Why...

Two mature aged people who love travelling and learning along the way... Our names are Rob (Robyn) & darian in the 60+ vintage of travellers keen to visit parts of the world which will stretch us mentally, physically and emotionally.

30 March 2014

Ushuaia - Argentina 2014

As described in an earlier post, Ushuaia, the little city right down at the bottom of Sth America is also known as the ‘end of the world’.  For the geographically inclined of you, Ushuaia is further south than New Zealand.
It’s a port city handling containers and tourists like us wanting to either visit Patagonia or Antarctica with one longish main street catering for tourists wanting to shop and a seemingly disproportionate number and range of eating places.

We arrived back into Ushuaia from Antarctica to an acrid smell and barricades across numerous streets, forcing the bus back to our hotel to perform a few interesting manoeuvres to get us there. 
Public service employed locals were striking and the acrid smell was from burning of car tyres stacked at numerous locations in the middle of blockaded roads.

Cat & Cal only had one night in Ushuaia, so we said our goodbyes at a fabulous little restaurant that night before their 12 hr bus journey northwards early next morning.  It had been truly delightful to travel and share the experience with them.

We had decided to rent a car for a day to do some exploring in our own time.  It was a Sunday and all were closed except one.  Ever tried to rent a car from someone who only speaks Spanish and we only speak English.  He was as amused as we were.

We have driven on the opposite side of the road before but now we were not only confronted by every sign being in Spanish, we were also trying to dodge many of the Argentinian drivers who did seem to be able to read the same signs either.

First destination was the Tierra del Fuego National Park with its large mountains, beech forests, lichens and other ‘parasitic’ plants growing on host trees.  

It was nice to be able to take our time and go where we wanted to.  After leaving the park and navigating our way back and through Ushuaia, we headed north towards Rio Grande.

Only a few kms out of town, we started noticing the Polica and as we progressed further, more and more Policia grouped on the side of the road.  Maybe the strike from yesterday had gone sour.  A few more kms up the road provided an answer to all the Policia presence when politely signalled to stop.

Out of the bushes on one side of this main road screamed a dirt bike, crossed in front of us and disappeared into trees on the other side!  Soon afterwards came another followed by a quad bike.  The Polica standing in front of us then waved us to proceed.  Further on we were not only stopped many more time but were also confronted by hundreds of cars coming towards us, flags out of windows, emergency lights flashing, all racing to the next vantage point to watch their favourite racer go by. 

We were in the midst of a major Argentinian motor bike rally!

The further north we went, the more dense the oncoming fans, Policia and racing bikes became and the slower we travelled.  Eventually we were constantly simply crawling down the road, so we stopped at a great viewing location of not just the racers and fans but also Lake Fagamo.

Driving with the flow of fans back towards Ushuaia was even more interesting.   They were constantly trying to race ahead and get to another point to stop and watch, so double lines on roads meant nothing.  It was ‘normal’ for 3 or 4 cars to simply pull out and pass our slow moving queue and if confronted by oncoming vehicles, pull over onto the dirt verge on the opposite side of the road, still moving whilst letting the oncoming cars pass between us.  

Then some would pull back onto our side, force their way through the queue onto the right hand dirt verge, then scream off along it before sliding to a halt and all the occupants scrambling out and running to watch a bike hurtle out of a bush or up the side of a nearby mountain.

The following morning we had booked a small tour to Penguin Island, so found ourselves in a little bus with about 18 others on a windy dirt road heading for a boat.  This trip took about 90 mins with a few scenery stops and talks about the local aboriginal people of whom now number just one.
The boat  and 10 minute ride to the island departed from what was once a farm with numerous picturesque old buildings and some of the best ‘loos with a view’ that we have ever seen.  
the loos with views
We were greeted by very noisy Gentoo and Magellanic penguins along with sole remaining King penguin.  The other King penguins had already gone to sea for winter.
 
one King amongst the Gentoo penguins

















On the trip back in the bus, we learned more about Argentina from an American working in Beunos Aires.  She told of the impact of an inflation rate currently running at approx. 30% on the people.  Many of them are trying to get their hands on American $’s because it holds its value better than their own currency.  If they can’t get access to $US they spend whatever they earn as soon as they get it, hence the reason a lot of people seemingly eating out.  This also explained why we could exchange $US for about 30% better than the official cash rate.

We could not leave Ushuaia without trying one of the Argentinian bbq’s so on our last night, joined by 2 fellow Antarctic travellers, we enjoyed an all you can eat buffet for about $25 pp.  Let us simply say that the meat was very succulent and there was a lot of it.

