Showing posts with label eskimoes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eskimoes. Show all posts

Sunday, 7 January 2018

Alaskan Coastal Voyage

ALASKAN COASTAL VOYAGE



Flying to Vancouver with Zoom airlines, a Canadian budget company, was better than I expected; it was the queue at Immigration that was a nightmare. After a good night’s sleep, I was ready to go off exploring - I only had one full day in Vancouver and wanted to make the most of it. First, I headed to Stanley Park, a huge park in the city centre. Starting at the Lost Lagoon, through the underpass, and then I walked around the “8km” seawall starting at the Yacht club. 




I passed a totem pole display, a lighthouse and a bronze statue of a girl on a rock, before coming to a damaged section of the seawall where I had to head inland through the forest to Beaver Lake (which was covered in a mass of water lilies).






This walk was never 8km! I headed towards the sea again, Third beach, then Second beach - a lovely area with a pool and lots of play activities.





After passing English beach, a favourite weekend spot for the locals, I turned back towards the city, through an area known as Gas town and saw the most unusual steam powered clock that played a tune and steamed every fifteen minutes.




I passed the Canadian Pacific Railway station and ended up in Chinatown — which was the most scary place ever! When I arrived back at the safety of the hotel, I had walked miles and was now looking forward to a rest on board ship tomorrow! Next morning, we were heading down to Seattle to catch the ship; but had to stop at the American border and waited there nearly four hours - it was dreadful. Someone on my coach was detained and we never saw him again! It was torrential rain as we headed through the state of Washington, and I could only imagine how beautiful the thick, green forest would have looked, that we were speeding through - finally arriving at the port of Seattle with no time to spare.


I was so excited to be directed to my "stateroom" - there were people everywhere in life jackets - it looked like I had missed the life boat drill! My room was far nicer than I expected, with a good-sized bed, settee, table, TV/DVD, bathroom etc; and the ship itself was more luxurious than I thought it would be. After quickly unpacking I went up on deck; luckily it had stopped raining, and I was able to enjoy watching us set sail.

You could hardly tell the ship was moving, it left Seattle so gracefully and the sea was very calm - I could cope with this! I had heard that if you felt sea sick, you could get some special tablets from the reception! I explored the ship, got rather lost, and discovered lots of bars and restaurants! I had a wonderful dinner - there was such a choice of food, I was going to have to be very restrained! And when I got back to my cabin, there was a basket of fruit and chocolates on the bed – more food!


Also, I had mail - a newsletter telling me of tomorrow's activities and letter saying that as I had missed the life boat drill I would have to do it tomorrow – so I hadn't got away with it! I woke often through the night with the rocking - the sea must have been getting rough. I found that on the TV I could see the front and rear view of the ship - that enabled me to check what the weather was doing and to see if it was light!

Next morning the rain had stopped and the sea looked a picture with the sun glistening and whales and porpoises spouting water into the air. After breakfast it was time for the “Explore Alaska Show”, but I had to leave early to attend the missed life boat drill; but I managed to see the next show which was all about Juneau and Sitka - our first two ports of call. Then I called in at reception for some of their very good seasick tablets – just in case! After lunch and a quick stroll around the deck (3 times around was a mile!) I enjoyed a show about Glaciers, before the formal dinner night, where I had to get dressed up and headed for the restaurant. I was seated with some ladies from the tour I was going to be on next week and it was a good evening and I really enjoyed their company. After dinner I walked around the ship again, stopped by the casino, and saw some of the cabaret; I couldn't believe how many people were seasick and hadn't even left their cabins - the tablets must have worked for me. All through the night the ship continued to rock - the winds had been gusting up to 70 miles per hour. 




We stopped at 4am to collect the Park Rangers at the entrance to Glacier bay, they were to be with the ship all day, and once they were on board the sea began calming down. I got up and excitedly hurried upstairs for my first view of the infamous Glacier bay.


What a change from the night before! The ocean was so calm it wasn't real - it was as if you were on a gigantic lake - not the ocean. There were porpoises, sea lions and seals following the ship - that seemed to be hardly moving at all, we were just drifting along. 


The sky was dull, and the clouds were so very low over the hills and mountains that surrounded us. It was so atmospheric. The dense forest grows up to within a foot or two of the water’s edge, with only a sliver of shingle separating the trees from the ocean. Humpback whales were blowing their spouts in every direction, and as I opened the door to go out on Deck, a killer whale rose out of the water in front of me – it was a heart stopping moment.



