You know it’s a good day when you wake up early to watch the largest ecotype of killer whales before breakfast. You know it’s a superb day when you get to spend the morning standing in the sunshine below the Antarctic circle surrounded by Antarctic fur seals and southern elephant seals. You know it’s a great day when your lunch is interrupted by a second type of killer whale (and the galley team joins us out on deck to enjoy it as well!). You know it’s an awesome day when the naturalist team can’t put their cameras down while cruising through amazing scenery. You know it’s an incredible day when the bridge team navigates us through “The Gullet”, the only ship to do so this season. It’s normal to be at a loss for words for all that Antarctica has to offer, and today was nothing short of spectacular.
2/27/2024
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National Geographic Endurance
Drake Passage and Beagle Channel
This morning there is once again water as far as the eye can see, and the Drake Passage has not lived up to its intimidating reputation. The sun came out in glorious form and we watched it paint the tops of the waves with orange light. Land Ho! South America has been spotted. Soon the green covered hills of Tierra Del Fuego were clearly seen. Gone are the ice-covered hills, the glaciers, and tabular icebergs. Before us are trees, sea birds, and hints of a town. Black-browed albatross and blue-eyed shags guide us toward the tip of South America as if to help us transition from the life we have lived these past weeks back to the lives we previously knew. How to share what we just experienced with those we love who have not been a part of it is a quandary we all face. How many of our photos do we share to convey the magic? Will anyone honestly understand how we felt being there? Will anyone notice that we have been deeply changed by this past month in Antarctica? And the question that we all ask ourselves, will we be able to keep this experience close to our hearts? “Dolphin!”, someone cries out. Our inner thoughts disappear as Peale’s dolphins bow ride our ship. Then the blows of sei whales are seen and we spend the rest of the afternoon watching their sharp dorsal fins cut the surface of the sea. The ship moves on as life moves on. Our trip is coming to an end. The Beagle channel opens its arms and welcomes us back. Fair winds and following seas fellow travelers.