Skógafoss Rainbow Mist — Iceland
Skógafoss is a 62-metre single-plunge waterfall so consistently mist-producing that a permanent rainbow hangs in front of it on any sunny day — one of Iceland's most reliably photogenic natural phenomena. Viking legend holds that the first Norse settler buried a treasure chest behind the falls, and locals say whoever catches the ring on the chest will be granted a wish. A staircase of 527 steps climbs alongside the falls to a plateau with views of the Eyjafjallajökull glacier and the Skogar River winding to the sea. In spring and early summer the falls flow at maximum volume and the rainbow is visible from the highway kilometres away.
About this spectacle
Standing before Skógafoss, visitors are enveloped in a perpetual cool mist that settles on skin and camera lenses alike. The 62-metre curtain of water crashes into the pool below with a deep, resonant thunder that you feel in your chest before you hear it clearly. On any sunny day — and often on bright overcast ones — a vivid, full-arc rainbow hangs suspended in the spray directly in front of the falls, sometimes doubling into a secondary arc. The 527-step staircase rising alongside the cascade rewards climbers with an ever-widening panorama: the Skogar River threading silver toward the Atlantic, and Eyjafjallajökull's glacier-capped summit looming to the east. Spring and early summer amplify everything — snowmelt swells the flow to its most thunderous, and the rainbow can be spotted from the Ring Road kilometres away. The plateau above offers a quieter, birds-eye perspective where the roar softens to a hiss and the full valley unfolds.
When to go
Jan — Dec, peak Apr — Jun
Getting there
Nearest airport: KEF. Nearest city: Reykjavik.
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