There were eagles and so many other birds following the line of our ship. Never before had I experienced such an expanse of calm, unspoilt wilderness, and felt so privileged to be floating so quietly through it. As the morning progressed the ocean began changing colour, was it getting bluer, or was it greener? 


Little white “things” started floating past us; if you had been anywhere else in the world you would have thought that they were rubbish carrier bags — but these were little icebergs! And they were getting bigger and more frequent! As we got closer to the glaciers, the water became cloudy, it is the silt that travels inside the ice within the glacier that causes the colour change. 



Some of the glaciers were up to twenty-five storeys high - with electric blue and bright red streaks running down the front of them. The ship waited by each glacier and when ice calved off the front edge and crashed into the sea, it was like an explosion! And thousands of new icebergs were then floating in the ocean! 




Some glaciers are up to thirty-nine miles long and it has taken thousands of years for the compacted ice to reach the ocean, after originally falling as snow.









Excitement next when it was announced bears had been spotted! It was difficult to see them at first, these Brown Bears blended into the mountainside so well, but I saw one getting out of the water, and climbing onto a rock. 




When I next saw them, 2 young bears were following the “mummy bear” up a rocky slope. Everyone was outside watching this family scurrying up the mountain until they were mere specks in the distance - what a buzz around the ship – “we had actually seen real, live bears in the wild”!




I was absolutely elated, but there was still more to see - the magnificent view in every direction. The front of the ship was opened up so that we could get even closer to the front of the glaciers, the sun was still shining and my face was getting redder. 



Eventually, the ship turned around - a last look at the glaciers; they were left behind in the distance now, but their magnificence and splendour would stay with me forever. The colours of the ocean, the brightness when the sun shone, no-one could have experienced this amazing wilderness any better than it had been today.



I could not stop watching outside until it was dark.  A quick change before the evening meal and then to see an Elton John show and have a sing a- long. Then a stroll around the deck, the view was total blackness, no lights or stars anywhere to be seen – such a contrast to earlier in the day. What a day it had been!





When I woke up next morning, it was still dark outside, but we had already docked in Juneau - the remote Alaskan capital which you can only reach by ship or seaplane, but it has over one million visitors every year. After breakfast, we disembarked by the small gang plank onto the dock, which was next to the towering Mount Roberts with a cable car running almost half way up it, and lots of colourful shops close by. It was pouring down with rain - they measure rainfall in feet not inches in Alaska - that tells you something! I should have been going on a small Float plane flight over the glaciers but due to worsening conditions, the flights had been cancelled.

The weather was going to get worse — the storm hadn't arrived yet. So, I had to do some exploring in the rain; starting at the Alaskan state museum where I learnt about the history of the early pioneers and the lives of the various Eskimo peoples. I even did some shopping in the sales because it was the last week of the tourist season, before returning to the comfort of the ship.

At lunchtime the weather was at its worst, you couldn't even see the mountain and cable car, it was completely obscured by fog and rain. I was so disappointed, as I had been looking forward to the float plane adventure and to finding the special glacier gardens. I went back out in the afternoon and took some photographs of the colourful buildings, they were a colonial style with saloons that looked as if they were out of a western film. It was unfortunate that the weather was so awful, there are some superb hiking routes that start only a few minutes from the town, as well as glaciers, a lake and other water front activities.

That evening, after dinner I watched a show before going to bed but was woken about 2am by the movement of the ship, it must have been that storm! I felt so ill and needed a sea sick tablet whilst I was still lying down, I daren't get up! That went on until morning! As we approached Sitka the seas became calmer, and it was a lovely sight as we sailed past numerous small uninhabited islands full of dark fir trees that were silhouetted against the sky, and any houses, on the larger islands, were on stilts.

Sitka was the old Russian capital of Alaska, it is a small town and we were only going to be there for the morning. The town itself is spread over Baranof Island and belonged to Russia until 1867. There is still St Michael’s Orthodox Domed Cathedral and a Russian Bishop’s house there, from before it became part of America.

The lifeboats (tenders) were lowered onto the sea; they were completely covered in, with long benches and held up to 150 people. I could not believe the speed these lifeboats travelled at, and we were quickly on land. I hadn't booked any excursions here, so walked along the shoreline heading towards the National Park. As I passed the harbour there was the biggest splash, it was so loud, it sounded like it could have been a seal, but it was a salmon - huge salmon!



