Archives for posts with tag: voyage

And we continue with our January adventures…. As they rolled to a close! It’s time to catch up as now there have been more adventures.

So, Holland America has as an excursion option on disembarkation day the choice of having a private car and tour guide for eight hours – ending at the airport.  For a solo person the car for two would be great.  It’s likely a car the size of a Toyota Corolla I suspect.  As we have six pieces of luggage with us (two checked each plus carry on) we realized we needed something bigger so we booked a “private minivan” which is supposedly large enough for three or four couples.  I tell you, the van that picked us up this morning was big enough for about 12 people with 22 days of baggage but there was only ourselves in it.

Ours was listed as “Buenos Aires Private Touring – Full Day (Minivan) Ending at the Airport.”  I suspect you’d want “Buenos Aires Private Touring – Full Day (Car) Ending at the Airport.”  I’ll describe now how it worked for us.  We think it was worth it and I’ll explain way, but also use this as an excuse to describe the experience.

The cruise port in Buenos Aires is pretty chaotic.  So, from beginning to end.

As is the case for all disembarking passengers luggage goes out the night before by midnight.  They haul your “checked bags” down, you bring down your carry-on.  You have to carry your carry-on down in the morning to the cruise terminal shuttle and then carry it to the terminal.  For these private touring transfers you are in the last group to disembark – at 8:30 for us.  They give you enough tags for your bag and they call you when it’s time.

Upon arrival from the terminal you get off of the bus and go into the terminal and find your other luggage, which if like us would be Blue group C, a fairly small section towards the near end of the baggage claim area.  Then you take your baggage (there are no carts) out through customs.  At customs you must put everything through an X-ray machine (they will put it up for you but really didn’t help taking it down).  In general there were not luggage trolleys available.  

For us, this was a matter of maneuvering, between The Boss, myself, and my mother, one 76 pound rolling bag, one 65 pound rolling bag, one 40 pound rolling bag, a couple of fairly heavy duffel bags, a rolling carry on, a few shoulder bags and one backpack out through a fairly good sized building.

Then you spill out onto a wide covered apron near the street where a HAL person will direct you through a crowd to a corner of the building where there were numerous people carying signs with your name on them.

Pro tip – pack less than we did.  Take advantage of the unlimited laundry offer.

So, we found our guide and he directed us across a dip in the concrete to a van that was luckily waiting on the best patch of curb available.  The driver loaded our luggage and we were on our way.

Logistically, the way it works is on embarkation day the HAL excursion desk leaves you an envelope with a form for you to fill out regarding anything you may want to see on your private tour.  In reality, our guide had a list of eight main areas he shows to everyone but if we had anything special we wanted to see it should go on the list.  I was looking at something that wasn’t steak for lunch so I researched, and we wanted to see the Evita Peron Museum, so I researched that as well.  Otherwise, he covered the five main areas we wanted to see including the cemetery and Plaza Mayo along with Recoleta and Palermo neighborhoods,  We also added Ateneo Grand Splendid Bookstore which was also among our favorites.

So as I was saying, they picked us up and we were on our way.  We spent the morning heading towards the central and then the more southern part of the close-in city and then after lunch we headed towards the northern part of the city.  Finally, we went to the airport.

We stopped by Teatro Colon which unfortunately was closed except for the main hallway due to some electrical work being done.  We could have done a tour here for forty five minutes in English but it would not have happened anyway.

One note – our guide, and most of the guides, are fully licensed and many of them have college degrees for being tour guides.  With his badge our guide was able to visit most attractions without paying a fee, although we had to pay the international rate.  he also seemed to know somebody on every single block.  Martin was approached many times for the typical Argentinian kiss on the cheek greeting.  Oh, but one other thing – even though he has free admission everywhere at attractions where they sell an electronic guide or otherwise he is often forbidden from providing his own commentary.  More on this later.

We spent a bit of time in the square behind the theater talking about the buildings in the neighborhood including the palace of justice.  Then, back into the van.

I snapped this photo of The Obelisk on our way to our next stop, Plaza Mayo.  Santiago and Punta Arenas both had Plaza de Armas; Buenos Aires has the same thing, Plaza Mayo.  Most Spanish colonial cities have something similar.

