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            Welcome to Been there. Your tips on the places you know - that you love,
            live in or have just visited - are what make this guide.
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                <title>Kolaportið - Reykjavik's great flea market.</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/29935</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[Kolaportið is Iceland's only flea market. It takes place at weekends in a large warehouse building by the harbour. <br>In Kolaportið you can buy everything from old records to jewellery to voluminous knitted patterned jumpers to liquorice to second hand clothing to vacuum-packed salmon to fermented shark. Kolaportið is open only during weekends.]]></description>
                
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                <title>Great places</title>
                
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                <description><![CDATA[Just back from a visit at the end of October, after the kronor had crashed and this made things cheaper, though still about the same as the UK.<br><br>We loved a second hand bookshop off the main drag and just down from Cafe Rosenberg and near the old Cirkus club. It was piled high with books, with a fair few in English. It has a vibe of total happy chaos. <br><br>Our favourite cafe was the one on the corner of Laugeamur and the street where Cafe Rosenberg is - it's a yellow house. Very good coffee, cakes and atmosphere.  <br><br>We ate at two very good places down at the harbour. One is called "The Baron" and is a fish market. The owner takes his leftover fish and makes the most delicious crayfish soup you can imagine. You sit on old barrels and<br>drink beer while sipping your soup from a cup which is very atmospheric. If you get fed up with fish just by it is a very good hamburger joint with terrific burgers and fries. Even cheaper is the hot dog stand round the corner from it selling Icelandic sausages in a roll. Very reasonable. <br><br>Best bargain for shopping were the Red Cross<br>charity shops on Laugeamur. I got a beautiful<br>Icelandic wool jumper there for about five pounds. <br><br>And do try the public thermal pools of the city. They are more "real" than the Blue Lagoon, which though fabulous, is rather touristy in feel.]]></description>
                
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                <title>12 Tónar</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/6462</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[A small record shop where you are encouraged to listen before you buy whilst sipping a free coffee. The shop is like an Icelandic version of Rough Trade. <br><br>It holds in-store performances which get so packed that people are squeezed up against the windows. Fill in a form to claim back tax.]]></description>
                
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