Few Lessons From the Iceland Volcano 2010


What should we learn from the historic grounding of thousands of flights? For the past months, the world has been shocked with unexpected consequences caused by Iceland volcano eruption. When the ashes at the sky were finally settles over Europe and the Great Volcano Shutdown of 2010 is rendered history, what have we learned? Following are few things that I can think of.

1) We Really Are Living in a Global Village, and That Village Isn’t Always Perfect

A volcano erupts in a remote part of Iceland and within a few days you can’t get a hotel room in New York or Taiwan, and even Singapore. Such is the interconnected world in which we live. While we benefit from seamless connections and global alliances, we suffer when one part of the international air-travel system—in this case the entire continent of Europe—misfires. A flat world is not always a happy one.


Photography by Patrick Smith | Click to Enlarge :O

2) Don’t Mess with Iceland

Iceland Tours, until recently a happy boutique nation, became something of a global joke when its overextended banks contributed to the global financial meltdown. Jilted shareholders in Britain, in particular, were furious, and poked fun at the little island-nation that couldn’t. Might the volcanic eruption be Iceland’s revenge for all that ribbing? Perhaps. Why else would the Brits now be crying, “We said send cash, not ash!” LOL


Photography by Alliat | Click to Enlarge :O

3) Mother Nature Still Gets The Last Word

It’s easy to think that we have, if not conquered Mother Nature, at least subdued Her. The modern airplane is indeed a technological marvel, with fly-by-wire flight controls, onboard radar and enough computing power to run a small city, or even an iPad. But it is still bound by the laws of nature. (One of those laws being that volcanic ash and jet engines don’t mix.) Nature giveth flight and Nature occasionally taketh away. That’s humbling, in a good way.


Photography by Moon Sheep | Click to Enlarge :O

4) Trains are Good

With European airlines grounded, stranded passengers scrambled for a seat—any seat—on a train. Yes, the old-fashioned, maligned, frumpy train is suddenly the most popular kid in school. And for good reason. Trains are more comfortable than airplanes, more likely to arrive and depart from city centers, with better food, no turbulence, less draconian security, and an actual view of the scenery. And, of course, trains could care less about some giant cloud of volcanic ash. What’s not to like?


Photography by Paolo Margari | Click to Enlarge :O

5) Airports Make Lousy Bedrooms

Just in case you were wondering.

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Photography by Dog Bone Art | Click to Enlarge :O

6) Acceptance is the Only Sane Response to a Situation Like This

When faced with a near-total shutdown of European air travel, there are two possible responses. You could fret, fume, vent and grind your teeth, haranguing the airline staff as if they were personally responsible for the volcanic eruption. Or you could accept the inevitable and belly up to the airport bar for a Bloody Mary, or two, until the ash dissipates. My money is on the latter option.


Photography by Ben | Click to Enlarge :O

7) Air Travel is a Miracle, Plain and Simple

A giant vehicle weighing hundreds of tons flies—like a bird—through the skies, soaring—like a bird!—above the clouds at nearly the speed of sound and transporting you in a few short hours to a different time zone, a different climate. Somehow we’ve managed to forget that this is—and there is no other words for it—a f***ing miracle. Maybe the Great Volcano Shutdown of 2010 will remind us


Photography by Matt Hintsa | Click to Enlarge :O

Credit: Eric Weiner Worldhum


7 responses to “Few Lessons From the Iceland Volcano 2010”

  1. “Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.” Says your response pre-text. Doesn’t it seem a bit hypocritical that you can expect to voice your perspective without censorship but wouldn’t have the same in return?
    I am not sure if you are ignorant, a drone of the media/government, or a fool, but the root of this matter relates to your skewed perspective on learning and ‘global events’. The ideas put here are as provocative and misunderstood as a fart, as in they aren’t things people learned about recently nor are they really worth noting to any degree in this era today.
    The perspective I gathered from this is that you desire to put in front of as many strangers faces as much about things people should be scared of as much as possible. In my opinion, your aim seems to enable strangers to relive the panic they may have briefly felt through reading this article. http://rt.com/Top_News/2010-04-20/europe-hysteria-dangers-psychology.html?utm_source=2leep&utm_medium=2leep&utm_campaign=2leep This is an article that speaks about a perspective similar to my own. You may or may not be an agent of some destructive organization, either way, you seem to be fulfilling their goals.
    Need something to think about? Try looking into the massive numbers of enslaved and wrongfully imprisoned. Ever heard of someone going to prison for a victimless crime? Ever thought about that phrase ‘made in china’ that is on at least half of the stuff you own?

  2. hey buddy,this is one of the best posts that I’ve ever seen; you may include some more ideas in the same theme. I’m still waiting for some interesting thoughts from your side in your next post.

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