This heavily-touched-up photo I took of the pink house – their presidential mansion.  It sits on Plaza Mayo along with the national bank and the cathedral and a number of other buildings.

This is the inside of the cathedral on the square.  As it was Pope Francis’ seat when he was in Buenos Aires there is now a small Pope Francis museum attached apparently but we did not visit it. There is actually a bit to see here including The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier of the Independence.  If anybody is curious I’ll look it up when I get around to reviewing my notes.

Back in the van.  Let me tell you, it’s nice to only wait for two others climbing into a van.  Martin wanted to take us to the San Telmo neighborhood but as we visited it yesterday we suggested moving on.  Instead, he took us straight to the La Boca neighborhoodwhere we drove past the very famous soccer (futbol) stadium.  Every building in La Boca seems to be painted in its colors.  Here we got out of the van and went for a coffee in what I would call a “coffee speakeasy.”

This was my cafe cortado.  Mmmm.  Anyway, the entrance to the coffee shop was through a souvenir shop behind a painted door and up some stairs in the back.  You would not know it was there.

La Boca is a neighborhood that was settled first by Spanish immigrants and later by Italian immigrants in the late 1800s.  Along the port there there is a walking street, Caminito, leading to the small port where today many artists sell their wares.

Caminito is actually a combination between an outdoor market, walking street, and outdoor gallery.

Our guide Martin highlighting one of the artworks.

The back of a meat-selling restaurant.

After this part of the tour it was time to say goodbye to the South and head north.  Along the way we passed the new port district along the eastern side of the district, much better than the cruise port neighborhood.  It reminded me of the newer parts of Baltimore’s Inner Harbor district or some of the developments along the Chicago River in Chicago. 

Martin insisted we stop at this – it was not on our radar at all.  Two years ago, long time Cruise Critic readers will remember, around the time of one of the January Antarctic sailings there was a tornado that hit this part of Buenos Aires collapsing part of the roof in the cruise terminal.  In addition to collapsing the cruise terminal it did some damage to this, Floralis Genérica.  This has only been reopened for the past two weeks.  Prior to 2023, it opened in the daytime and closed at night; now it is just… open, but hopefully it will soon return to its opening and closing status.

After the flower we visited Recoleta Cemetary where Evita and her family are entombed.  Of course, our guide told us the story about this as well.  She was not actually entombed there until years after her death of course and there are many many mausoleums that are more grand than hers.  If anybody is interested, please let me know and I will share more photos.

And then finally we visited Ateneo Grand Splendid bookstore.

This bookstore is great, obviously.  It’s like a large Barnes and Noble if you speak Spanish.  If not, then it’s just pretty.  The English language section is on the ground floor on the left.  There is a gift and merchandise section in the lobby.  On the third (top) tier for a fee you can see an exhibit regarding the history of the museum and they will serve you snacks.  Or you can pay for a coffee and sit on the stage.

I bought a dual-language cookbook here, it was on sale in the lobby.  We also somewhere along here stopped for lunch.

I’m not going to say lunch was a mistake, but it certainly was an adventure. I think our guide’s intention was to take us to one of the market restaurants or somewhere similar, but prior to the day of the tour when we provided our list I gave him the name of Niño Gordo – “Fat Baby” in English. This had the potential to be a legendary lunch except for two factors – one, we had eaten ourselves to death on the few days prior and two, halfway through the meal the power went out!

Our guide was actually a young guy – in his mid-twenties, and perhaps when I assessed him as an adventurous recent college graduate in a cosmopolitan city I was wrong :-). We took him to an Asian – Argentine fusion spot. As you can see above, we were seated in a section that had low seats, near the floor, with light spilling in from the tabled area and from the bar area. We ordered several dishes to share including kimchi, an Argentine-Asian beef dish, and a fish dish. It was going great, but around the second course the power in the kitchen goes out and half the restaurant goes dark. Not long after that, the air conditioning above us starts dripping on us – because it was off and no longer blowing the condensation elsewhere. So, surprise.

