And there we were, Port Stanley, gateway to the King penguins. |
It was not to be. The wind was
blowing so hard that they cancelled the tender operations. We waited in place for our ship’s captain to
make an announcement. Would it be a yea,
or a nay!!! Dahmmit. It was a nay.
The excursions were cancelled and the ship was to set sail for our next
port, Ushuaia, or Tierra del Fuego. I
figure we’ll just need to come back here another time.
There we were; there we went ... away. |
We were so disappointed as this whole trip has been about seeing penguins. There
are several colonies near Port Stanley, King penguins, the second largest
species, Rockhoppers, the smallest species, and Gentoo penguins. Luckily, we have one more shot in a few days
to see more penguins.
But the wind truly was blowing, about 55 knots, and the tenders took on a
lot of wave action. There was a bit of
trouble getting them lined up and back on the ship.
The tender was fighting the waves and eventually made it along side to be loaded back onto the ship. |
And then we were underway again. Jaz
and I were going to do some deck walking; however, that was not to be as the
decks were mostly closed due to high winds and we couldn’t get out onto
them.
Maybe we've sailed all the way around and are near home again? It's quite cool. |
We came up with Plan B and started on Deck 15 and walked up and down the
halls and down the stair cases until we got down to Deck 5. That gave us a 5K or more.
The ship was doing some rocking and rolling, and when we did another check
it was still blowing about 29 knots, so we need to make sure our sea legs are
in good working order.
On we push now … but in the meantime, more Bingo this afternoon. And the musician tonight, playing a
saxophone.
The day Saturday, March 7, was not beautiful. It was cloudy, overcast, cool, windy. It sure did feel like home. And that’s not necessarily a good thing.
We cruised along, occupying ourselves with a port lecture, a DVD viewing of
a penguin video and bingo. Yesterday Jaz
won. I’d won a little the day
before. Today was not our day to win
again.
But this was one of the moments we’d been waiting for … the rounding of
Cape Horn. The weather hadn’t cooperated
up until now, but it seemed as though it wanted to show its best side … the
weather got better, and the water wasn’t nearly as rough as it had been
earlier. Yesterday, though, was the
worst winds and wave action we’ve seen this trip. The horn was beautiful in a wild and primal
way.
Cape Horn, something I'd only seen on maps or in movies. I never in my wildest thoughts, would have believed I would be here, with the stark coastline in a photo. |
Waves slapping against the ship and the rocks in the distance remind you
that many a ship has not fared well in these waters, where the Atlantic and
Pacific oceans join around the rocks.
The water and landscape is beautiful ... it seems as though everything on trips just gets better and better. |
Rocks jutted out of the water all around us like snaggly teeth and we had a
local pilot on board to guide us through them.
The lighthouse on the point is Cape Horn Lighthouse, but is not the real
one. That one is further along on our
travels today. Both are beautiful at a
distance.
The little lighthouse in the distance is so isolated I can't imagine working at something like this. |
The isolation here must be horrendous to some. I know it would not be a place I’d want to
stay for very long. There seems to be
nothing else here except thousands of birds seen at a distance, flying over the
water, standing on the rocks.
Snaggle-tooth rocks sure can make you believe how so many ships and boats can go aground. |
On to Ushuaia … between islands and through beautiful channels with rocks that reach up to
touch the sky. It’s mesmerizing … and
something I never dreamed of seeing, much less even considered … sailing around
Cape Horn. Who’d a thought?
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