FILE - In this Wednesday, March 1, 2017 file photo, the Northern Lights, or aurora borealis, appear in the sky over Bifrost, Western Iceland. Police in Iceland say tourists are often putting themselves at risk searching for the Northern Lights, whose spectacular streaks of color light up the winter skies at night. Police say sleep-deprived tourists are dividing their attentions between the road and the sky, and often underestimate the challenging conditions posed by Icelandâs twisty, narrow, often-icy roads in the winter. (AP Photo/Rene Rossignaud, file)
The Associated Press
AKUREYRI, Iceland (AP) - Police in Iceland have a warning for visitors: Beware our roads in the winter.
Spending a clear winter night under an Arctic sky lit up by spectacular streaks of color from the Northern Lights is an often-cited "bucket-list" experience that's among the reasons more people are visiting Iceland.
But police say many foreign visitors lack the experience and expertise to handle Iceland's wintry road conditions. They are increasingly worried about visitors scanning the sky for the Northern Lights and not looking at the road, which may be icy, twisty, narrow - or all three at once.
Of the 18 people who died in traffic crashes in Iceland in 2018, half of them were foreigners.
Johannes Sigfusson of the Akureyri Police Department says "the weather in Iceland changes every five minutes."
FILE - In this March 1, 2017 file photo, the Northern Lights, or aurora borealis, appear in the sky over Bifrost, Western Iceland. Police in Iceland say tourists are often putting themselves at risk searching for the Northern Lights, whose spectacular streaks of color light up the winter skies at night. Police say sleep-deprived tourists are dividing their attentions between the road and the sky, and often underestimate the challenging conditions posed by Icelandâs twisty, narrow, often-icy roads in the winter. (AP Photo/Rene Rossignaud, File)
The Associated Press
A tourist from Singapore photographs the Godafoss waterfall, a landmark view in northern Iceland, Dec. 16, 2018. Police in Iceland say tourists are often putting themselves at risk searching for the Northern Lights, whose spectacular streaks of color light up the winter skies at night. Police say sleep-deprived tourists are dividing their attentions between the road and the sky, and often underestimate the challenging conditions posed by Icelandâs twisty, narrow, often-icy roads in the winter. (AP Photo/Egill Bjarnason)
The Associated Press
Tourists park their rental car to capture a landscape vista of the Akureyri town, a regional capital in northern Iceland, on Dec. 19, 2018. Police in Iceland say tourists are often putting themselves at risk searching for the Northern Lights, whose spectacular streaks of color light up the winter skies at night. Police say sleep-deprived tourists are dividing their attentions between the road and the sky, and often underestimate the challenging conditions posed by Icelandâs twisty, narrow, often-icy roads in the winter. (AP Photo/Egill Bjarnason)
The Associated Press
Gunnlaugur Bjornsson, astrophysicist at the University of Iceland, poses for a photograph on Dec. 22, 2018. Bjornsson is among the local scientists involved in a project studying the aurora borealis, saying much was still unknown about the Northern Lights and the vast system that controlled them. (AP Photo/Egill Bjarnason)
The Associated Press