Wednesday, 30 January 2008
The man from Del Monte, he say...... (30 Jan 2008)
The Australian Dream and places beginning with "M" (29 Jan 2008)
Tuesday, 29 January 2008
20 – 24 Jan 08 - Sun, sea, sand, sushi and sellulite (sic – just had to be done)
It was a lovely way to end the trip as I spent three days lying by the pool or at the beach, in typical Punta style – i.e. late starts, lots of posing ( them not me ), late restaurants, they don’t get busy until 23.30 ish (adults, kids and grandparents all eating together) and the shops close at 2am. Suspect the club scene starts at about that time – but I am well past that. I am also well past thongs which seem to be the order of the day accompanied by huge beach jewellery and dark tans – regardless of gender, age or size. There are clearly no mirrors in this town, either that or no taste. There is however, loads of money – it is very expensive here and the harbour is full of yachts, there is a Tiffany store, Rolex, and even a Victoria’s Crown boutique dedicated to Posh’s clothes label!! You get the idea.
The beach is lovely, but crowded in a Spanish Costa sort of way, except here it is so noisy, with everyone chatting, milling around, huge extended family groups all buying from the bewildering parade of hawkers – selling helados, cerverza, agua, sunglasses, pareos, toys, footballs, bags, sweetcorn, mate, café, bocadillos, bikinis, jewellery, beach dresses, etc etc etc. It made for great people watching and the general buzz and movement reminded me of the squawky chinstrap penguin colonies.
Must say that I am so fed up of steak and Malbec that I have resorted to sushi and sauvignon blanc – feels like home already. Don’t want to go home after such an amazing trip. Kev was there too. This is my last blog of this trip – so Gill back over to you……
12 – 20 Jan 08 - Trekking in Torres Del Paine (Chile)
We were to walk about 20 km a day for 5 days in the Torres del Paine National Park in the very south of Chile, which is amazing, and as walking is the only way to see it - I had no choice anyway. It is am igneous massif, which has been eroded by the ice to form magnificent landforms and so as a geographer and geologist (v. rusty) I was in heaven
I was to hike the W – basically that is the shape of the hike on a map – with camping sites (I use the word very loosely) at the angles in the W. 20 km sounds like nothing, but we were carrying all our stuff – the porters only carried the tent, sleeping bag and food. In addition the terrain was poor and undulating, with lots of uphills and boulder fields, – so progress was slow and each day we were walking for up to 10 hours covering 2km an hour!!!!
Day 1 was tough as I battled with the ‘what the fuck am I doing here‘ question? However, as the scenery impressed me more and more, and we started to have fun scrambling up glacial boulder fields and stumbling across hidden glaciers and glacial lakes, I was soon converted.
There were 4 of us in the group – and I was the youngest – so I had no excuse but to keep up – the eldest was 72 – and he was like a gazelle and put me to shame. You get to know people very well when walking for so long and all my companions were great company. My tent partner was Ken – he was a British Columbian MP, the other two were a married couple from Oz – although Bill was originally from UK and at 72 was retired from the MOD, his wife June younger at only 57 was Burmese Chinese and was a GP in Sydney - we had a lot of fun. Our guide was Eduardo – a Chilean – who loved this park. We had three porters / cook – but to be honest their cooking was poor and I certainly did not spend the time walking thinking of dinner!!
What I did think about was my past and the future and I enjoyed having this time just to think.
We did not wash, shave or have showers for 5 days – as even where there were such things – the water was straight from the glaciers, and so super chilled! I would soak my feet in nearby rivers of glacial meltwater for up to 12 seconds each evening – and that was torture enough but really refreshing.
The scenery was amazing, as the photos show I hope, daylight was very long (20 hours at least), the weather sunny, mountain air was lovely, and all the water we collected and drank from the rivers was by far the best water that I have ever tasted and so it was all well worth it – I will definitely trek again.
The very basic wilderness camping was the worst bit. If I had done my research better – I would have discovered that there are Refugios en route – basic huts with dorms and cooking facilities that I could have booked into – but they fill up 6 months in advance, so we trekked past looking longingly.