There was a stream, and it was alive with salmon trying to swim up it, and jump up the steps to get into the river further inland. There were thousands of salmon splashing about, I couldn't believe how noisy or how big they were. 




I arrived at the entrance to the park, where there were maps and totem poles, and headed off along the coastal path where there was a marvellous view of our ship. 





Sitka National Park is where Russia defeated the indigenous Tlingit people, it is very dense and the pine frees towered well above, obscuring most of the light and there were so many totem poles all telling different tales.



As I wandered through the forest, it was rather worrying when I heard rustling in the trees!




As I left the park there was a bald-headed eagle sitting on a nest high up in a tree - what a sight. It was so majestic! When I reached the area known as "downtown" Sitka, with its quaint, colonial styled buildings, shops and churches; I was desperate for sit down and a drink.

But there was hardly anywhere open, and as I was too tired to shop, I headed back to the ship. I was cold and wet, it had been drizzling for most of the morning and I had completely run out of energy. The sea was getting really choppy now and the tender boats were struggling to dock next to the ship. After lunch we departed through Sitka Sound and the ocean was actually calm for an hour or so, and the resident wildlife spotter was on the bridge pointing out any whales he saw.


At one time a hump back whale jumped completely out of the water - that was amazing to see. As we left the calm waters, the ocean got darker and rougher and the temperature dropped – it even started sleeting! It was rather difficult to walk about that evening and the after-dinner show was by an Olympic gymnast, which was quite entertaining.



Next morning, we arrived at Ketchikan (Alaska's first town on the edge of The Inside Passage) nice and early and guess what - it was raining again! Apparently, Alaska have thirteen feet of rain each year. I was booked on a trip to see the best of this town and make the most of the short time we were there. Although this little town gets over 800,000 visitors every year, none stop there for very long. 

I thought we were going on a bus — but we were directed onto a little boat! We had an hour on this boat, travelling around the bay looking along the coast line for wildlife within the forest. This area is renowned for its wildlife including black bears, wolves and bald eagles but we only saw some harbour seals and an eagle on its nest. The pine trees were growing right down to the water’s edge, some were on rocky outcrops — goodness knows where their roots were!

We got off at a Salmon cannery that had closed down fifty years ago and was now a museum; and watched a film show about the history of the area, had a tour of the factory and were given some salmon dip to try. Outside there were more Salmon swimming upstream, and jumping up a waterfall - I have never seen so many fish — all trying to get back upstream to their spawning ground hundreds of miles inland.





Next, we were then taken to Saxman village, with the biggest collection of totem poles and went into a work shop to see someone making traditional totem poles.
We arrived back at the dockside with only 30 minutes to spare, so I quickly took some photographs of the colourful houses on stilts by the river - that used to be the "Red light area"- lovely wooden buildings! Back on board for lunch and then a Line Dancing session in the Crow's nest - that was a laugh! As we sailed into the open sea - the North Pacific Ocean - the weather was taking a turn for the worse. The Captain warned us that the waves could get up to 10 metres high and that we might have to hold on walking around the ship - just for a change!

I had a relaxing evening and tried not to tempt fate by walking around or doing too much. Although the seas were rough all night, I managed to have a good night's sleep. I think I was getting used to the movement of the ship, or the tablets were working!


I woke to a lovely sunny morning at last; and after breakfast sat on a lounger on deck – snuggled under a blanket. Then I went to the theatre to be told what would happen when we disembarked tomorrow, before a game of bingo and a lottery game - where one of the women from our trip won a Caribbean cruise! It was glorious sunshine as we docked at Victoria, the capital of British Columbia on the Pacific Coast.


It was named after Queen Victoria and is one of the oldest cities in the Pacific Northwest, being a British settlement since 1843. It has some impressive Victorian architecture and historical buildings as well as the second oldest Chinatown in North America. Victoria is known as "The Garden City", as it has fifty-five acres of floral displays, water features and formal gardens – the most famous being Butchart Gardens. Unfortunately, these gardens were closed when we arrived – that was a real disappointment.


After disembarking, I followed the directions along the waterfront — heading towards the town where I saw the Government House and the Empress Hotel, and passed by a few interesting looking touristy shops. There were so many people about, mostly shopping and eating - I didn’t fancy doing either; so, I found a garden to explore and managed to see a great sunset.


