Pampering on a Norwegian Cruise Line Prima excursion in Iceland: Travel Weekly
, 2022-10-22 04:49:42,
Nothing is the color I expect it to be. The craggy rocks are dark like charcoal and dappled with a mosslike plant that’s tan, and I am about to go for a swim in water that is a milky baby blue. I’m in Iceland for the inaugural sailing of the Norwegian Prima, the premiere ship in Norwegian Cruise Line’s (NCL) first new class in nearly a decade. The 3,100-passenger Prima is sailing out of Reykjavik, which roughly translates to “smoky bay” or “bay of steam.”
I decide to get an up-close experience with that steam and book an NCL excursion to the Blue Lagoon, one of Iceland’s most popular attractions, where geothermally heated water is surrounded by lava hardened over hundreds of years.
I arrive at the lagoon after a 45-minute bus ride from the pier where the Prima is docked. I am given a white bathrobe and instructed to shower before donning my bathing suit, a prerequisite to enter the lagoon. Those of us with long hair are told to leave hair conditioner in and tie it up to protect our manes from drying out as we wade in the water.
It’s 57 degrees outside, and I disrobe, feeling every cool breeze whipping over the lava field as I walk toward the water. My toes initially sting from the heat, but within moments I’m fully immersed in the lagoon. The water is warm and welcoming as I watch steam blow across the surface.
A staffer from the lagoon tells me there is silica in the water, along with algae, seawater and fresh water. The silica is a compound of lava said to be good for…
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