We finished our lunch and then made our way to the airport. The airport is a bit crazy though. The key here that worked out well for us is with the private car or van our guide snagged us a luggage trolley, walked into the airport with us and showed us where our check-in counters are, and showed us where the security desk is.

One thing I’m going to note now –

EVEN WITH PRIORITY STATUS EZE IS A FOUR HOUR AIRPORT IN THE LATE AFTERNOON AND EVENING.  UGH.

Delta’s check-in opens at five. American opens at six as does United (I think).  Delta has fewer people staffing check-in but the same number of planes as American.  American opened early.  We arrived at 5pm and my mother got in line for check in right away whereas the two of us sat and had coffee for ninety minutes as we had several hours to wait. With priority our check-in was 20 minutes; my mother’s was 90 minutes.  The security line was I think 50 minutes, passport control was 20 or 30 minutes.  Okay, so maybe with priority it’s a three hour airport. However, as we arrived so early we had time to kill. We enjoyed a light meal at Le Pain Quiotidien along with some wine and beer prior to running the security and passport gauntlet. And then? The best thing ever. We visited the Admiral’s Club lounge where, after spending a hot summer day touring Buenos Aires, I was able to take a shower! We finally boarded for our 11:59pm flight and were happily able to sleep on the plane as well.

And all of the bags on the right (the four) made it on the plane to Miami. When we landed in Miami it was barely above freezing and there were gusty winds which slammed our plane to the ground twice.  I figured we’d be in for the same at home but it was a more typical landing.  Even so, brrrrr.

On approach the Potomac was full of ice. And then we spent the next week clearing snowcrete from our driveway and walks…. Back to normal.

By contrast? Today?

Off for another adventure…

Normally I would want to blog about my travels as they happened, but as I fell off the wagon a week prior to the end of our January journeys I’ve been occasionally playing catch up instead. I find that this has actually been an enjoyable pursuit. I was writing a lot on Cruise Critic about our journey much of which I was transferring here, but revisiting it later instead gives me a different perspective. I also find that, with the aid of modern photography, I still am able to remember details effectively. So we will see how this goes today.

Montevideo appears as a city on the sea, rising above the flatlands just a tiny bit.

Montevideo of course is the capital of Uruguay, a surprisingly impressive country on the eastern coast of South America. Uruguay feels to me a bit like Argentina with similar culture and similar gaucho lifestyle but a little more laid back. It is also a little cheaper than Buenos Aires. Buenos Aires, which I will review later, seems to charge American or New York prices for anything that remotely resembles a luxury good. In other words, date night there is still a $200 proposition.

Our ship, the Oosterdam, chooses Montevideo to provision rather than Buenos Aires. My initial guess was Buenos Aires is avoided for this purpose because the Uruguayan currency is stable and HAL buys enough that transacting in U.S. dollars becomes unwieldy. The Argentine Peso is not a stable currency so individuals carry on a lot of transactions in dollars. In theory Argentines are to report larger dollar transactions and then be taxed on them in pesos, but in reality they do not and wait for a tax amnesty before depositing larger amounts of money in banks and using them in the official economy. Instead, they participate in an unofficial economy. Now, a cruise line cannot choose that approach, can they? They buy from local wholesalers and it is taxed and the government chooses what currency to use (always the peso, which is not stable).

But my secondary guess is because it’s more practical. The Port of Buenos Aires is a monster and they can get everything they need, or more, in Montevideo.

Also, about ten percent of the ship’s staff turned over that day. Our waiters from the Main Dining Room went home as a number of housekeeping staff, but not ours (we asked). The last port with a large crew turnover was Ushuaia I believe. They also provision in Ushuaia. What do these two ports have in common? It’s easy for trucks and buses to drive straight to the ship. In Buenos Aires everything is offloaded and switched to shuttles and the dock workers have their own thing going on of course.