Heading back towards the ship, I saw a quaint bus being pulled along by a horse with spiral lights on each corner and was so very relieved to finally see my ship -The Noordam. It did look a picture - all lit up. 



I was absolutely shattered and so glad to get back on board ship, to more food, and then off to bed. I can't even remember the ship setting sail about 1.30am — next stop back at Seattle in the morning.







We docked very early in the morning, the sun was out and everyone was eager to disembark. Luckily, I didn't have to wait too long and walked off the ship at 8.00am and made my way to the coach that was to be home for the next week……………………but that’s another story!


Thanks for stopping by!

Lynne

Please check out my other blogs ..............



Saturday, 21 May 2016

Greenland Trip



                                                 A Few Days in Greenland
     





Saturday 1st June

I got up really early, opening my curtains in anticipation of a glorious morning - but no such luck! I think it rains every morning in Iceland, and the sun always comes out at 9pm. After breakfast, I checked out of my hotel and headed to the local airport. This part of my trip was to the east coast of Greenland, somewhere completely new to me and relatively new to tourism. Greenland is the world's largest island and most of it lies within the Arctic Circle. Eighty five percent of it is covered by ice; with only the narrow coastal fringe of rugged mountains and green valley’s remaining ice-free, allowing a resilient and determined community to live there. 


It is the home to the largest Inuit (Eskimo) population in the world, and with their ability to adapt to the severe climatic conditions here; they have survived where others found it impossible to live. I was hoping to see this magnificent, unspoilt, land before too much of it changed. Surprisingly, it was only just over 100 years since the first Europeans arrived at this coast; and its tiny coastal settlements that have retained their traditional rural way of life - only slightly influenced by the Western world. Most of the east coast is uninhabited, and the only settlements are limited to the Tasiilaq area, also known as Ammassalik.


I flew to Kulusuk, on a relatively small plane; I had expected it to be full - as it was the first flight of the season, but there were many empty seats. The scenery below was unbelievable; the packed sea ice looked incredible, it was just breaking apart, pure white, as far as the eye could see. Before I knew it, we were coming in to land at Kulusuk, a small village with only 100 inhabitants - but it had an international airport. Well that part is a bit of a joke!


The runway, where we landed was a dirt track, and we stopped over the biggest muddy puddle that we had to walk through to get to the small terminal building. Looking around, the snow was piled up at least ten feet high. Whilst I was waiting for the helicopter to take me on the final part of my journey, I met up with several people who were going to the same place as me, a few tourists and 2 ladies who were travelling out there to work. After an hour it was time to board the helicopter, but where were we going to sit?




I have never seen anything like it; the amount of food boxes, as well as our luggage, that was squeezed into the front of the helicopter was unbelievable. I sat looking out of the side window, and what an amazing ten-minute journey! 








What a view! You could see the ice breaking up, reflections of the mountains on the jet-black ocean, icebergs, more ice and more mountains.




It was absolutely breath taking, but the journey went far too fast.





We landed at Ammassalik, on a square of concrete this time - that was an improvement! The sun was shining, the sky was blue, the mountains were white, the sea was still icy and the houses were a multitude of colours. It was even better than the pictures that had drawn me here. The locals call this place Tasiilaq, and it is the largest town in East Greenland, with almost 2000 inhabitants.



It is situated in a protective fjord, with huge jagged peaks on all sides, and it is cut in two by a river, which flows through the Valley of Flowers behind the town. We were picked up by the hotel minibus and taken up to our hotel, high up, overlooking the town. It looked very basic on the Internet, but I was pleasantly surprised, it was far nicer and more modern than I had expected. I quickly unpacked and went for lunch. 




After being told that the town had nearly run out of food and the supply ship wasn't expected for several more weeks (because the ice pack was late thawing this year), I had no idea what food I was going to be eating. When my lunch was put in front of me, I couldn't believe it. There was salmon, white fish, prawns, herring, caviar, salad, fruit, a meatball, cold lamb and delicious home baked bread.

It must be so hard for the people here to work out how much food and supplies they need to keep them going from October, when the last supply ship comes - until the following July, when the next one arrives. Some items come in by helicopter, but this is such an expensive option, it isn't used very often. After lunch, the owner of the hotel, Mickey, took us on a guided tour of the town. Even though it looked sparse, once we started driving around, I was surprised to see how many amenities there were.



