Sunday 24th September 2017.
Photos from Londranger, Skarðsvík bay and Dritvik beach.

Basalt columns on Londrangar cliffs. These are the remnants of a volcanic crater which had been eroded over the years to form these stacks. 
Spectacular large waterfall which we couldn’t get any closer too due to the river crossing in front of us. 
Rainbow! 
Rainbow over a church 
Waves with the wind blowing the crest back over 
Crashing waves 
Carole photographing the waves exploding on the rocks in Skarðsvík bay. 
Svörtuloft lighthouse stands on a four-kilometer long cliff at the tip of the Snæfellsnes Peninsula 
Skálasnagi, stems from a cliff which was connected by a stone bridge to land. The stone bridge collapsed in 1973 and now this cliff stands alone and majestic looking – it even looks like it has got a head. 
Sea arch in the cliffs below the lighthouse eroded by the sea 
The beach is strewn with the remains of a British trawler ‘Epine GY7’. It ran aground east of Dritvik on 13th March 1948. Only 5 of the crew of 19 survived. 
The basalt rocks battered by the waves at Dritvik beach. 
The beach at Dritvik from the hills at the end of the beach. 
Rainbow over the beach at Dritvik.
