Pictures from Puerto Chacabuco March 7/19

A little too choppy in the pool for swimming!

Finally calm in the fiords

Roasting lamb

Looks and acts like a variety of bamboo but isn’t…. it isn’t hollow!

Fushia Magellanic …. now the name makes sense….. grows wild everywhere

Arrayan tree….. bark much like our arbutus. Here it grows in the wet

Me at the “Old Man’s Beard” waterfall with 2 rainbows. The spray soaked you. It was spectacular!.

One of the volcanos as seen from the passage

Somewhere between Punta Del Este Feb. 27&28/19

I found that this post was just sitting, that it had failed to send. Sorry for the mix-up!

We have been at sea for 2 days… and what a rocky ride! Lots of people… passengers and crew, are sea sick. I’ve never been seasick in my life but I certainly was feeling queasy. Since our arrival back on board in Punta Del Este, our porthole “windows” have been shut as a precaution. Personally I would like to be able to see out. It really has been rough…. difficult to walk without looking totally drunk.

Puerto Chacabuco..March 7/19

This port area has very little except the docks but the fiords in and around are just gorgeous.

There are 15 “districts”. This is 11th.

Lots of Germans came here for logging. Only one person per sq. kilometre

Lake Riesco…..

The first hatchery is for research not commercial.

16 today but will go to 28 in next couple of days

3000-4000 mm rain/yr….. flooded last couple days. People couldn’t come out of their homes. Inland it drops to 600mm.

A bird called a Chucao is a hopper & a beautiful singer.

Lots of Gunnera growing..called “Nalca” here. They eat the stalk.. like rhubarb. They also make drink like pisco sour with it.

Califate bush…. purple fruit ….yellow flower… if you eat it it is said you will come back.

Arrayan tree…”Luma apiculata” most common… trunk looks arbutus… consumes lots of water so it’s colder to touch.

Wet wet bird….

Quilla looks like bamboo “colihue”… not hollow. Every 15 years blooms… bring many mice.

Final destination on our walk was a spectacular waterfall call the”Old Man’s Beard” but in Spanish.

White flowers… luma plant.

Quienhco… gathering of friends… bbq, drinks. Had a lamb bbq-4 hours cooking….. fire pit in the middle.

I am not having much success downloading pictures. I will try later.

Cape Horn

Windiest place in world… 30% time in winter gale force …called the ”furious fifties”

It’s 800 kms between SAmerica and Antarctic….Drake Passage.

Magellan passage (Puna Arenas is … calmer but much narrower than the open waters of Drake passage.

On March 5/19 we watched a very primitive video taken in 1929 by the man who later narrated it. It was called “The Peking Battles Cape Horn”. If you get the opportunity to watch it, I recommend that you do. It is truly amazing and really quite humorous.

To travel from the Atlantic side to the Pacific around the Cape is considered the wrong way because you would be fighting the prevailing winds…. very difficult considering you would have to tack into it…, no motors on board.

The Peking was a 17 stories high sailing ship from Hamburg. It was sent to pick up nitrates from Chile.

90% of the ice fields are in Antartica, 7% Greenland and 2% in the rest of world.

While travelling through more of the Chilean fiords, the Amalia Glacier, at first we couldn’t see because of clouds. But then it finally came into view. Amalia Glacier is about 3 kilometres wide. They lowered one of the boats into the sea to collect a “bergie” and hoisted it up for display in “Horizons”.

Sometime later we sailed by the Asia Glacier. Magnificent!

Through the Chilean Fiords

Our location in Patagonia

Amalia Glacier

Asia Glacier

Yours truly at Asia Glacier

“Bergie” bits

More pictures of Punta Arenas March 4/19

Palacio Sara Braun Hamberger ….a heritage home now the “Union Club”

The conservatory of the “Palacio”

Looks like by the thickness of this bark that winters are severe

At the cemetery

Another mausoleum

This mausoleum is not as well cared for

Shelter on the dock… I kind of think they must have severe wind and rain at times….lol!