Anyway, enough about that. Montevideo is nice because you can walk right off the ship and you’re in town. I wasn’t too sure about Montevideo before we joined the cruise. I wasn’t certain how well developed it would be as I have ended up in a number of places where there’s a nice downtown core but then there’s a vacant no-man’s-land or an unsafe-to-walk-area outside of the downtown core, but Montevideo wasn’t like this. You walk off the ship and you’re in town. The only challenge was there were two other ships in port that day so there were a total of six or seven thousand tourists flooding the streets. Fortunately we had a longer stay than either so the impact on us was spread out. I feel bad for the folks on the MSC cruise who had perhaps a six hour stop in Montevideo – in my mind barely long enough for a massive ship to empty out and then reload again (our ship, for the record, carried perhaps 35% the number of passengers, and it really does make a difference).

Our first stop was the Mercado del Puerto mainly for two reasons – to walk through and browse shops and find a hat but also to scope out to see if it works as a lunch stop. As you can see above there was at least one place that fit the bill. There were actually several, and this is where we began the practice of dining at the bar at a wood fired grill. Why didn’t we do this sooner in our voyage?

Our journey from this point took us through pedestrian streets lined with shops and cafes to multiple squares, some tree lined and some not.

Along the way we passed the Plaza De La Diversidad Sexual. The Plaza was dedicated more than two decades ago now with a monolith. The monolith features the following inscription: “Honrar la diversidad es honrar la vida: Montevideo por el respeto a todo género, identidad y orientación sexual” (Honoring diversity is honoring life: Montevideo for the respect of every gender, identity, and sexual orientation). On a random weekday afternoon it was a quiet and peaceful place just a block off busy streets where there were only a handful of people hanging around – mostly some boys riding their bicycles up and down the ramp.

We had vague plans to visit the leather factory off of Plaza Independcia (shown above), but the leather factory was a floor above ground level and more oriented towards tailoring to fit with 24 hour turn around than tourist browsing, so instead we took a wander back to the ship. I wasn’t permitted to wander the ocean front around the peninsula as this had resulted in a five mile walk for us in Punta del Este…

Like many South American cities there was a large classic theater, the above perhaps skewed a bit by me using the iPhone on fisheye mode.

This residence or business had some delightful sculptures climbing on the railings. And by the way the street scene was interesting to watch. We would not have happened upon this on an official tour.

We did actually make our way back to the market for lunch. As I said it was bar seating with food prep going on in front of us. Wine and beer here was the usual situation – nearly always they sell you the whole bottle of wine and they encourage you to order two beers at once by only providing liter beer bottles.

You can see the jamon serrano I ordered as well as tortilla de patata set for wait staff to slice off a quarter for anybody who requests. Reminds me that I should cook some up at home sometime soon; the challenge is it’s designed to be served room temperature at your leisure and I’m the only one who will have it that way so I make a plate full and serve off two slices and then it’s just me. But it’s oh so good.

This was the best beef I had enjoyed in two weeks at this point. There are about half a dozen of these places within the market as well as the fresh food stalls, tourist shops, and other artisanal shops. Also it didn’t seem to be air conditioned. I imagine it isn’t heated in the cooler months either. We were there around 2 or 3 in the afternoon. With Uruguay being the same longitude as us roughly as well as being two hours ahead of us this tells me the summer time hottest part of the day comes around 4 or 5pm in the afternoon, and the locals have lunch between 2 and 5, so I am thinking we timed things fairly well. It was warm to hot but not what I would say is Virginia hot, and it was fine inside in the shade.

Since our visit to Montevideo I have read additional travel reports regarding the city and the country and it all sounds fascinating – a great place to visit and base yourself for a week or two if not longer and travel around the Uruguayan countryside. Also, based on our experiences as well as these travel reports it almost sounds as if it is a better place to end a long haul flight than Buenos Aires. The airport is smaller and better run than the airports across the estuary in Buenos Aires. Between the two of us I think we both want to re-visit Montevideo and Punta del Esta as well as Buenos Aires. I know I would add on Argentine wine growing regions, the Argentina side of Patagonia and the Andes, and some hiking in the rain in Chilean Patagonia, but more on this when I write up Buenos Aires.

Eventually we made our way back to the ship. The night prior had been our final night in the main dining room. As our wait staff departed in Montevideo and we had a large lunch we opted to “stay in” and prepare for our travels home even though it was still two nights out. Also, it was our final night at sea.

