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Lead »Cruising the Danube

Travel Today Is Better Than Ever

A Whale of a Time in Alaska

Barging Through France

Down the Danube in Mozart’s Footsteps

Antarctica -

Take the Ferry

Learning to Sail Aboard a Two-Masted Schooner

Caribbean Cruising, a Private Yacht Fantasy

Jill's Son Goes 'Round the World

 
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Antarctica -

By Christophe Dabbs Posted on Nature


"It seems like a long way to go to look at ice and penguins," said an acquaintance when I told her I was going to Antarctica. It wasn't the distance that bothered me, though. I was concerned about ruffling the feathers of the tuxedoed birds.  

As it turned out, I needn't have worried. The penguins took me and my shipmates in stride, waddling around us with indifference or approaching us with cautious curiosity, as if we were large rocks or slumbering seals.  

I was visiting Antarctica with a Canadian expedition cruise company that promotes safe and environmentally responsible tourism to the White Continent. The company asks passengers not to approach within five meters (16 feet) of penguins, seabirds and seals, and to give the animals the right of way at all times. The animals, on the other hand, have no rules, and penguins showed little reluctance to approach those of us who stood quietly observing.  

Our transportation was the 100-passenger Russian-registered Akademik Ioffe, an A-class ice-rated vessel. The itinerary for our trip was vague and pre-departure information stated, "ever changing weather, ice or political circumstances often dictate" the ship's route and shore excursions.  

"This is expedition cruising. We go with the flow," we were reminded our first day at sea by the expedition leader for our cruise. It was his responsibility to coordinate with the ship's captain where we could safely anchor and take the Zodiacs (small, maneuverable rubber boats) to shore. He managed to pack six shore excursions and two Zodiac cruises into our three-day stay in Antarctic waters.  
One landing each day took us to the rookery of a different species of penguin: the white browed Gentoo; the button-eyed Adelie; and the aptly named Chinstrap, which has a ribbon of black running from its black crown around its white face. All three sites had penguins galore, including large numbers of downy chicks.  

At Hannah Point on Livingston Island, we encountered a herd of Southern Elephant Seals heaped together in a muddy wallow, their puppy dog expressions belying the unpleasant sounds and smells they emitted. They seemed unperturbed by the battalion of zoom lenses aimed at them.  


Almirante Brown Research Station

Our Zodiac cruises reaped close-ups of other seal species — solitary Leopard Seals, Weddell Seals and Crabeater Seals lounging on ice floes. The Zodiac driver for both of my cruises was David German, president of Fathom Expeditions Inc. He skillfully maneuvered the inflated rubber boat among the floes and bergs of Nature's floating sculpture garden, stopping to let us admire particularly beautiful examples.  

A cruise of Paradise Bay took us beneath a sheer cliff, streaked turquoise with copper and red with lichen, where a colony of Imperial Shags (cormorants) was nesting. We landed at nearby Almirante Brown Research Station, an Argentine facility abandoned in 1984 after the team's doctor, having been told he would have to spend a second year at the isolated station, set it afire.  

On another day, we called at the active Akademik Vernadsky Station, established in 1996 near Britain's now abandoned Faraday Station, which was first to alert the world to changes in the ozone layer. The Ukrainian scientists at Vernadsky, who are continuing the meteorological work begun at Faraday, gave us a guided tour of the facility and opened the "Southernmost Souvenir Shop on the Earth" for spending-starved passengers. The "shop" is a closet filled with handcrafted items carved and painted by the scientists in their ample free time.  

We also visited Deception Island, actually a collapsed volcano that still generates enough thermal activity to make bathing along its beaches possible. We wandered among the remains of a British hangar and airstrip, from which the first powered flight over the continent of Antarctica was made in 1928, and the ruins of a Norwegian-Chilean whaling station that closed in 1931.  

Whale sightings were jealously coveted on our expedition, so excitement peaked when, one evening after dinner, we encountered a humpback whale feeding frenzy. The captain turned the ship into their midst and cut the engines, and passengers, staff and crew stood spellbound as an estimated 50 of the great beasts entertained us, blowing, breaching, bubbling, lunging from the water head first and flipping their tails high in the air to signal a deep dive.  

The Akademik Ioffe was an ideal platform for viewing seabirds, too. The expedition ornithologist frequently held court on the aft deck, helping us identify the ever-changing selection of birds that followed the ship's wake. Especially handsome were the Grey-Headed Albatross, with its dark wings and snowy body, and the Cape Petrel, with a distinctive black-and-white checkerboard pattern across its wings.  

While there was plenty of fun to be had on our expedition, there also was a strong educational component. Shore excursions and wildlife sightings were supplemented by an optional lecture program, and the ship had a spacious library well stocked with reference books.
 

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