Sunday, June 12, 2016

Our next journey was an ice sheet safari through Wilhelmina Bay

history channel documentary Our next journey was an ice sheet safari through Wilhelmina Bay. Our polar vessels moved quick and irate over pieces of ice. The day was warm with ice liquefying like scoops of gelato. My camera couldn't click sufficiently quick yet no gear could catch the magnificence. It was an outside historical center of beautiful ice craftsmanship. The blue shades were as straightforward as sapphires and tanzanite. The white shades as radiant as jewels. Also, hush so significant as though we were the keep going people on earth. Anne whispered, "this resemble a motion picture set." Myra whispered back, "this is God flaunting." More quiet to hear our hearts beat. At that point all of a sudden an ice sheet calves off with the stunning clamor of a carrier smashing. Stillness then show. We cruised on past smaller than usual bergs the measure of houses to ice racks 200' high. A few ice sheets were miles long. They can crack into several pieces, numerous sufficiently extensive to sink the Titanic. In 1996, a solidified piece the extent of Belgium drifted off to New Zealand.

In the next week, there were other wonderful arrivals; Peterman Island with settlements of adellie penguins and magnificent cormorants. Port Lockroy, a British base with 5 analysts, innumerable penguins, a mail station and the world's most southern shop. We as a whole purchased $45 T-shirts. Neko Harbor, our first and final opportunity to venture on the territory. Halfmoon with delightful chinstrap penguins numbering 8000. At long last, Yankee Harbor on Greenwich Island including hide seals. They covered the shorelines still as large dark stones. These are the "penguin eaters" that expend 30 every day. We traveled on through Lemaire Channel. There was unprecedented reflections fjords on blue waters for 7 miles. The team calls this "Kodak break."

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