I also went glacial trekking on the Grey Glacier in Chile and Perito Moreno in Argentina, both of which form part of the Southern Patagonian ice field which is the third largest ice field in the world after Antarctica and Greenland (so with two done – Greenland has to be done soon)
You would not believe how good the first shower and hotel bed felt – it was in a 2 start in Southern Argentina but felt better than the Burj!!
6 Jan 08 - The Whale Show
We had seen all that this trip had promised and more, we were satiated and 'suficiento' so 2 more days back across the Drake – more sleep and it was a sad disembarkation. Not sure if the sense of uniqueness and remoteness will be experienced ever again.
Some dulche de leche ire cream cheered me up!!
Derek flew home and I took a few days rest in 5 star hotels in Ushuaia and El Calafate before the next expedition, facials . massage, no dock rock, more steak and Malbec and prepared for the next adventure.
3 – 6 Jan 08 - Continental Landing and other adventures
We spent the morning in zodiacs watching the wildlife and exploring the coastline in order to find somewhere to land on the continent. Due to sheer size of the ice sheet it is very difficult to set your foot on the actual Antarctic continent itself and until this point we had always landed on offshore islands, but on 2nd Jan at 66 01 7 S and 65 20 6 w, we set foot on the continent of Antarctica at an unnamed point. So I could now bag all 7 continents, need to do the moon next.
This was interrupted by our first sighting of a leopard seal; these eat penguins and hang around colonies on ice floes. We had to use the zodiacs to push through small bergs and dense brash ice to get close to this one. He was not bothered by us at all. We were wary of him, only a few metres away, but they have only ever killed one person, but Martin says they intimidate divers, as they are 4m in length, weigh a tonne and move so quickly. To me he looked serpent like and menacing, but he rolled over and basked in the sunshine. Like buses, when one comes along … for the next few days we couldn’t turn without seeing yet another one.
The fun continued when the ship crashed into a football pitch sized piece of floating sea ice (deliberately) trying to break it as it was blocking our channel, and if we could break it it would save about 10 hours sailing time. We tried three times, and failed. So having tested its strength we decided to get of and walk on it. It had a small colony of seals who were unperturbed by our presence and our snowball fight, we built a snowman. Eva the bar person brought a bottle of scotch along, and so we had it over very fresh polar ice!!! This trip is a non stop series of highs and excitement. Even the expedition team are saying that we have some amazing things, as none of them had walked on floating ice sheet since 1999. We have been so lucky (again and again).
Next excitement was a landing at the Vernadsky Station – a Ukrainian polar research base. It used to be British but we sold it for £1 10 years ago – obviously yet another labour party triumph !!! It used to be called Faraday and was where the Brits alerted the world to the presence of a hole in the ozone layer. We had a tour of the very modern base and had our passports stamped which was unnecessary but fun. However, then came a real memorable moment – a new way of drinking vodka!
Recipe
Take a shot glass of ice cold vodka (freezer will do, no need for an iceberg, also they had distilled their own – this is not necessary!)
Take a half slice of fresh orange (where they got this from who knows?), dip one side in sugar, the other in cheap instant coffee granules / powder.
Down vodka in one, suck on orange.
Sounds disgusting – it was amazing – I had two!
Heading north again through the Leamiare channel we had fantastic weather and perfect zodiac weather and so we spent 4 hours or so, in our small rubber zodiacs, inches above the water, playing about in boats – watching seals, penguins, icebergs, birds and the scenery. The perfect afternoon was completed when all five zodiacs met up to enjoy some Sauvignon Blanc in the middle of the channel – perfect.
One night we had a barbecue on the bow of the boat – which was fun and freezing!!!! – The argentine chefs doing their best to re-create an Asado.
Further stops at Neko harbour, Useful Island and Portal Point and the trip was drawing to a close. However. our sightings of whales was pretty poor, we had even pursued a few in the zodiacs but they had got away – but that was about to change.