There was a school, with an area for boarders, a large supermarket (that sold everything from food, to clothes and hunting equipment), a police station, a church, a busy harbour (when the ice thawed out), a museum, a hospital and a post office that makes stamps for the whole of Greenland. The houses were painted in many bright colours, and often contained several generations of the same family; most had sleighs and husky dogs tied up outside, although for some it was snowmobiles.
There were even traditional fish hanging outside people’s houses - drying in the sun. As we continued around town, everyone was out enjoying themselves, as it was Children's day! So everyone was out with their children, there was lots of singing in the streets - and drinking was banned for the whole weekend. There were quite a few birds, arctic terns as you would expect, and snow sparrows - but not many seagulls - it is too far north for them. There were still piles of snow by the roadside, and we were told that it had been a long winter this year, with snow 2 -3 metres deep. When the weather turns nasty and the wind gets up, it is not unusual for houses to literally "blow away"; that is why some houses have steel cables running over them - to hold them down.


There was a tower in the centre of the town with an alarm on it, which goes off when a storm is approaching. We saw a museum, which was closed, and next to it was a potato house - where everyone’s perishables are stored in the winter. After the trip around town, we had a few hours before tea, to relax. My eyes felt so tired, I can see why people get snow blindness; I had put my sunglasses on earlier - but the brightness had still got to me!


After dinner I went a walk to the edge of the bay, to where the sea ice meets the frozen ice of our bay, to get some more photos, it was one of those places where you can't stop taking them, and with the everlasting daylight, the sun was still high in the sky until well after 9pm. It never really got dark, not all through the night. The Midnight Sun turned the mountains a delightful a shade of pink, and they were always there whenever I looked out of my window - which I did many times through the night!


Sunday 2nd June 

I got up at 7am, to another beautiful day, and I knew what I wanted to do; after breakfast, I was going for a walk in the Valley of the Flowers. This was a beautiful valley with unique arctic fauna, hundreds of different plants, mosses, saxifrages and arctic poppies.


But I was not under any illusion that they would be out yet - the winter here was dragging on. The French couple decided to come with me, as the alternative was to go to church! We were dropped us off near the cemetery where the trail began. I didn't know how far we would be able to go, because there was still so much snow on the ground - but I didn't mind, I just wanted a bit of an adventure. When we reached the cemetery, the snow began to get deeper and we could see up ahead it was getting worse, and Michelle decided to go back, so Jean and I carried on.
We couldn’t see the trail and had to guess where to walk. We just followed where someone had gone maybe the day before, and in parts the snow was up to the top of my legs! I had been told to follow the river, but there was a waterfall to our right that disappeared under the snow; and Jean was worried that we might end up falling down a crevasse into freezing water below. I led the way and could feel and see the ground underneath, so I wasn't worried. After we had walked for about an hour we reached some rocky ground and decided that, that was far enough, we were both rather wet and tired. We opted for going back via the higher ground, using the rocky areas.
Jean took the lead this time, which I didn't mind at all. It was far easier putting my feet in the holes in the snow where he had stepped; although when the footprints were two foot deep - it was hard on the legs! I must have fallen over at least a dozen times. I never hurt myself, and couldn't stop laughing, but I was getting wetter by the minute. It was a scary when we had to cross about 12 feet of ice, and you could see and hear the water running below it. Jean went first very slowly, and I followed, mighty relieved when we reached the solid ground in one piece. I did have an ‘Exciting moment’ - I saw a paw print in the snow, it was a huge paw print that I decided must have belonged to a polar bear.



I knew there were polar bears here, because one of the locals told me one actually went into Kulusuk town last week and as far as I was concerned this was my polar bear "near sighting". When we got back into town, we stopped by the church to catch a lift back with the hotel shuttle, but it never turned up, so everyone had to walk back - up “Nightmare hill”.



The day was becoming cloudier and after lunch, we were told that the flag was flying at the museum (that meant it was open), we decided to have a walk down to it. A old Inuit man ran the museum, he didn't speak any English at all but he was most amenable. The museum was in the old church, and was full of old Inuit masks, costumes, trinkets, a canoe, carvings, paintings and photographs.


We spent an enjoyable hour there, before getting an ice cream from the local shop - to help us get back up heart-attack hill. By this time the cloud had almost come down as far as our hotel and the temperature had dropped considerably. I was happy to let my legs have the rest of the day off and catch up with my diary; I always had the view from my window to distract me. After dinner, which was the best lamb that I have ever tasted, everyone went back to their rooms.



