Viking Cruises

Viking Explorer Society News - Issue 21 - Summer 2024

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off, instead accentuating the positive while organising a visit to Damoy Hut in Dorian Bay at Wiencke Island. e shack, established in 1975 to support the airstrip at Damoy Point, was last occupied in 1993 and is now a time capsule of Antarctic history. Inside, cans of food stacked neatly on shelves and clothes laid out in the bunkroom give the impression someone left just minutes ago. Nearby at Port Lockroy is the only post office in Antarctica, staffed this year by four women chosen by the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust. Finally, there is a plan. Day nine is our last chance, and we will take it. is morning I am part of a Zodiac armada funnelling guests on to the shore in a military-style operation that will allow everyone to step on to the mainland and have the photo to prove it. e exercise starts at dawn; crew have shovelled out a platform in the snow at the shoreline near Base Brown, Argentina's research base on the peninsula, to allow everyone a brief moment on land. When I say "moment" I mean 30 seconds. My Zodiac carrying 10 passengers turns around our landing in five minutes and five seconds, pictures done and heading back to the ship. e weather window is incredibly tight. We need to get out of here and run ahead of the storm moving into the notorious Drake Passage. We had the "Drake lake" on the way down; now for the "Drake shake", with 7m-8m swells. Yes, I get seasick. But after the wonders of medicine I am well enough to go for breakfast in Mamsen's, where there are traditional waffles, porridge, cinnamon buns and Norwegian treats. Did I mention the buffet at the World Cafe, the sublime Italian food at Manfredi's, the steaks at the grill, and the sushi? And while we were waiting for the weather to improve, I submitted to a comforting Hygge massage in the spa. en there's the ship's library of 5,000 carefully chosen books, plus the science and history lectures in the Aula. And the citizen science projects, such as sampling water for microplastics. My mind is filled with memories: the five fin whales spotted off the bow; the morning that snowy sheathbills peered through the lecture hall windows; the day we spotted at least five humpback whales spouting at the front – no, the back – no the side – of the ship, and; the petrels flanking us as we sailed back to port. Back in Ushuaia, in the shadow of the Andes, I would happily go back for more. My red parka is at the ready. is article was originally published in e Australian on Saturday 30 September 2023. viking.com 59 Half Moon Island Brown Blu Whalers Bay Cuverville Island Antarctic Peninsula Neko Harbor Damoy Point Petermann Island ANTARCTICA D r ake Pas s a g e We d d e ll S ea L e m aire C h a n n e l ARGENTINA Ushuaia C ap e H o r n Buenos Aires At lant i c O cean B ea gl e C h a n n e l – C r ui s e • – • C har te r e d Flight •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• E xamp l e e x p e di tio n d e s tination s GETTING THERE: The 13-day Antarctic Explorer expedition from Buenos Aires to Ushuaia to Buenos Aires starts from $18,195pp in a Nordic Balcony Stateroom VIEW VOYAGE

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