As you reach the halfway mark of your voyage, these days at sea offer time and space to reflect on the emotions and special moments you've experienced so far. You may like to make some notes in a journal, reminisce with newfound friends at the bar or start editing a backlog of amazing photos. For the next week, find your rhythm and settle into life at sea. Your expedition team will offer a daily program of educational activities, entertainment, and citizen science programs, which you are welcome to attend. Join them for lectures and daily recaps of your progress, weather, and trajectory. Take advantage of the many shared spaces onboard: relax in the sauna, work out in the gym, or grab a cuppa and peruse the library shelves as the ice shelves guarding the West Antarctic coast slide by. There is plenty of time to enjoy the magic of the Southern Ocean and the life that calls it home - especially as you gain a day by crossing the international date line! As always, the best place on the ship is out on deck, where Antarctic prions, snow petrels, and great whales await - as long as the seas permit! As you skirt the forbidding ice cliffs guarding the Antarctic ice sheet, spare a thought for British explorer James Cook, whose historic circumnavigation of Antarctica in the late 18th century encountered nothing but treacherous 'ice islands' and perilous winds that threatened to blow their wooden sailboat into the sea ice. Cook left the region firm in the belief that no Antarctic continent could exist, and if it did it "that the world will derive no benefit from it". The search for Antarctica, which had been going for hundreds of years, ground to a halt, only resuming when a merchant sailor named William Smith chanced upon the South Shetland Islands in 1819. This discovery sparked visits from the sealers, whalers, and scientists who would define the earliest eras of Antarctic exploration. Your voyage continues west past the Amundsen and Bellingshausen seas, towards the southern extremity of the Antarctic Peninsula. ...
Read More