1 January 2008 - Camping it up beyond the Circle
We landed at Detaille island, which was san abandoned British Antarctic Survey base. They had left in the mid 50s when Gill and Deryn were mere girls, over 50 years ago!! None of our team had ever been there before and they estimated that only about 200 people would get there in any one year, and we were the first 50 in 2008. The island was populated with crabeater and weddel seals and skuas However, the main attractions were a small number of wooden huts, untouched since the 50s. As Antarctica is technically a desert and gets less than 10cm of rain equivalent snow per year, the air is very dry and so nothing rots, and the huts were in an amazing condition. They looked as if the previous inhabitants had left in hurry, mail was scattered about, pots in the sink, coats and skis hanging up, beds unmade and the stores of food – HP sauce,, tins of porridge oats, pickle, biscuits, salad cream, were all stacked neatly in the cupboards, it was fascinating and we felt privileged to see all this stuff.
However, the main excitement of the day was to come. After dinner, Martin informed us that those of us who had elected a nights camping ( seemed like a good idea last March in London) would spend the night under polypropylene (modern day canvas?) on Detaille Island that night – buggers and we were just getting comfortable. So back into our multilayered cold weather gear, back onto the zodiacs and at 9pm we were flattening the snow (in a blizzard) and pitching flimsy, dome tents designed for somewhere else. Derek and I were to share a tent (and he had complained about my snoring keeping him awake in the cabin )– this was going to be a nightmare for him – but not for me as I would be asleep !!
Tents pitched, we had taken a chemical loo ashore and it needed to have some nice snow walls built around if for privacy and so this was the next task. I managed to avoid the tough job of building the walls of snow, but did manage to get a spade into my hands for the photo!!
By now it was 10pm, broad daylight – so what to do now as sleeping was going to be tough. We climbed to the top of the island, and were rewarded with great views, but also got dive bombed by large skuas protecting their nest. We saw where the dogs would have lived for the Brits sledging exhibitions to the interior, and we watched the seals, you do have to make your own entertainment as there is not much Antarctica night life!!!! However, I had a secret stash, although we had been told not to take any foreign materials ashore – I had a bottle of Veuve Cliquot and a Cohiba which 5 of us shared sitting in the snow outside the tent (like kids behind the bike shed!) and a memorable bottle and cigar is was too.
I slept like a log – Derek didn’t.
29 – 31 Dec 07 - First sighting and a swim
And then there was land – The South Shetland Islands came into view, hinting at the continent itself, the islands were snow covered, igneous rock and looked like chocolate marble cake.
Zodiacs were launched that first evening and in glorious late evening sunshine ( we were to get no night for 2 weeks) we landed at Barrientos Island in the Aitcho Group. We saw our first fur seals, Chinstrap Penguins Antarctic skuas and a lonely King penguin. The King was 800 miles away from South Georgia which is where they nest and is where he should have been. It was very sad to watch him call for his mate. It would have had no chance of meeting up with another King Penguin ever again, and was doomed to spend the rest of his life mateless and as an alien ion a colony of temperamental, stone robbing, noisy and smelly chinstraps. The feisty attitude of the chinstraps was hilarious and I think they are my favourite penguins.
The following day we landed at Half Moon Island in the morning and then sailed into the caldera of an active volcano at Deception Island. You enter trough a narrow channel that the sea has breached and is known as Neptune’s Bellows, a steep sided volcanic channel. Here (at Pendulum Cove) we went swimming!! However, deception was a good name as despite the promise of the steam rising from the hot steam vents, the water was either at -1C or +50C and with little happy medium, and with a minus 10C air temperature, undressing from all our layers and replacing them on the windswept volcanic sand beach was far from tropical – but we had swum in the Antarctic – so tick in that box.
We typically went ashore twice a day for up to 3 to 4 hours at a time. All landings were on beaches or on rocks and were wet – i.e. we needed wellingtons as we had to step into the water each time. We were then free to wander where we wanted or just sit and let the penguins approach us – which many did as they inquisitive and have no fear of humans as they have no land based predators. Overnight we sailed across the Bransfield Strait to Danco Island and the Leamire???? Channel which is the Antarctic Peninsula proper. It was cloudy and snowing with poor visibility as we zodiaced for 4 hours through the Leamire Channel – we did not know it until the return journey but this is also known as Kodak Gap as it is so photogenic – but we saw very little but had the adventure of zodiacing around the icebergs and the brash ice. I remember seeing our ship sail past us in the fog which was eerie, and we met it on the other side of the Lemaire. .
