Are Icelandic deserts so dry I need to worry about drinking water?
I am investigating the feasibility of a hike looping around Hofsjökull. This will take me through several “deserts” such as Hofsafrétt and Sprengisandur. On photos, this looks pretty dry, but Iceland is not the Sahara.
Source: Johann Dréo, CC-BY-SA, Wikimedia Commons
A topographic map appears to show plenty of streams in this area, but so do maps in deserts in the USA, even if those streams rarely have water (usually shown dashed but sometimes also when drawn as continuous lines). Should I expect that streams to be seasonal and dried out in September, or can I rest assured that in the chilly climate of Iceland with little evaporation, streams do not actually dry out?
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/q/16452. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
1 answer
This is from the well known trekker Andrew Skurka, who did an East/West traverse that would cross similar terrain to your proposed route.
Question:
I have asked around and everywhere I hear that water is sufficiently available in all areas, but I keep wondering about this ‘desert’ area that you also talk about. The area around Askja seems so dry and empty to me and running out of water there seems to be one of the worst things to do. So how was your experience on this?
Andrew's reply:
There’s plenty of water. You might have to carry some, but never much. Plus, you don’t burn through much water in those cool, windy conditions, hiking on flat terrain.
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/16480. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
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