Showing posts with label Gerlache Strait. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gerlache Strait. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Niko and Paradise Harbors - March 23, 2009


Well everyone, this will be the final blog I can get out before we head for the Drake Passage on our return voyage. In some ways, I find it a little sad because I'm sure there is so much more to see and experience. This is adventure has been incredible, but now I look forward to returning home and sharing my thoughts, experiences, photos and videos with my family and others. The photos and video will not fully communicate what I have seen.

In some ways, I feel it may minimize the experience. Regardless, I look forward to speaking to students about what it is like in Antarctica and encourage them to find and learn from their own experiences.

We were hoping for some spectacular weather these final two days instead of the snow, wind and cold. Today, the last half of the day was sunny, cold and windy. That may sound funny, but the snow makes you wet and weighs down your gear.

We entered Niko Harbor this morning. It is a beautiful harbor and was shielded somewhat from the elements. For some reason, it is also one of the more active areas for the glacier breaks. This is when large sections of glacier facture and fall off into the ocean creating a large tidal wave.

This magnificent event occurred a number of times while we were hiking up one of the more safe glaciers. One moment it was quite and then you hear a loud cracking sound, then a thunderous explosion. A wall of ice then crumbles into the ocean. The Antarctic has so many dimensions to her. From weather that seems to change from moment to moment, to the magnificent beauty of her black mountains scraping the assure sky, covered with glaciers of blue crystals almost as tall as the mountains them self. Then there is the clean blue ocean and wildlife that is usually seen only in documentaries.

On this day while we were out, we came across a humpback whale feeding on creel about 25 yards from out zodiac boat. We then caught some movement by one of the icebergs and found a curious leopard seal that was as interested in us as we were in him. As we were watching the leopard seal, a Minky whale surfaced no more than 10 feet from us.
Since we were short on time, we then moved to Brown Base, which an Argentinean Antarctic base. As we went ashore, two more leopard seals were
keeping eye on our movements. We are now on the ship heading down the
Gerlache Strait. We will make one more stop before heading to the Drake Passage.
I have often wondered as I have been blogging, if anyone has been reading or following this expedition. If you have, I hope you have found some value.
Take some time and leave me your thoughts and how the blog has made you
feel. This Antarctic expedition is not the only thing that has been new to
me. Keeping a blog and sharing my daily adventures is new for me also. If nothing else, it has acted as a great journal for this period of time in my
life. It is a form memory documentation and personal expression. I will
look back and draw on the mental video and snapshots this wilderness has provided me. In some way, I hope it has sparked a desire for some of you to look for your own adventure or expedition.