Travellers currently stranded in Iceland are safe and sound according to Visit Reykjavik, the official Tourism website for Reykjavik and the surrounding area.
All visitors stranded in Reykjavik, due to flight restrictions across Europe, have been offered complimentary Reykjavik Welcome Cards, allowing for free access to all museums and exhibitions, swimming pools, public transport, and other leisure facilities.
“We all sympathise with those stranded here in Reykjavik, so we decided to hand out free passes to make the best out of a bad situation and make their stay as comfortable as possible. We always enjoy the company of our foreign travellers and wish them a pleasant stay in Iceland and a safe journey home.” Commented Sif Gunnarsdottir, head of Visit Reykjavik.
Known Icelandic TV personality Vala Matt also took to the lively streets of Reykjavik to ask travellers their thoughts on the current situation. During an interview with a Dutch couple on how they will spend their time throughout the delay period, they responded by saying “we’ll just see some more, it’s a great country to be in.”
All spirits seem positive across the Reykjavik area, with daily life remaining as normal.
To view all six interviews conducted by Vala Matt visit http://www.visitreykjavik.is/desktopdefault.aspx/tabid-60
Tourist in Iceland treated well during Flight Restrictions – Personally for me this is the best way of knowing Iceland better -living amongst them and clarifying whatever misinformations they have learned previously. We can not control mother nature but mother nature have surely healped us and hopefully understand the predicament of terrorist Iceland.
[…] To find out more about the reactions of those affected visit the article at IceNews (https://www.icenews.is/index.php/2010/04/18/tourists-in-iceland-treated-well-during-flight-restrictio…) […]
If the statute employed to “ring fence” assets were called the “banana statute” do you think the rest of us would think you were bananas?
[…] the volcano, flights across Europe and reactions of the public, click either of the following: Tourists in Iceland treated well during flight restrictions, a report on positive tourist treatment in Reykjavik, including links to interviews with those […]
Well, yes, naturally Icelanders sympathise with tourists who are stranded. It is not even two years since Icelanders where stranded tourists in Denmark, Britain and other backward countries, when they had been made terrorists and the good citizens of those countries were afraid they might be made terror sympathisers if they cashed Icelanders’ cheques or honoured their bank or credit cards.
Perhaps we should have random drawings from time to time to make different ones terrorists for a time, to remind us all the importance of sympathy and to stop us all turning into Americans, as they have done in Denmark and Britain.