This was written two weeks ago, and I'm just now finally getting internet on a port day... So enjoy and I'll try again next time!
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I've had two trips so far, one ten day to the Antarctic peninsula and one 18 day to the Falklands, South Georgia, and the peninsula and both trips were fantastic... stunning weather, great guests, great crew... and I'm getting paid to be here. Not really a bad deal, all in all.
Our internet connection on the ship continues to be relatively inaccessible though so it'll just be bits and pieces from me as I can get things uploaded in town on turnaround days. With that in mind (I'm typing in bed on the eve of our port day in Ushuaia) here's a brief synopsis of my time so far.
Here's port, the lovely mountainscape of Ushuaia Argentina
Then it was off to the land of ice and such... then boarding the zodiacs...
Heading off to a cool destination...
Like the wreck of an old whaling supply ship (the Governouren in Foyn Harbour) with a private boat anchored in its shallow lee
or maybe a zodiac cruise
Where we happened to run into Santa on Christmas Day...
Or maybe some kayaking?
Or perhaps a hike overlooking Paradise Bay on a flat calm, blue sky day?
Wow.
But what about the penguins? Yep, some of those too...
At Useful Island, a 360• lookout once used by whalers and now enjoyed for scenery, peace, and nesting gentoos on high!
Ok, and there was at least one iceberg we saw...
Then off with that lot, on with the next, and sailed off to the Falklands we did!
Windswept islands looking a lot like the Scottish moors, but with black-browed albatross and rockhopper penguins throwing a wrench in things...
Then on to Stanley for a little "throwback Thursday" scene of a farflung British outpost still supplied primarily by ship from the old country... Though there is an amazing coffee/wine bar/chocolate shop selling the finest truffles for I don't know how many thousands of miles...
And off again to Saunders Island where we saw four species of penguins in just about a square mile... (gentoo, king, magellanic, rockhopper).
Then it was back to sea, heading for South Georgia. It doesn't disappoint, especially when the weather holds and you're treated to blue skies and fair winds... Not to mention tons of wildlife!
Actually the fur seals were so dense here that we couldn't land the passengers safely so we had to move on!
I used my camera for all of the other landings so I don't have a record of them here but at the end we were able to take the ship up into Drygalski fijord which was an impressive area for the jagged rock walls and craggy ice falls... not to mention the 50 knot winds screaming down at us from the glacier at the head of the inlet...
Then came Point Lookout at Elephant Island... the nearly inaccessible point Shackleton and his men first made landfall after their journey across the ocean after their winter spent stuck inthe pack ice of the Weddell Sea...
And then on to the Antarctic Peninsula... where I am continually mesmerized by the white stuff...
We did have a lot of whale sightings, I took this pic of one that was far away
But then some crew got really excited at the window, pointing to a whale they said was really close!
Turned out it was a drawing of a whale they were pointing at... stinkers! :))))
A last stop at Deception Island (the caldera of a blown up/sunken volcani, still thermally quite active!) where we landed near to Spanish and Argentine research bases...
Where I took a great walk along the beach
and found some neat penguin tracks
even where one had taken a snooze and then, as it used its flippers to stand (or maybe just dug in for traction), it shot out a load of poo, as they are wont to do...
I'm sooooo freakin envious!
ReplyDeleteHad to turn down another cruise for this spring (Pine Island Glacier, I think) due to family commitment. But itching like crazy to get back to the ice.
Thanks so much for sharing these pics.
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