Today was a perfect day for sailing along the coast of
Alaska toward Sitka (which we will reach tomorrow morning). The ocean was almost perfectly flat, the sky
bright blue and visibility near infinite.
That did not prevent me from feeling slightly sea sick in the morning…..
As I’ve said before, I get seasick when I look at boats for too long…. But in
this case I think that the problem was the scopalanime patch: It seems to do the inverse for me than for
most people – rather than alleviating sea sickness, it causes or aggravates it….. So I removed it and have been feeling much
better.
This was a lazy day:
No packing bags, no early morning excursion. So we slept late (7:30!), had leisurely breakfast
, and spent some time discovering the boat.
By lunch time, the scopolamine had worn off, and I was even able to eat some – the view and fresh air helped at lot!
We arrived at “disillusion bay” around 1:30pm (the bay is so
named because the Italian explorer who found it was convinced he found the
North passage, until he saw the Hubbard Glacier blocking his path. Also, it’s
not a bay, it’s a fjord, but the people who named it did not know that, and the
name stuck).
The day was so clear (indeed, the captain said
that this was one of the top 10, and that he had very rarely been able to see
all the peaks around us) that we got a great view of some of the high peaks
that surround the bay. Mount St Elias
(18,008), and Mount Hogan (19551) were particularly impressive. Mt Hogan is the tallest peak in Canada (Canada is about 35 miles away
from where we were- that tells you how big this thing is), and the second
highest in North America. Having failed
to see Denali, this was a nice consolation prize….
We got to see some of the “calving” (chunks of ice falling from it into the see. From where we were, the chunks did not look that big, but then we saw some of the resulting icebergs ), and, more impressively, got to hear the groan and boom of the glacier when large chunks fall.
There are also several tributary to this large glacier, such
as this one – so covered with moraine it is hard to distinguish from the
mountain itself.
As we left the glacier, we got a lovely view of the entrance
to the Fjord, and – of course- had some drinks on the deck, with the
glacier in the background.
Nice dinner followed, and now it’s 9pm. They have some entertainment every evening,
but it starts at 9:30pm…. This ship is
full of old people – some are even older than Joe and me if you can believe
that – I wonder how many people stay up till the end….
Hoping for more of this weather tomorrow, although it seems
to be clouding up a bit right now…..
1 comment:
Thank you for your gorgeous photos and excellent commentary!
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