I know that Jeppe said everyone goes to bed early, but this was ridiculous – it was only 7.30pm! Still, I had another day of Iceland to write up, as well as mountain viewing and I could always watch television if I was desperate!




Monday 3rd June

I had the worst night sleep, I even tried wearing an eye mask to make it dark, but that didn't help. So when it reached 6.00am, I got up, had a shower and made a coffee. The weather outside wasn't looking very good, it was drizzly and dark clouds obscured the tops of the mountains. I went down for breakfast, and had a chat to Maggie and Irene, before they left for the airport. I decided to go down to the heliport, to see them off; but then the hotel owner Mickey came to us and said, so casually "There will be no flights from Kulusuk to Reykjavik today, there is a problem, maybe there is too much water on the runway!" Maggie, Irene, Jean and Michelle were given the choice of stopping in Hotel Ammassalik or flying to Kulusuk and staying in their sister hotel there. They opted to go and stay in Kulusuk, where they would have the chance to explore the small fishing community.


I still went a drive down with them and then went a walk, not far from the helipad, hoping to see the pack ice more clearly. I hadn't gone far when Jeppe pulled up beside me in the minibus. He said that there wasn't much down that way, and he took me to the end - which wasn't very nice, it was the rubbish dump and the saddest thing was to see all of this rubbish by the side of, and occasionally falling in, to this picturesque fjord. Anyway, I had a lift back to the hotel where it was safe and dry and I watched the helicopters coming to and fro all morning. I had thought the flight from Tasiilaq would be the problem - not the flight back to Reykjavik!
One thing was slightly un-nerving though, Jean said when he booked this trip, his tour operator said "This is the date you fly out to Greenland, but I cannot give you a date when you will be able to leave. It will depend on the weather"! There were only 3 of us for lunch, no new arrivals, as no one could get here! An interesting tale I learnt at lunchtime was about the helicopter that had broken down last week, leaving 3 guests stranded in Kulusuk. The authorities here were getting so worried that it wasn't going to get fixed by the weekend, and they had no way of getting the spare part from Kulusuk to Tasiilaq, as no boats could get through the ice. So they wrapped the part in two pillows and clear wrap, hired a small plane, and had the package thrown out of the plane, to land on the football pitch. How incredible is that!


I caught up with a few bits and pieces after lunch, but couldn't stay inside all day. So I put lots of clothes on, and braved the rain, heading off towards the supermarket. Problem was, I noticed a shortcut, and trying to avoid all the really big hills, I gave it a go. When will I learn! I ended up in a life threatening position on a cliff side, and then I thought I would walk over, what looked like a playing field. The melting wet snow ended up being about two foot deep, so I got soaked again. When I got to the supermarket, it was such an eye opener to see rifles and live ammunition in between the children’s toys, cakes and Ikea-like furniture! Everything was so expensive, a box of cereal, a small box of chocolates, some facial wipes, shampoo etc were all at least £5 each. I have no idea how people afford to live here. I didn't stay long, and promised myself that I would stick to the roads all the way back, no matter how tired I was - and was it a trek getting back to the hotel! But after a hot shower and a couple of drinks, I was ok, and happy to stop in the dry and warmth for the rest of the day.



At dinner, the Danish professor told me that a few of years ago, 10 polar bears came into Tasiilaq one spring and they were all shot dead. The government grants each town a certain number that they are allowed to kill, because if polar bears do get this far south, it is doubtful that they will ever get back to their hunting grounds in the north - alive. But last week, one was spotted near Kulusuk, and they weren't allowed to shoot it because they had already killed this season’s quota. He also told us about a seal he shot that was so big he couldn't get it in his boat, so he shot in the air 3 times, meaning he needed help.


Someone came to help him, but the seal was so heavy, it weighed his boat down too far at the back, so he had to shoot a smaller one, and put it in the front - to balance things up. When he got back to the harbour with it, even 5 men could not pull it out of the boat, so they called a taxi to pull it out. It was just left, tied with some rope in the water, and when the tide went out, he was able to go and cut it up for his dogs to eat, and all of his neighbour’s dogs too! Anyway, I had an early night, hoping to get a more restful sleep than the one I had the previous night.



Tuesday 4th June

I got up really early, but felt refreshed after a good nights sleep. Looking out of the window, it looked as awful as yesterday and I had no idea if I would be leaving or not.



