The Westfjords occupy the northwestern extreme of Iceland — a deeply indented peninsula of fjords, cliffs, and tundra that juts into the Denmark Strait like a gnarled hand reaching toward Greenland. It is the oldest part of Iceland geologically, and in many ways the most itself: the most dramatic, the most remote, the least visited, the most insistently wild.
Getting there requires either a long drive on roads that become seasonal tracks in winter, or a domestic flight to Ísafjörður, the region’s only real town. Once there, you find a landscape that operates on its own schedule, indifferent to tourism and entirely unwilling to be convenient. The fjords are long and deep; the cliffs above them are home to some of the largest seabird colonies in the North Atlantic; the tundra rolls away inland toward the central highlands.
What draws photographers and travelers to the Westfjords is precisely its resistance to easy consumption. This is not a landscape of Instagram-friendly waterfalls and convenient viewpoints (though the waterfall Dynjandi is genuinely one of the most spectacular in Europe). It is a landscape that requires something of you: patience, proper equipment, a willingness to wait for weather and light that do not perform on demand.
The wildlife of the Westfjords is exceptional — Arctic foxes are common here, having inhabited the peninsula since before the human settlement of Iceland, and the coastal waters support minke whales, orcas, harbor porpoises, and in summer, enormous aggregations of seabirds. In winter, the northern lights are visible on clear nights, and the frozen fjords create landscapes of otherworldly silence.
We share these images as an invitation — not necessarily to travel to the Westfjords, though that would be extraordinary, but to hold in mind the existence of places like this. Places where the land is still older than human memory, where the light is still doing things that have no names, where remoteness is not a problem to be solved but a quality to be honored.














You might also like: Fly Through One of the World’s Largest Waterfalls • Meet Iridogorgia chewbacca: The Wookiee of the Deep Sea • Haiti’s Olympic Uniform Design That Carries a Nation


4 responses to “Iceland’s Remote Westfjords: The Country’s Last Undiscovered Corner”
Gorgeous, simply stunning impressions!
Happy Holidays and a fabulous New Year to you and yours❣️🌿❤️🤶🎄🎅
The Fab Four of Cley 💃🏼🚶👭
LikeLike
Thanks for the comment. We agree, can’t wait to visit Iceland ourselves!
LikeLike
Absolutely beautiful! I so hope to visit Iceland one day.
LikeLike
[…] never stops amazing with it’s vast open landscapes and raw glaciers, expanses of natural textures that bring to […]
LikeLike