Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Recap









As a recap, here is a list of DeDe and Pop Pop’s highlights from the trip:

1. The people we met – there were so many people with multiple talents: a classical concert pianist, a classical concert singer, the man who first climbed and mapped Antarctica’s highest two mountain peaks – both all ice and rock over 16,000 ft., a young couple on a world tour – he a trader and she a product manager for Skittles, the National Geographic and Lindblad photography teams, the naturalists and scientists studying marine and wildlife on Antarctica, the Antarctic dive team, and people from all over the world: Australia, Bonaire, Britain, Canada,Switzerland, and all over the U.S.
2. The vastness and sparseness of Antarctica – ice, rocks, and lots of space. One time we thought an iceberg was two miles away. The captain hit it with a GPS – it was 12 miles away, and very big!
3. The king penguin colony in South Georgia – standing with 300,000 to 500,000 penguins is amazing – especially watching the personal interaction of the individual birds.
4. The rest of the area’s wildlife – birds, seals, and whales - and the geology, and the interaction of the two dynamics.
5. Albatross in both South Georgia and the Falklands – these birds are so awkward on land and so graceful soaring in the air – it is no wonder they can stay aloft for months at a time.
6. The Lindblad response to the earthquakes in Chile – they threw resources at a problem, and were there for all their travelers. We appreciate their commitment, expertise, teamwork, and diligence.
7. The links to the Shackelton rescue both in Antarctica and South Georgia – we got a minute taste of the Shackelton men’s experience by being there in the summer, and hiking 4 miles over a ridge 1,000 ft high (it was very steep, both up and down). That was certainly small potatoes compared to an 800 mile ride in a tiny boat in the dead of winter, almost without navigation, and a hike over 9,000 ft and 20 miles after near exhaustion. And the men who stayed on Antarctica over the winter under two wooden life boats had no picnic, either.
8. The photography lessons, the critiques, and the individual attention - having six photography experts, each with their own style and point of view, was a learning experience. We were at the bottom end of the photo food chain, with our little point and shoot cameras. But we learned that with good positioning and composition, and pretty good editing tools at our disposal, we were able to improve our picture taking significantly.
9. The concert in the “Bistro Bar” and the personal story and presentation of climbing Antarctica’s Mountain peaks –these were unexpected treats, from our fellow travelers.
10. And finally, but not trivially, learning to blog over time and space – DeDe and Pop Pop loved doing it, getting better as we went along, and knowing that others were able to share our experience in part.

Thank you to all who traveled with us and followed us on our blog.

Coming home








We were stranded in Ushuaia for two days, due to the Chilean earthquake and apparent Argentine intransigence. Special thanks to Bud and Kendra, trip leaders, and the entire Lindblad team for all their attention and efforts to get us home with minimal disruption - including flying a special charter from Miami to get us all back to the states. The earthquake had left all South American travel in shambles. For example, in Santiago there was a cruise ship where over 2,000 passengers were not allowed to
have anyone disembark, nor shore passengers to board, because there were no hotel rooms certified safe!

We, however, arrived home safe, sound and exhausted. We had as good a trip as could be expected considering a five hour leg, an hour layover on the plane, a two hour leg, a two hour layover off the plane, and finally a five hour leg to Miami (all with three bodies in three seats in steerage). But it was better than it sounds. Mike Nolan, one of the Lindblad photographers, sat with us, and he used to be a deejay, so we had a group sing-along with Mike, Jake (from Bonaire), and Juan (from Canberra) leading the way. The sing-alongs and the layovers really helped break up the tight space for the rest of the trip.

From there it got much better. We hustled in Miami, and our expected layover of ten hours was not only cut to an hour and a half, but we were upgraded to Philly, and arrived back in Philly by 11 am, and home before noon. After showers, Donna called friends and crashed around 790, while I went to our club, where the National American Paddle Tennis Association (APTA) finals were being held. It was unreal - "A game of which I am unfamiliar," as someone once said.

The Philly clan arrived and we had a great time with a Chinese dinner and watching the Oscar prelims, the Red Carpet. Pop Pop fell asleep twice prior to heading upstairs before the actual show started, and never heard a thing until workers arrived yesterday am, installing new wiring in our basement and finishing the work on our family room.

Just prior to our trip, and while we were gone, we had over fifty inches of snow - in PA, not Antarctica! We have pine boughs down everywhere, and mold (yuck)in our basement. We have things to do and miles to go before we sleep.

P.S., The pictures are our last day in the Falklands, a scene in Ushuaia, and a scene from our sing-along.