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Its dramatic, otherworldly setting – steam rising from intensely blue water backed by mountains and gleaming architecture – makes the Blue Lagoon the most photographed site in Iceland. An hour’s drive from Reykjavik, the “lagoon” is actually the runoff from a nearby power plant that forms a pool of geothermal water, with temperatures that range between 100 and 110°F. The pool is rich in beneficial natural minerals (salts, silica, and blue algae), which give the lagoon its color. People started bathing in the lagoon in 1981, and patients with the skin conditions such as psoriasis began touting the water’s curative powers. At the spa, waters is completely refreshed every 24 hours; you can rent a bathing suit, robe, and towel and simply soak, wandering through waterfalls, hot spots, sauna, steam bath, and lava caves. In-water massages and body treatments, from spa facial to salt glow, are available, as well as holistic treatments. Facilities are open year-round, ideal for enjoying summer’s long days or the preternatural calm of winter. There’s also a sleek, Scandinavian-modern restaurant overlooking the waters, serving seafood from a nearby fishing village. The entire Blue Lagoon experience is as cool and bizarre as Iceland itself.
Everybody know that the best reason people go to Iceland is to see the Aurora Borealis or known also as the Northern Light, so many hotels and resort that you can choose on Agoda.com or Booking.com you may compare each other and seems price to be competitive. Don’t forget to bring your proper camera cause you must document the Aurora as well, let me give you some recommendation of best digital camera and lenses that you should have to bring this magnificent picture back to your home sweet home…
SIGNATURE TREATMENT: SILICA MASSAGE
Blue Lagoon
Svartsengi 240 Grindavik, Iceland
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