every year, and the coffers of the Icelandic elite are ever growing. But even if you have fallen for this international conspiracy, and have booked or are going to book regardless of my stone-cold reasoning, I beg you to do just one thing:
Please, read the following tips for your best chance of survival when visiting Greenland.
Do not leave the airport
If arriving at Kulusuk, the airport has a cafeteria and much more importantly, a duty-free. It’s nice to let loose and have a few drinks on holiday, so make the most of it. Use your ‘once-in-a-lifetime’ trip to Greenland to get drunk in the corner of the departures lounge.
Scream constantly
This will help let everybody know that you are incredibly out of your depth as a traveller.
Dress children in t-shirts and shorts
If travelling with children, do not wrap them in bulky, warm clothing. They are likely to be mistaken for a baby seal and be bludgeoned to death. This tradition is incredibly cruel because baby seals can’t hurt anything. I strongly believe that it's immoral to hurt things that don’t hurt anything else. This is why I take pride in only wearing the skins of top-of-the-food-chain predators, like the pelt of the snow leopard I’m draped in and my patent orca-leather boots.
Do not go whale-watching
There is a plethora of evidence, dating from as far back as the 13th Century, and continuing until 1781, that the Greenlandic Sea has two Krakens, which have taken countless lives. Do not take the lack of modern evidence as proof that they are either gone or fictional. The late 18th Century is when the Illuminati formed, and it is no coincidence that information on this fact stopped becoming public at that time.
Google it.
Remember 1997
Never forget what happened to the Titanic. Never forget what Kate Winslet went through. The iceberg that ruined her engagement to that really edgy dark-haired guy came from Greenland. Cousins of this killer pass by the town of Kulusuk every day, looking for a true love story of their own to destroy.
Keep a constant eye on the seas. If you see even the smallest iceberg, you must never approach it, even from shore. Remember that you can only ever see a tiny amount of an iceberg at a time; the rest is hiding. Who knows where. Run.
Respect native Greenlandic culture
Native Greenlanders, or the Kalaadit, have thrived in Greenland’s harsh climate for millenniums and are living embodiments of human survivalism and adaptability. Be polite. Remove the word Eskimo from your vocabulary. This one isn’t a joke; it’s just manners. You’ll regret not following this when you’re stuck alone outside in a terrible storm that echoes the masterpiece ‘Sharknado’, but with polar bears rather than sharks.
These basic tips are not likely to keep you from grievance bodily harm, but may just help you survive a trip to Greenland. The safest way to protect yourself, however, is to fight against the machine and simply not to book.
At the end of the day, what Eric the Red discovered when he first voyaged to this mystical land remains true a millennium later. Greenland still has no appealing qualities. If it did, they would have changed its name already.
If you are hell-bent on having such a dangerous holiday, there are many other places you could go to that you are more likely to return from. If you want to go to a place with no internet and complete isolation, why not North Korea? If you want to enjoy a location with no edible food, why not search which parts of the world are currently experiencing famine?
If you want the whole package, however, and seek somewhere destroyed by colonialist policies, with a brutal, unpredictable climate, in a lifeless, unbearable terrain, so uninhabitable that the situation will literally never be salvageable, perhaps the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant will serve you better.
While admittedly, these places are only a little better than Iceland or Greenland, at least, if you leave them alive, you’ll come home with a tan.
Morning comes once more, so I have to escape the Guide to Iceland office via the air vents. Security has been raised here since my last post, but I will not stop fighting to get the truth out. I do not say these things to denigrate Iceland or Greenland (certainly not Greenland at least), nor do I do it to raise my public profile for when RuPaul's Drag Race gets to the UK. I do it because I’m more than just a beautiful face and a killer body; I have a huge heart and an ever-giving soul.
Now if someone could get that fact to the producers of RuPaul's Drag Race, I’d be most grateful.
Photo by @dottirmanagement and @alexandrakristjans
- See Wonda's next blog, the Most Overrated Places in Iceland
其他有意思的博客
冰岛最浪漫的角落
对于很多人,遥远的冰岛有着世界尽头的神秘,有着区别于巴黎、马尔代夫、自成一体的浪漫。没有埃菲尔铁塔和蒂凡尼,没有热带沙滩,而是在冰川、火山、苔藓地的背景下蜜月旅拍、婚拍,甚至举办一场冰岛婚礼。来冰岛旅行,多是要跨千山万水、飞跃大洋大陆,很有一点“万水千山陪你走过”的史诗感。难怪很多人说,光是冰岛二字,就足够浪漫了。 冰岛虽然不大,但是地貌极其丰富,不同的自然景观自然有不同的气质。这一篇,就挑阅读更多从极光观测到摄影-到底该不该来冰岛看极光
很多朋友都想来冰岛看极光,但是冰岛到底适不适合看极光呢?几月、什么季节能看到极光?是不是一定要参加北极光旅行团?如何能拍摄出美丽的极光照片呢?在冰岛住了好几年了,从刚开始逢极光必出门,到如今家里阳台就能看极光,我对在冰岛看极光的了解和经验,也算得上大半个专家了,且听我娓娓道来吧。 到底该不该来冰岛看极光呢?最坦诚的答案是,不要只为了看极光而看极光。 极光原理 太阳活动→太阅读更多迷失冰岛的米湖游览推荐|不只有温泉的地热宝藏区
我在冬夏秋均到访过米湖,看过米湖的不同面。一直以来,米湖到底值不值得去是很多游客争论的问题。有些人觉得这里是来冰岛旅行的必去目的地,有些人则说米湖“太丑了”,连照片都不想多拍几张。那米湖到底值不值得来呢?到底怎么玩呢? 米湖的风景 北部的米湖,因地理位置相距首都雷克雅未克略远,很多来冰岛的短途游客选择放弃,其实米湖应该是和黄金圈、南岸沿线至冰湖齐名的冰岛景色,这里冷热相融,可谓最冰岛,尤其阅读更多
将冰岛最大的旅行平台下载到您的手机中,一站式管理您的整个行程
使用手机摄像头扫描此二维码,然后点击显示的链接,将冰岛最大的旅行平台添加到您的手机中。输入您的电话号码或电子邮件地址,以接收包含下载链接的短信或电子邮件。