By now it was new year’s eve and how bizarre to celebrate it in daylight at midnight on the deck of a ship in Antarctica. Happy New Year!
27 – 28 Dec 07 - The Dreaded Drake…..
Ushuaia or ‘fin del mundo’ really does feel like the end of the world. Colourful from a distance, as it clings beneath the snow capped Andes as they peter out into the seas around Tierra del Fuego, close up it is a frontier town. It is dominated by hard faces, run down cars and feral dogs. Here, in mid-summer, the cold Antarctic wind was the only hint of what lay 500 miles south and 2 days sailing away over the horizon.
First sighting of out ship – Professor Multanovskiy was a shock. It was tiny and rusted compared to the enormous Marco Polo berthed next door!! In fact it almost looked no bigger than a Marco Polo life boat!! It was indeed tiny (only 12m across) and 65 m long, but it quickly became home for us and the other 46 passengers. Our cabin was compact and last decorated in 1980s Russia and was without facilities – so the toilet and showers were a short haul down the corridor and shared with about 6 other cabins. Gill, you would have hated this part, but actually they were fine and didn’t bother us at all and there is an art to using either facility in the swell.
The ship’s crew was Russian, there was the captain, navigator, first mate, a few engineering types who had oily hands all the time, 2 waitresses and two Argentine cooks. They were the permanent crew who spent the summers either in Antarctica or the Arctic as the ship moves north in the northern summer.
The dining rooms, had tables for 6 or 8 and the chairs were bolted down and tables covered in plastic sheets. Glasses had to be stored in wooden stabilisers and there was a pile of sick bags next to the salt!! In the circumstances food was great – each meal started with soup – so Derek and I used to fight to sit at the end of the tables in order to serve the soup and get the seconds!!!
The bar was small and the drinks were so cheap – too cheap if you know what I mean.
The expedition staff were assigned just for a few trips per year and they were specialists in their fields. They were lead by the swashbuckling Martin from Sweden who was a polar scuba diver and wildlife photographer – he was in charge. His team included Jeff, the author of the Antarctica Lonely Planet, Tony – the humorous ornithologist, an ex British civil servant who was indulging himself by spending every summer bird watching in Antarctica. (knew everything there was to know about penguins, petrels and albatross), Jamie – a British marine biologist (who loved krill, seals and whales) an aussie geologist, geomorphologist and glaciologist and Matt the aussie doctor who was not getting paid but was on a free trip – he had been on a waiting list to do this for 3 years. . Not only were they the resident experts but they doubled up as guides, zodiac drivers, expedition planners, our dining companions and bar mates to boot Their enthusiasm was contagious and they were having as much fun as the rest of us, because for them it was paid holiday doing what they loved.
We were under no illusion that this was an expedition and not a cruise. Where we would land and how far south we would go would depend on the weather and ice conditions and so nothing was guaranteed. The bridge was open 24 hrs a day and we were often there for discussions between the captain and the team leader on where we could get to, as they poured over charts and weather forecasts. We were there when a distress signal came in from another ship – but we were at least 2 days sailing away thank goodness.
Our aim was to cross the Antarctic Circle and be the first ship that far south this season and indeed in 2008. But as we set off nothing was guaranteed.
I’m racing ahead again as I am actually still buzzing as I write this in El Calafate nearly a month later and the buzz is incredible.
We sailed out of Ushuaia at 6pm and headed south down the Beagle (as in Darwin) Channel on a beautiful sunny (but nippy) long summer evening. We were so excited, cameras already clicking like mad as we saw our first Wandering Albatross and patterned Cape Petrels gliding effortlessly in the updrafts as the followed the ship. We had a pilot for the first 4 hours until we got to open water. Martin then made an announcement that the pilot had left the ship and were on our own and heading south – oh shit!!