Lovely skies. We packed up and prepared for two days in Buenos Aires.

Meanwhile at home a few days prior a thick layer of snowcrete had fallen which would plague us for half the month of February before it was no longer a nuisance…

The weather yesterday could best have been described as inhospitable. Today has been much better. So, yesterday I spent some time doing other things, and today, especially in the morning, I spent a lot of time outside.

Yesterday morning we had a strong wind from the stern as we hoover off Cuverville Island. The good news is there are plenty of penguins and humpback whales.

This was the scene yesterday morning.

I did go through the trouble of viewing it from up above. See that rock in front of us? All of the level areas with lots of grey are coverd with penguins. You couldn’t smell them as there was a fairly strong wind arriving from the left.

Penguins everywhere.

Aren’t they cute?

After our early morning penguin-viewing, we went for breakfast in the Pinnacle Grill where we had whales breaching a hundred meters outside the window. There’s a blue blob above for instance.

There was some decent tail action but as we were about six feet from a window rather than six inches from a window photos really didn’t come out well.

All of my photos are taken with an iPhone 17 Pro. I stopped carrying an SLR about eight years ago because I don’t have the patience to upload or process. The quality on the 17 is twice as good as the IPhone 15 I just traded in. Most of my photos are rubbish, I just choose to share the good ones. You can tell when it switches to digital zoom as things get grainy.

I sat through three talks yesterday morning as it was a very rainy day.  Dedicated wildlife watchers were still out on the bow, though, as there have been penguin and whale sightings all morning.  As we then had 30 knot winds and were moving around considerably the bow balconies on 5, 6, and 7 are closed but 4 was still open. And, as always, the promenade was open.

There are a number of folks following along on my writing elsewhere and social media who are on-ship, and there are some who are planning future voyages.  There are places Holland America doesn’t go anymore that past cruises could go (such as the lagoon in Deception Island where a Russian cruise ship ruined it for everyone).  There are places that can be visited in an expedition ship that cannot be visited in a cruise ship.  There are places where a small ship can dodge icebergs but Captain Kevin cannot even though Oosterdam is more maneuverable than other similar-sized vessels.  And ultimately it’s the scientific community and Antarctic treaties that dictate what we can and cannot do.  

And there are places where we’ve had things happen and seen things before where others haven’t.

We’re sgetting a great experience and at the moment we’re “planning to see” as much or more than the Oosterdam December 2025 voyage and prior voyages and a bit more than what direct competitor voyages (Celebrity, Princess, NCl0 were seeing this year.

So, choosing not to Sunday morning quarterback the captain, when the captain says “we are hoovering overnight” that really means from about 8pm to about 4am when most guests are either dining or sleeping, although there are many who are going without sleep for the four days we are down here.  I take him at his word – we’re hoovering overnight because it’s windy on the other side of the rocks, not just to save fuel.  Other than that we haven’t hoovered (I’ll repeat this – we’re only hoovering at night, otherwise he’s driving from place to place so we can view wildlife even in the inclement conditions).

We’re not a polar class ship.  Quark had their polar cass ship sitting southwest of us in Lemaire Channel (not confused with Lemaire Island – the two are 20 miles apart).  Silversea had their ice strengthened ship sitting in Paradise Bay, which we skipped yesterday, and the 450 foot long Hamburg is there as well (note – we saw this ship today, on January 21).  Interestingly the Seabourn ship we met up with Monday “hoovered” with us last night and a handful of expedition ships were following us this morning. We later learned that the Seabourn ship’s captain trained with Captain Kevin on Holland America Konigsdam.

A little sad we missed Lemaire Channel, but here’s what the guidebook tells us about Lemaire Channel.

”Perhaps the best-known fjord in Antarctica, Lemaire Channel cuts a path between the continent’s mainland on the east and Booth Island on the west.  It is almost 11 km (7 miles) long and renowned for its spectacular scenery, with near-vertical peakgs rising close on both sides.  Wandel Peak, on Booth Island, is 980 m (3215 ft) high.  The channel is deep too, measuring about 150 m (492 ft) most of the way.  Ice sometimes chokes it closed so if you are lucky enough to make it through make a point of spending your time out on deck.

