is the last landing of this voyage.
Chinstrap penguins.
Elephant seal.
Jawbone of baleen whale, with me for scale.
is the last landing of this voyage.
Chinstrap penguins.
Elephant seal.
Jawbone of baleen whale, with me for scale.
Active geothermal activity in Whaler’s Bay.
British Antarctic Survey station Biscoe House destroyed by a lahar in 1967.
Norwegian whaling station oil tanks.
Snow and surf on the black sand beach.
Nearby yawning crabeater seal.
Crabeater seals on ice, and, by the way, they eat krill, not crabs.
Sunken factory ship Governoren.
Wooden boats called “jollen” used to haul blubber to the factory ships.
our furthest point south on this expedition, and my personal best at 68° 12′ 0″ S.
(Click image to enlarge.)
is the tiny rocky platform on which both British and American bases were established in the 1940s.
British Antarctic Survey Station E.
United States Antarctic Service - East Base.
Happy guests and expedition staff on the foredeck, celebrating crossing the Circle!
of the snowy sheathbill, a scavenger that resides in Antarctica, living among penguin colonies.
(Click image to enlarge.)
Day 26 of “retirement” above the glacier in Neko Harbor.
(Click image to enlarge.)
on this second voyage to Antarctica. Here we are on Greenwich Island in the Shetland Island group, arriving on a pebble tombolo beach populated by fur seals and gentoo and chinstrap penguins.
(Click image to enlarge.)
“JD,” our expedition leader, expressing joy at Fort Point. Life is good!
following a terrific 18 day long voyage to the Falklands, South Georgia and Antarctica. The guests will depart tomorrow and the ship reprovisioned, welcoming new guests aboard later in the day with a return to Antarctica.
is a more positive way of thinking about my new focus in life. Here I am in Gold Harbour on South Georgia celebrating this wonderful exploration of the Southern Ocean and Antarctica.
Bertrand Glacier and me!
Sedimentary sandstones consisting of a series of stacked turbidites.
Expedition staff member Ingrid Nixon, who took the images of me shown above.
was the site of phreatomagmatic eruptions in 1967, 1969 and 1970. Since then, a glacier is advancing into one of the maar craters formed during the explosive eruptions.
Another day at the office at Whaler’s Bay in the Deception Island caldera.
that I photographed while alone in a Zodiac. Wonderful!
Charcot cairn constructed in 1904.
(Click image to enlarge.)
Weddel seal
Leopard seal