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Karsten Bidstrup

The Antarctica Chronicles, Part 1

Oct. 18th, 2019

The colors of Antarctica are not ones of humanity: no green trees, red, pink, or yellow flowers. The only colors seen on our journey was the color of orange and green lichen on ancient rocks, an algae/fungus combination that have survived the impervious frigidity of millennia. 

The colors of the Antarctic are those of active warning: be careful here, look toward skies of gunmetal grey, do not be seduced by glaciers and ice floes of turquoise blue, note black mountains laced with snow. And watch for blizzard snow, white, dense, coming out of nowhere, blotting the dazzling blue skies within seconds. 

Alien colors in an alien land. It is the only continent on earth that has yet to be lived on in a consistent way by humans. And yet the desire to experience such an unearthly, earthly land is a siren song – magnetic, seductive, aspirational. 

I was fortunate to have traveled to Antarctica on Hurtigruten’s Midnatsol. It was an expedition cruise, and the two exceptional expedition photographers, Karsten Bidstrup and Stefan Dall, chronicled our journey through their great photography. We went in November 2018, which is Spring in Antarctica. It was cold, but not brutal, although some of the images below looked awfully frigid. 

Here is the visual chronicle of our Antarctic journey:  

Karsten Bidstrup

Climbing on a glacier, Almirante Brown Camp area, Antractica

Karsten Bidstrup

Half Moon island — Rocks with orange lichen and penguins nearby

Karsten Bidstrup

A lone albatross crosses the Drake Passage, a body of water where the Atlantic and the Pacific meet

Stefan Dall

A gentoo penguin rookery on Cuverville Island, standing at the entrance of Errera Channel.  The island is flanked by mountains and glaciers of the Antarctic mainland.

Stefan Dall

Lone Walker, Whaler’s Bay

Karstein Bidstrup

Sailing to Danco Island in a RIB Boat, in a blizzard. Danco Island is home to many gentoo and chinstrap penguin colonies.

Karstein Bidstrup

Sailing with Seagulls, into Neko Harbor. This harbor is on Andvord Bay, near huge glaciers, and more gentoo penguin colonies.

Stefan Dall

Chinstrap penguins at Orne Harbor, on the west side of the Antractica peninsula. 

Karstein Bidstrup

Half Moon Island. This is crescent shaped, and lies at the entrance of Moon Bay. 

Stefan Dall

Gentoo penguins -- the active, verbal inhabitants of Neko Island. 

Karstein Bidstrup

Half Moon Island -- humans and penguins, looking at each other.

Karstein Bidstrup

Rib Boat near Cuverville island. Gentoo rookeries are here as well as deep beds of lichen and moss.

Karstein Bidstrup

Hiking on Damoy Point, a headland at the northern entrance point to the harbour of Port Lockroy, in the Palmer Archipelago of Antarctica. 

Stefan Dall

Gentoo Penguins at Whaler's Bay. Whalers Bay is a small bay in the South Shetland Islands of Antarctica.

Stefan Dall

Antarctica Fur Seal on Neko Island.

Stefan Dall

Diving Gentoo penguin — Cuverville Island

Susan Kime

Susan Kime's career combines publishing, journalism and editing. She was the Destination Club/Fractional Update Editor for Elite Traveler, and senior club news correspondent for The Robb Report's Vacation Homes. Her work has been published in Stratos, Luxury Living, European CEO, The London Telegraph, Caviar Affair, ARDA Developments, and Luxist/AOL. She was the Editor-in-Chief of Travel Connoisseur, a high end magazine with a focus on the evolution of the private residence and destination club industries, until its closure. In 2009, Susan served as the Content Editor for FraxFinder.com, writing travel club guides, and all forms of Destination Club, Private Residence Club and high end fractional news. She was also the Senior Lifestyle Journalist for Luxist.com. She was chosen as one of the five best luxury journalists of 2011 by the website LuxuryHub.com. Susan lives in Logan,...(Read More)