Iceland
A brightly coloured herring town tucked into a mountain-ringed fjord at the world's edge.
The first thing you notice is the silence. Then the colour — canary yellow, postbox red, ocean blue — painted onto timber houses that line a harbour ringed by mountains so steep they block the afternoon sun. Siglufjörður in north Iceland is a town that once held the world's herring wealth and now holds its breath in the most photogenic quiet.
Siglufjörður was Iceland's herring capital during the boom decades of the early-to-mid 20th century, when thousands of seasonal workers descended on this tiny fjord to salt, barrel, and ship the silver darlings. The industry collapsed in the late 1960s when herring stocks crashed, and the town nearly died with it. Today the award-winning Herring Era Museum, spread across three harbourside buildings, brings that vanished world back to life with recreated salting stations and first-person accounts. The town is connected to the outside world by single-lane tunnels blasted through the surrounding mountains — the Héðinsfjörður tunnel, opened in 2010, finally ended the winter isolation that could last months. A growing folk music scene and craft brewery add new layers to the old herring town.
Couple
The colourful harbour, candlelit restaurants serving local fish, and the sense of being at the end of the world together make Siglufjörður one of Iceland's most romantic small towns.
Solo
The herring museum is unexpectedly moving, the tunnels add drama to the approach, and the quiet harbour at sunset — with only the sound of water lapping — is perfect for contemplation.
Pickled herring in five different spice blends at the award-winning maritime museum.
Local craft ale brewed with mountain water and toasted Icelandic barley.

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