I would say this …. right in the middle of the city, was built for severe rain storms

Punta Arenas… March 4/19

Jeanette and Marilyn went kayaking (I didn’t want to go for any unscheduled dips in the ocean seeing as it was a little windy. That was my excuse) so Linda and I just walked around the city. It is really quite a large city but in my opinion, has no redeeming qualities. The only thing that is quite nice is the park in the downtown area that has a fabulous statue of Magellan and some crew. One of the crew has very shiny toes from everyone rubbing it (if you do you will return to Punta Arenas). Also…. we went to the “cemetario”. Wow…. lots of lovely mausoleums!

Welcome to Punta Arenas and the straits of Magellan

Rusted steel sheeting on a building

Statue of Magellan

Rubbing the toes

Later in the evening us 4 gals and 2 couples from California Margaret and Charlie and Don and Kathrine met for dinner in Tuscan Steak in celebration of my birthday. We had champagne (thank you M&C), saw a great show in the lounge and later when returning to our room, found a card from Oceania, 5 balloons and a towel “dog” with 2 chocolate eyes. Nice!

Me & Charlie… my b’day cake

Margaret and me

Don and Katherine

My pooch with the chocolate eyes

Isla Hornos or Cape Horn… March 3/19… just after 7 am.

We are at 55 minutes south in the “Southern Ocean” on relatively calm day unlike the first time our lecturer was here……18 metre or 60 foot seas…..OMG… I can’t imagine that!

Ocean is 100 metres deep below us.

La Boreal and Zaandam, 2 other ships are here besides us. The sun rise was gorgeous but the Isla Hornos was shrouded in cloud. Apparently there is a sculpture (which we could not see) made of 2 pieces but together look like an albatross. BTW they are quite huge…. too hard to get a picture of.

It was about 9C but the wind came up out of nowhere and so did the swells. The captain didn’t want the ship hanging around cuz there was a “low” coming our way so he got us on our way.

Cloud shrouded Isla Hornos

Sunrise at the Cape

Our location at the bottom of the world

At Cape Horn

Friend Margaret …. Cape Horn

Albatross sculpture at Cape Horn

Zaandam near the Cape “Isla”

Sunset the night before in the Beagle Channel

Ushuaia-March 2/19… our tour is Penguin Rookery

Imperial or “blue-eyed cormorants were the first we stopped to see on our way to see penguins. We were travelling by catamaran.

Cormorants

There are Skuas… an aggressive bird that steals food from the cormorants. Petrals are also aggressive … brown.

The first we saw were South America Fur Seals…. max out at 300 kilos for males and 200 females. One alpha male has a haram … one pup per year for each female. The first group were called fur seals but are actually sea lions. These had a pointy snout, the second group were sea lions too but have a pushed in nose.

This second group of sea lion males weight in between 350-400 kilos.

Isn’t this one cute???

Very huge alpha male sea lion… second group

Lighthouse at entrance to Ushuaia Bay. … Les Eclaireurs.

They harvest King Crab here.

Well we saw mostly Magellanic (Ma’gell an’ ic) … the chicks are born in January. There were a few Gentoos…. their chicks are born the beginning of December….. are more territorial. Both are migratory. Gentoos go to same nest year after year.

Magellanic

Moulting Magellanic chick

The boat took us as far as Harberton where a whole lot of people were dropped off.

After stopping in

The Falklands (also known as the Malvinas. There were signs in Ushuaia that referred to it as the capital of the Malvinas. Argentina obviously doesn’t agree that they lost the war), this tour was quite a disappointment. It was a long boat ride without seeing all that much wildlife.

Ushuaia…. looks somewhat like North Van

Linda and Jeanette… Ushuaia

Rugged mountains along the Beagle Channel

Ushuaia itself is quite large with a major prison. The city of 65-75,000 is built on the side of the mountains and doesn’t look dissimilar to North Vancouver. Note the very defined tree line. The mountains on either side of the Beagle Channel are rugged and steep… coming right down to the waters edge…., kind of reminded us of the coast of B.C.

Cool sculpture at waterfront in Ushuaia

Hand-craft market Ushuaia

Hard Rock Cafe Ushuaia