There's a wonderful moment in 2012's Hitchcock where Helen Mirren—playing wife Alma Reville—peers at Anthony Hopkins's titular character over a newspaper and pithily announces, 'You shouldn't wait 'til halfway through, kill her off after thirty minutes', referring, of course, to the death of Janet Leigh as false heroine Marion Crane in Psycho. Which is exactly how we felt about our trip to Sørvágsvatn lake on Vágar, in the Faroe Islands. But more on that in a minute.
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Once—when we were teenagers—my now husband got the idea at my parents' acreage to race down fields of wheat stubble that cascade from my childhood home like drapery to find the end of a rainbow that had appeared behind their barn. He knew he'd never find it, but at sixteen wanted to indulge that childhood fantasy we all have—particularly those of my generation who were brought up with Lucky the Leprechaun prancing across their screens during Saturday morning cartoons, or the Skittles slogan 'taste the rainbow'. He ran 'til he reached the point where one inevitably feels sick from effort, then returned to the house panting and happy as a dog from the chase. My mother later told me that this was the moment she knew he was the right boy for her daughter. Because he was far too old to knowingly act like a child but did, while his peers preoccupied themselves with cars and chasing tail, not rainbows.
Well into adulthood, my husband and I were introduced to two guys at a bar by a mutual friend. The introduction was memorable in so far as we'd met before—online. Introductions went something like this: 'Matty, Jer, this is Adam who you know as Alumirac, and Lesley is Rontu. Matty is Moomatty, Jer is...' Publicly-outted as we were, we laughed awkwardly, peeling back beer labels from sweaty bottles. Later, slightly buzzed and a little less gun-shy, the married couple, mutual friend (David), and Mat returned to our dingy apartment and played WoW—the MMORPG where we'd met—into the wee hours of the night, giggling like school children over a tub of frozen margarita and yet more beers: a years-long friendship was born. And things have been that easy ever since. Because when we get together, we hardly talk shop, or finances, or the doldrums of adulthood, and instead have a consistent history of being mis-identified rowdy teenagers at campgrounds who then quickly become the warden's pets.
Fast-forward years later, to our 2017 trip to the Faroe Islands. Mat is now married to Kat, David's younger cousin. With Katherine Hepburn's cheek-bones, freckles, and love for the outdoors arising naturally from a childhood spent in rural B.C., she's the perfect pairing for our friend with boyish good-looks and booming laugh that you can hear two rooms over; and they, in turn, are our perfect travel companions. They both have a childlike love for animals, and good portion of our day is spent discussing respective pets back home, how we miss them, what they're likely doing, and the prospect of puffin watching on Mykines despite bad weather. Mat points out an inflatable puffin to his wife in a gift shop (just add water!), knowing full well he'll have to buy it for her. He chuckles that its what you'd get a kid while affectionately handing it to her.
The boy who raced through stubble is sick (fever), so after a morning of bird watching by boat, we settle into our rented second story flat: Mat and Kat go buy the birthday boy supper (what luck, sick when travelling on your birthday), and I amble around empty harbour streets in long arctic light. Mat insists on cooking for the group (because he's JUST THAT NICE); the rest of us relive daydreams from a just-finished trip to Scotland watching Braveheart. A couple of Tylenol for birthday boy, and at ten-to-nine p.m. the urge hits: four adults set out way too late for a hike Sørvágsvatn lake, trailhead unknown.
We're helped by the presence of a lone car parked off the highway, and what looks like a path diverging from a lambing pen. Quickly, the trail ends, but we know we're on the right track: the sought-after waterfall-into-ocean is a hair's breadth away, on the horizon just out of reach. We hop, skip, jump(!) from rock to dry-patch among mucky bog, farther and farther from the now-muffled sound of sleepy cars on the highway. The lake is like blown glass gently surging from a blower's rod as wind whips off the sea channeled along its surface. Our voices reach an excited pitch as a a truly epic view comes into sight, and we cinch our jackets tighter against the cold. We take risks—climb higher, sit on cliff's edges, pose for photos—as the real world suspends our disbelief that we're mortal, can't respawn.
Germans have a word for the deep, meditative feeling one feels alone in the woods, Waldeinsamkeit, having to do with connectedness to nature. What that fails to encapsulate for me is the way landscape, passing through it, existing in it, does among friends: holds you in commune. How you shrilly call to each other over wind to point to delicate flower, escarpment, incoming weather, the way you shrieked at a hand-caught frog as a child. As a bonafide member of the Peter Pan generation, the sense of childhood play inspired by time spent outdoors seems undersold: that feeling you had when jumping rock-to-rock with your brother playing MarioBros collecting imagined, pixelated mushrooms; or skipping through dunes with your best-friend (ages nine and eleven) in your Arabian fantasy world. Similar but different to when a dance troupe hits synchronicity with a collective flick of the wrist, when a hockey team lines up that killer shot, or when musicians grin at each other over spontaneous but mutually-agreed-upon improvisation. Chasing proverbial rainbows in tandem; hive-mind.
On the way home, our shared elation begins to lapse: I slip several times in mud and sheep's dung, birthday boy's fever comes back, Mat's fear of heights sets in. The travelling troupe has wearied. In waning twilight, the denouement of our time spent in the Faroe Islands has begun, far too early at one day in. You see, we'd killed our buxom blond prematurely under the purplish setting sun at Sørvágsvatn; the laughed mantra for the rest of the trip was we'd already seen that waterfall billow dramatically to the sea—'impress us!'
NOTES
Getting there: Take Highway 11 heading west from Sandavágur toward Sørvágur; park where the road initially meets the lake's shoreline, just prior to a rather sharp northwest turn (pictured above). You will see trail on the opposite side of the highway, which skirts along the side of a lambing pen and small stone structure; Trælanípa will be visible in the distance. Bøsdalafossur is at its base. You can make a nice, approximately 7km loop by hiking from the highway, to the base of Trælanípa, up Trælanípa (which has another great viewpoint), and then back.