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The bay
Ingolfsfjordur in the Strandir District is about 8 km long and 1½ km
wide at the mouth. The bay itself is deep and free of obstructions for
vessels, but just outside it are shallows and skerries. The lowland
areas are very limited on the bay and the access to the nearest bay
towards northwest, Ofeigsfiord, is a 4wd trail along the mountain
slopes, and that really is the end of the road in this part of the
country.
That is a starting point for many
hikers, who spend days on end in this uninhabited area. Some prefer
shorter hikes, and rent a boat to take them a bit further. On the
other end, a boat trip to Bolungarvik or Isafiord is necessary to get
back to civilization.
During the period
between 1915 and 1919, the Norwegians started pickling the
herring in many stations along the Ingolfsfiord Bay. Then
the price of their products collapsed and this short boom
ended. Between 1944 and 1946, a herring factory was built at
Eyri bye entrepreneurs, who hoped to profit from the herring catch in the Huna Bay,
which soon failed. The operation of the factory ended in
1952 and the hamlet was abandoned.
A few people spend the summer
there to reap the natural advantages, such as eider down gathering,
drift wood processing, seal hunting and fishing. The farm Munadarnes
on the mouth of the bay is still occupied the whole year and is the
northernmost inhabited farm of the district. |