I face a view of Hekla out of studio windows here in Laugarvatn. I'm watching clouds cover and dissipate over the volcano daily. Article from a March 2017 publication.
"Most measurements that we have today indicate that Hekla is ready for an eruption, but we do not know what factor will set the eruption off," says geophysicist Páll Einarsson at the University of Iceland.
More pressure is in the magma chambers underneath the mountain than before the last two eruptions in 1991 and 2000. It's however impossible to say whether a Hekla eruption is to be expected soon or not, as eruptions come without much warning and with little correlation to other volcanic or earthquake activities in South Iceland.
Today marks the 70th anniversary of the greatest Hekla eruption known to man, which lasted 13 months. There have been five eruptions in Mount Hekla since 1970.