Ushuaia was founded mainly on a convict and maritime past, the worse Argentinian convicts being sent to Ushuaia in a similar fashion as Port Arthur in Tasmania.  The conditions were very harsh from what we saw in their museums.

We found the people of Ushuaia to be very reserved and almost dour initially, but once we invested the time and some humour with them, they soon loosened up releasing their own form of humour and warmth.

For more photos of Ushuaia just click on the link below:


26 March 2014

Antarctica 2014

Antarctica

We arrived in Ushuaia, regarded as the most southern city in the world, spent a night and then boarded our ship, the MV Expedition.  With life vest and boat drills out of the way, we departed port gliding our way down a very smooth Beagle Channel bound for the infamous Drake Passage. 
Ours is the red one 
As we sailed south, we all had stories from people who had just arrived back from Antarctica on the same ship, of 8+ mtr seas across the Drake and many days unable to use the zodiacs due to very bad weather.  We all wondered what our turn was going to be like.

Well our 2 day crossing of the Drake Passage was not too bad, 4-5 mtr seas and the occasional larger wave to keep everyone on their toes trying to balance.  The seas however were not coming from one direction, rather it felt like we were in a top loading washing machine and this meant few people in the dining room for meals.  Rob with the help of drugs, handled it really well.

So how do we describe what happened and what we saw from the first time we saw the sun rising over the Antarctic Peninsula until our floating home turned north to take us back across the Drake?
First Antarctic Peninsula sunrise
Let’s try with amazing, vast, alive, astounding, staggering, serene, stunning, breathtaking, exciting, violent, demanding, changing, towering, surprising, seductive… and it can simply could go on and on and on!

We were blessed with very kind weather including some clear blue skies, wonderful sunrises & sunsets.  There were some days when snow fell lightly and a day of a snow blizzard, but it did not deter us from any activity.

Cat & Cal renewed their vows on the mainland of Antarctica at Neko Harbour with Rob as celebrant and penguins as their guests, before sliding down the side of a hill, their Nepalese pray flags held high.



















But the rest of that story is for them to tell.

So every day many of us climbed into zodiacs to go exploring, whilst others kayaked in amongst the ice, leopard seals and humpback or minke whales.  Half the ship decided to go camping on the ice overnight, with a colony of very inquisitive penguins keeping them company.




Every day was different and we were kept very active.  We got up close with different species of penguins, seals and whales.  We cruised around icebergs, walked on sea ice and slid down hills covered with fresh snow.  Visited on old British but closed research hut, and enjoyed the hospitality of an active Ukrainian research facility including their home made hooch… very warming!

enjoying hooch at Vernandsky Station
We even managed to visit and explore an island that no expedition ship has ever visited before (Mist Island) and this made everyone, including the ships’ Captain very excited because it was simply stunning.

We achieved and then enthusiastically celebrated our crossing of the Antarctic Circle, and for many of us when we stepped onto the mainland of Antarctica, was to achieve our ‘7 Continents’ goal.
well can you find us...
The landscape also changed every day from towering mountains covered by snow and ice, to sailing the ship into the caldera of a still active volcano called Deception Island. 

It was here that we were surrounded by landscape which looks black & white and it was here that some of us took the ‘polar plunge’ in 0 deg C water during a snow blizzard, then warmed our hands in the volcanic warmed water a few centimetres below surface of the beach near the freezing waters edge.  Having taken the plunge, I am in no hurry to do it again but the neat rums on the ship sure helped!
well here goes nothing
the grimace - the plunge and horizontal snow coming straight for the face
They say ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’, so with this in mind, we hope our pictures can describe in their own way what we experienced and felt during our time down in Antarctica and crossing the Drake.

There are multiple categories to choose from, so just pick and click on a link you are interested in and a new webpage will open up for you then just click 'Slideshow' and hopefully it will all work.





We were a ship of 130 people of all ages including an 82 yr old, everyone keen to experience something truly amazing and for the 12 days we were travelling together we were one large happy ‘family’, thanks to what Antarctica immersed us all in.

Would like to close with giving all due credit to G Adventures for a truly stunning experience…  our sincere thanks.