We felt the swell almost immediately and it was soporific (or was that the overdose of seasickness tablets that we were all doped up on). The crossing is legendary as we have to sail across the main current which circumnavigate the continent and at 90 degrees to the prevailing furious fifties and screaming 60s for 2 whole days. On average the weather fronts and low pressure storms follow each other every 35 hours, – but we missed them (on both legs) which was a tad disappointing. Although I have been assured by everyone who did experience such a storm that we were the lucky ones. In between sleeping and eating, we enjoyed the bracing decks, watching the swell, the birds and the moody skies It really felt as if we were leaving the rest of the world behind us as we dropped off the end.
Sunday, 27 January 2008
In Australia for Australia Day (26 Jan 2008)
Bula from Fiji (21 - 26 Jan 2008)
Sunday, 20 January 2008
Flashpacking and frogs free in Fiji (20 January 2008)
Saturday, 19 January 2008
The long and winding road....(18 January 2008)
Flying laundry and the most unusual theme park in the world (17Jan 2008)
Pompeii of the Southern hemisphere (16 Jan 2008)
Wednesday, 16 January 2008
A day goes missing between Raro and Roto... (15 January 2008)
The welcome here is Kia Ora, meaning Hello– funny really, all those years ago when Mum used to buy Kia Ora orange squash it sounded so exotic – hello orange squash doesn’t sound quite the same!
Reflections on Rarotonga (13 January 2008)
After my trip to Aitutaki, Air Rarotonga got me back here safe and sound, and as you can se on the left modelling the latest headgear - it smells lovely! Am here for a couple of nights and after almost 3 weeks in the Cook Islands, I am about to move on – next stop New Zealand. It’s been the relaxing time that I had planned – time to unpack the case for a few days at least, and take time to appreciate the beauty of the South Pacific. A few things to note for next time or for anyone else thinking of visiting here- be prepared:
· to slow down to Island time – nothing is done – or indeed needs to be done – in a hurry. A simple lunch of a sandwich and a coffee in town takes at least an hour – so sit back and enjoy!
· to bring your biggest credit card, Tahiti has always been known as the most expensive place; the Cook Islands is catching up and apparently is running a close second.
· to go back in time to the 1950’s where shopping is concerned. Not just the lack of shops, but the lack of choice! And no alcohol sold in the shops after 9pm or all day Sunday. The shops close at 12.30 on Sat and all day Sunday. We forget with the shopping hours at home how easy it is to get exactly what you want, when you want. If things run out here, there’s nothing to be done but wait 2 weeks for the next supply boat…. but in itself, that has a charm of its own.
· for rain – I know it’s wet season, but the amount of rain here was a surprise – I thought it would be showers with sun in between, but some of the time here it has been continuous. But on the upside, it’s always nice and warm and these weather patterns are unusual.
· to become a Christian! The Cook Islands, as a result, I suppose, of the missionaries, are strongly Christian. On Aitutaki at least, grace before meals was compulsory - before the Island Night buffet and the on board barbie, all were required to close eyes and bow heads as grace was said, and join in with the “Amen” at the end!
· to feel safe. As I travelled round the islands, it appears people leave their doors and windows wide open, even when no one’s at home. You can walk along in the dark quite happily, and everyone says a friendly “Kia Orana” (may you live long), the traditional Cook Island greeting as they walk or “scooter” by. Also there are no poisonous insects or snakes of any kind on any of the islands.
· to bring lots of mozzie repellent – they are quite persistent little things….
· to take trips to the other islands – there are a few more out there I need to come back to visit.
· to enjoy the spectacular sunsets, the amazing colours and warmth of the crystal clear water, the white sand, the peace and quiet. Kia Orana.
Saturday, 12 January 2008
Shipwrecked! (10th January 2008)
Off road again... (9th January 2008)
Island Night (8 Januay 2008)
And on the 8th day God created Aitutaki Lagoon (7 Jan 2008)
Wednesday, 2 January 2008
Happy New Year (Jan 1 2008)
Island Time (Dec 30th 2007)
Am thinking about Ant and Derek – tonight is the night that they camp on the Antarctic ice on a day when the sun doesn’t go down.