”The current that flows through this passage is strong enough to drag in large icebergs that sometimes block traffic.  The ice also provides excellent platforms for resting leopard and crabeater seals, so keep an eye out for dark objects (this is the part I’m sad I missed).”

It goes on to talk about the humpbacks and minkes as well as shags and gentoo penguins in small numbers, but then points out that you go there for the landscape.  Yesterday’s cloud ceiling during the cloudy half of the day was about a thousand feet though.

But there are a lot of places like this.  The intention was we would make three stops Monday and overnight in Paradise Bay, but I’ve lost count of what we actually did Monday.

So, some slides from the morning briefing yesterday from Captain Kevin.  I’ll note that the Q&A included some second guessing of the captain of which I reference above 🙂. One passenger suggested we remain in Antarctica for an extra day because “we won’t be able to stop at the Falklands.”

The first slide I’ll share was the ice forecast for the northern peninsula.

Thanks to the suggestion of a passenger, the cruise director is dispatched to the screen with a pool cue to point out anything interesting.

We’re told we’re missing Esperanza as sea ice is flowing over from Weddell Sea and the marine map bears out nothing more than an ice breaker up in Hope Bay.

Nonetheless, everyone who has been here has experienced the changeable weather.  Yesterday’s weather as observed on Windy.com –

This really looked ominous. Thankfully it has improved. The map showed a low pressure system well to the west of us which actually traveled over us during the night. It showed 42 knot winds just “outside” of the islands but with hurricane-force winds closer to the low. By today, it moved off to the east.

Here is what the weather looks like now. Note how the peninsula now has blues.

We ended up spending the rest of the day yesterday trolling around the bays and islands more in the open than not, but still sheltered so the wind wasn’t horrible. It was a real treat though during the midday and early afternoon though because in the lower-visibility conditions there were a ton of humpback whales feeding. Many, many times the Captain took the ship to full stop and we just drifted as they breached around us. I went out on the veranda several times and listened to them coming up – you would hear a rush of water and sometimes a groan when they came to the surface. Usually they traveled in packs of two or three but sometimes they would be solo and the whole bay we were in you could see several groups splashing at once separated by a quarter mile or so in between each group. It was truly magical.

As I wasn’t one of the folks standing patiently with a big huge lens this is the typical type of photo I got.

And sometimes a bit of this.

By comparison in today’s daylight –

My new wallpaper!

Or really, a more realistic version thereof…. Conditions were much better for whale-viewing today but there were fewer whales (although still a lot, and likely more than a Cape Cod whale watching trip; definitely more than I saw off Kaikoura in 2015).

Eventually by mid-afternoon yesterday I headed up to the treadmill for nearly an hour (!!!) on the treadmill. Treadmill running on a ship of course can be tricky as it moves underneath you; there was a bit of dancing around and I had to focus directly in front of me. However, the view was great. Especially when the snow started falling.

I kept staring at this flag or just beyond. At one point, there was a pod of three whales less than a tenth of a mile in front of us which kept breaching every thirty seconds or so. I watched them move from left to right across my field of vision for about ten to fifteen minutes. When I finished, I realized many

Person on the treadmill made headless for anonymity purposes. Anyway, it was a bunch of this.

Obligatory post-run selfie outside!

So, after treadmill time I’ve been enjoying Oosterdam’s hydrotherapy pool. They have a large fifteen foot by twenty foot hottub with jets, bubbles, and a large spray from overhead which is good for soaking and warming up. Granted, after a run you don’t need hot water…. But it’s nice to go to the gym, shower, and soak in the hottub. And then head outside to the Seaview Pool and sit in the hottub there in the falling snow!

This is me outside on Sunday. I don’t have a photo from yesterday.

This of course is the view of the pool on today’s glorious morning! Note the snow-penguins at the end of the deck still there from yesterday. This afternoon there was actually a polar plunge out there which I magine wasn’t too bad as long as you soaked in a hottub beforehand. The water in the pool is probably around 75 or 80 degrees Fahrenheit so it wasn’t that polar, but not exactly pleasant to be out in the open air either – it’s barely above freezing.