11 March 2014

Buenos Aires - Argentina 2014

Buenos Aires

So after about 26+ hrs of travelling we found ourselves at 6pm in our Hotel A&B, very centrally located in this large city of 20+ M people.  With check in out of the way, was time for a stroll and stretch legs before crashing.  Our little walk was more like a game of dodgeball, in part due to our condition plus the frenetic nature and volume of pedestrians and traffic.  The Argentineans are a little like Aussies with their jay walking by the way.

The city certainly has a European feel to it, with many wide tree lined streets, narrow streets with older style apartment buildings crammed side by side and mixes of old and art nouveau architecture everywhere.  There are also modern sections to this the city, but we spent most of our time in the older parts of town.

The city is not a clean one with plenty of paper rubbish to be seen as well as numerous footpaths with large chunks missing from leaving potholes and chunks of concrete to avoid.

So the city has the feel of one that evolved and grew through a long period of prosperity, then through recent decades in decline but is now seems to be going through a period of restoration and renewal.
The people are very friendly and warm both in how they greet each other with very European kisses on both cheeks, including a policewoman on her beat when seeing familiar locals. 

They are also helpful people as we discovered whilst walking to see the balcony Eva Peron stood on, when they assisted us in the removal of ‘mierda’ (practicing our Spanish) after we presume a pigeon had deposited a seriously large amounts of its mierda on both of us.

When we say ‘seriously’… well it felt like we were extras in a remake of The Exorcist… it was splattered on various parts of us and we’re still finding small remnants!

A few locals appeared with tissues and bottles of water, even helping to wipe some of the foul smelling mierda off us.  We did not know that so much mierda could be fired from a relatively small bird.

Parts of the city like La Boca, where many buildings are made out of corrugated iron, the locals have painted them in multiple bright colours, conveying the sense of pride and energy the people have of their city.  La Boca has a great sense of fun and enterprise with very sensuous looking couples dancing the Tango with passion whilst being watched by people,  including us, enjoying the local beer.

This sense of pride was also observed in the many monuments and statues throughout the city but we also observed this pride when walking back to our hotel one night after a day of exploring the city via the hop on/off bus.

We were almost blocked by a small crowed of people on the footpath watching someone beautifully singing ‘Don’t Cry For Me Argentina’.  This was a crowd of locals on their way home, some with shopping or suitcases in their hands, halted on their way en-masse by their song.

Buenos Aires is a city that requires time to be explored as we learned, when finding little cafes in the most interesting little lanes but unfortunately we had run out of time to do this city enough justice.

5 March 2014

Plan for Antarctica 2014

Time to head south...

Well very early tomorrow its time to head south thanks to our son and daughter in law (Cat & Cal) who, having just got married, are planning to have '7 Weddings in 7 Continents' over the next 6 months... gotta love Gen Ys don't you.

Two of those continents are Antarctica and South America, so when they were sharing their Antarctica travel plans we asked if they would mind us joining them on this leg of their trip as it was also on our bucket list.  An enthusiastic "yes" simply left us all searching for a tour to get us there.

Part of the challenge in making our plans were 2 key factors:
  1. Cat & Cal had to complete their African adventure first which meant they would not get to Buenos Aires until early March and...
  2. We all wanted to try and cross the Antarctic Circle.

We found a company who could meet both key dates and our quest for the Antarctic Circle so now the plan has us meeting Cat & Cal in Buenos Aires on 8th March and next day flying down to the most southern town in the world... Ushuaia.

We're having a few extra days in Buenos Aires before Cat & Cal arrive to enjoy what this city has to offer including the tango and their love of meat!

We board our ship, M/S Expedition on 9th March and head down on a 2 day or 640 Km crossing of Drakes Passage to the Antarctic Peninsula and 8-9 days of exploring and absorbing that which is Antarctica.

After returning back to Ushuaia we leave Cat & Cal and head off throughout Patagonia for almost 2 weeks before briefly meeting them again to collect an extra bag to bring back to Australia for them.

They will head off to other parts of Sth America and we will have 3 days in Santiago (Chile) before heading back to Australia.

So roughly, our destinations during this trip looks something like...
As we wander around, we will be using a GPS logger thingy, which, if we can work it properly, will log exactly where we and the ships, buses or whatever are every 5-10 seconds.  The location log data can be imported and displayed using Google Earth, so we will attempt in future posts to update where we have been.  Well we will try to anyway.

Concerning photos, yes we will be taking a lot i suspect but we will be including only a few in each post but should, dependant on access to the internet, include links to another site so you can see a few more from each prime location.

Well that's about it for now... off we go and we both hope the crossing of Drakes Passage to Antarctica is uneventful and not like this one!