Apparently it might not have been a wet runway that cancelled yesterday’s flight; it might have been the fact that there weren’t many people booked on the flight! As I was having breakfast, the cloud/mist/rain was getting worse by the minute. At 9am I was told that everything was OK today and the flight would be going ahead. I was relieved but surprised, as the conditions looked worse than yesterday to me. Anyway, after settling my bill, Jeppe took me down to the helipad.



There were only 3 of us in the helicopter to Kulusuk, and not much luggage; so I sat at the front this time and had a great view. Even though it was raining, the ten-minute flight was still spectacular and I loved every minute if it. When I arrived at Kulusuk, the sun was shining; the scenery was amazing and I could see huge icebergs floating down the fjord, by the airport. I had been told that it was worth trying to get into town, and as I had over 3 hours to spare, I tried to get a taxi – but there were no other vehicles about at all.


The walk into town wasn't too far, 15 minutes to the hotel and another 15 minutes to town, so off I set. It was unbelievable walking along the road, there was only enough room for one vehicle; and the snow was piled so high at both sides of the road. Anyway, true to time, I arrived at the hotel and asked if anyone was able to drive me into the town - no chance! They said that the only way was to walk - I thought they were just being miserable because Jeppe had told me that they would happily take me to town.




They said no vehicles could go down the road and that it would only take me 15 minutes to walk it. So I headed off down the hill. Oh my, they weren't kidding. The road would have been totally impassable by any vehicle; it had nearly been washed away by the floodwater that was still gushing down off the surrounding hills. The base of the snow wall at the edge of the road was being eroded away and every few metres, the side of the road had caved in - making underground waterfalls.


As for the middle of the road, it was just a torrent of water gushing down the entire width of the road. How could today’s conditions be better than yesterdays? I walked for 15 minutes, and the banks of snow either side of the road were even higher, they must have been almost 20 feet high. I was starting to feel closed-in by the height of them, and scared that they might crash down and I would be crushed under them. No one would know I was there! So, as I still couldn't see the town, I decided to call it a day, and turn around. 




Once the high banks of snow became smaller banks of snow, the view of the ice floating in the fjords was lovely - it gave off a delightful turquoise tinge. The hills to the other side of the road were more intimidating though. I suddenly had an awful thought that there could be a polar bear out there - I had forgotten that just last week a polar bear was spotted right here. What was I doing! Trying to get myself eaten or crushed under snow.

I hurried back to the airport as quickly as I could and kept thinking of what to do if I came across a polar bear, but I couldn't remember anything. I was so glad to get back to the little airport where I had a coffee and read a magazine, and saw an interesting article with a photo of a polar bear footprint - that was identical to the paw print I saw in the valley of the flowers. Oh my, that really was a polar bear. After a while, Maggie, Irene and the French couple arrived, they had enjoyed their stay in Kulusuk and managed to go on a dog sleigh ride.
Then they showed me a photograph of a polar bear, next to the helicopter, right here at this airport last week.



I suddenly felt glad to be leaving here in one piece! It had been the most incredible few days. I was hoping to see the place in the sunshine, which I had; it had been a great bunch of people and made me remember why I like to travel. As it says at Iceland's airport "It isn't all about the destination - it is about the journey". And on this one, I felt privileged to have had both. I had met the loveliest people, seen the most amazing things and had experiences to cherish forever. We were relieved when they announced that we could board the plane, yes, we were really going.


I had been watching the vehicles outside trying to flatten the runway and move the muddy puddles about, although we still had to walk through them to reach the plane. When we got on the plane, we saw that there were only 15 passengers, when there was room for 50, so it was likely that yesterday’s flight was cancelled due to there not being enough people on it, rather than the weather. The stewardess came down and told us that we were waiting for 6 more passengers; they were walking with their cases from the town, in all that rain and mud! When they eventually arrived, we managed to take off and I was so relieved.


We all said our goodbyes at the airport, and Geoffrey shared a taxi with me into the city. I checked into my hotel, had a quick walk, got everything ready for the morning and went to bed. I was only at this hotel for 9 hours; I had to be up before 4am the next morning for my flight home. Everything on this trip had been fabulously organised. It really had been a wonderful trip, far better that I was expecting, and had left me with such wonderful memories and of course - amazing photos!

Try Greenland – it’s amazing!

Here's a few more ice photographs..................................