I’m going to skip ahead to today’s update and come back and talk about our evening activities and wining and dining later (spoiler alert – the steakhouse has Caymus so that made me happy).

First, some updates on current and future conditions.

We’ve spent the past few days trolling around the area circled in red above.

Today we started in Charlotte Harbor; through the morning and into mid-afternoon we left Charlotte Harbor and slowly motored to the edge of the immediate peninsula islands. We are now crossing the strait to Deception Island where we hope to arrive around 6:30 this evening.

See? Here.

Chatting with my friends Andy and Hetty in England they provided their update from following cruisemapper which showed our path as above. Looking on MarineTraffic, I think we’re still, at nearly 5pm, about fifty nautical miles from Deception Island, so I think 6:30 in Deception Island is wishful thinking. I think we’re aiming more towards 8 or 9pm at this point which should be fine as it will still be daylight but it will certainly make an early morning tomorrow difficult.

Captain Kevin said “the kids” will drive the ship as we sleep and take us to Admiralty Bay. I think this is probably a hundred mile run so if we leave Deception Island and maintain only ten knots for whales that may be hard to do as well.

Then we will focus on crossing the Drake Passage. Forecast for Thursday night is holding at 6 meter waves which is fine with us, calming a bit by Friday afternoon.

Anyway, back to this morning.

I had my first outdoor meal.

Charlotte Bay is supposedly not known for wildlife although there was some there.  I spent some time on the bow chatting with Adrian and Graeme from the expedition team and they explained that most likely the whales we were seeing there were resting – they weren’t moving a whole lot.  They eventually explained this over the PA as well.  Out in the main channel there is a fairly strong current so as they explained the whales tend to get tired out feeding there.  Then they talked about whales sleeping vertically and a number of other subjects which I’m not too certain about (and didn’t really pay attention anyway).

I’ve been wandering around here with a heavy sweater labeled “US Antarctic Program South Pole” that a friend gave to me twenty years ago.  I’ve been wearing it mid-winter since then, and I think now it’s time to retire it.  No, neither of them visited the south pole but Graeme did come within 250 miles of the pole.  There’s not much at the pole except a US research station and a handful of others.  It’s flat, cold, and wind blows the snow everywhere even though it never snows there.  And it’s always dark for half the year.

One of the things we visited before lunch was this iceberg – it has fallen apart over time and most likely one of the columns will collapse entirely at some point.  I think we came maybe 50 or 75 yards away from it. I was on the bow for most of this and it was absolute mayhem. So many people came out so when I decided to leave I had to wait in line for about ten minutes.

I thought this view was particularly interesting as it showed a crack just above the waterline where water had filled in and frozen in dark blue.

On this scenic cruising often the clouds descend low and obscure things a bit.

And occasionally there’s a penguin.

This little guy was actually with a group of others who mostly got off the ice.

He just sat there stretching and posing for us!

In the mornign the best thing about visiting Charlotte Bay was the still water and the reflections on the ice.

The ship also used it as an excuse to do fast boat drills – and go collect some glacier ice. Like yesterday’s drone photos, they have a permit for this.

This has already shown up on Holland America’s social media. I imagine some of the views are going to show up on a television commercial coming soon to a screen near you as well.

Or on Carnival’s annual report as both Carnival and Seabourn are Carnival lines. Isn’t it beautiful?

What a great day it has been. The nicest thing about the past few days – only having to worry about a handful of things, rather than the usual family and corporate whack-a-mole at home. And it isn’t even like the usual vacation or retirement touring where you’re trying to figure out when you have an excursion or getting shuttled from place to place. You’re just walking out on deck and experiencing it.

I still want to write a bit about the variety of dining we’ve had over the past few days in particular and a handful of other things, such as how The Boss taught me to play craps and we did royally well, but for now I’m signing off. Tomorrow morning is going to be fairly busy but there will be more downtime to read and write starting tomorrow afternoon.