When I signed up for our cruise
on the MV Ushuaia, I confess that I really only knew two things about South
Georgia. I knew that the Falklands War
in 1982 started when Argentina invaded South Georgia, and that Ernest
Shackleton and his men had sailed a life boat across the open South Atlantic to
safety on South Georgia in 1917. Reading
up on the island while on board, and listening to the lectures from Monika and
our biologists, I realized that South Georgia has other claims to fame and
infamy. It was the centre of Southern
Ocean whaling until 1965, playing a huge part in the devastation of the
populations of southern right whales and blue whales. It is also, now that whaling is a thing of
the past, perhaps the most important and largest seabird nesting site in the
world, featuring prominently in BBC nature documentaries such as Frozen Planet
and Life of Birds.
King penguins at Right Whale Bay |
As we steamed across the huge
expanses of the southern ocean which separate South Georgia from the Falklands
for three entire days, I settled into a somewhat lethargic routine involving
lots of time in my bunk, escaping the low-level nausea of mild seasickness by
sleeping, reading and listening to podcasts.
It was only on the third day that I finally felt more myself and went
out on deck in unseasonably fine weather and calm seas to watch seabirds and
take picture of the approaching bulk of Shag Rock, the first outlier of South
Georgia. Finally, on the morning of
Monday, November 2nd, we woke up to find ourselves at anchor off the
beach of Right Whale Bay. Our original
plan had been to land a bit further up the coast at a location that sometimes
has macaroni penguins in residence, but the sea had been too rough and the wind
was in the wrong direction, so we had proceeded directly to our current location. The weather was fairly awful, with snow
squalls turning gradually into a full blizzard.
We lined up for the Zodiacs and were ferried ashore in groups of 9. The beach was full of elephant seals lolling
about like overstuffed sausages, with the occasional hyperaggressive southern
fur seal (actually a kind of sea lion) to keep us on our toes. Kata, one of our biologists, carried a boat
paddle and used it to warn off any fur seals that looked as though they were
contemplating a charge at us. The fur
seal males come ashore before the females and try to stake out a territory into
which they can entice a harem of females once the females land in a few weeks’
time.
I am too sexy for this beach |
We stepped ashore and almost
immediately were confronted by the sight of skuas and giant petrels pecking
away at the bloodied corpse of a stillborn elephant seal pup. Our attention, however, was diverted by our
first king penguins wandering by along the beach. They look a lot like a smaller version of the
emperor penguin, with dramatic orange colouring on their beak and chest. They waddled by singly or in small groups,
often in single file, marching along solemnly past their huge mammalian
neighbours. I couldn’t stop taking
pictures of the penguins; they make the most perfect photographic
subjects. Eventually we wandered a bit
further along the beach toward the distant rookery where juvenile king penguins
in their brown juvenile plumage, looking as though they were wearing their
grandmother’s fur coat, were gathered in huge throngs for safety while their
parents were out fishing for their lunch.
We couldn’t get very close to the rookeries, but from a distance the
sheer numbers of birds, many thousands of juveniles and adults, was
awe-inspiring. A fin whale skeleton lay
on the beach, its bleached bones a mute testament to long-ago whaling
activities. We filed back onto the
Zodiacs a couple of hours later, feet frozen in our rubber boots and heads
spinning with the overstimulation of so many sights, sounds and smells.
Sort of a king penguin Abbey Road cover |
After a hearty lunch of chicken,
pea soup and a delectable dessert of dulce de leche-based cake, it was time to
sort through hundreds of photos, selecting the best shots, before heading off
for our afternoon trip to Prion Island, a tiny offshore island where wandering
albatrosses, the endemic South Georgia pipit, southern giant petrels,
light-mantled sooty albatrosses, fur seals, elephant seals, skuas and gentoo
penguins all compete for space. It’s one
of the few places on earth where tourists can easily see wandering albatrosses
nesting, and landing parties are limited in size to fifty, so we split into two
groups of 44. There are only two
boardwalked paths to follow, and we did a pretty good job of completely filling
the boardwalks wherever a juvenile wandering albatross, almost a year old, sat
on the ground, looking enormous and very Ugly Duckling-esque with their fluffy
immature plumage. Their parents have
been tracked flying as far as the coast of Brazil in search of fish to feed
their offspring, a week-long round trip.
Prion Island is one of the few islets off South Georgia never to have
been infested with rats from whaling ships, so it is a safe place for
ground-nesting birds such as the wandering albatross to nest. As well, a number of South Georgia pipits,
fairly unremarkable-looking birds, made an appearance, flittering around from
bush to bush. There were dozens of giant
petrel juveniles interspersed among the albatrosses, some of them practicing
take-offs and landings in the biting wind.
Skuas, looking predatory and very velociraptor-like, sat in pairs on the
snow-covered grass.
Juvenile wandering albatross on Prion Island |
Down on the beach fur seals
competed aggressively for space and Kata had to get very fierce and scary
indeed with one particularly truculent male.
Some of the elephant seals had day-old newborn pups, and skuas were
pecking away at them to remove the last bits of placenta. On the beach gentoo penguins, my favourite
species, waddled past the fur seals on their way to and from the water,
sweeping their stubby flightless wings far behind their torsos for balance as
they walked. On our way back to the ship,
I managed nearly to fall into the ocean getting out of the Zodiac in a heavy
swell, ending up on my backside back in the Zodiac. I had neglected the cardinal rule of quickly
getting both feet up onto the side of the Zodiac before putting a foot onto the
ship. On the bright side, though, putting
the insoles from my hiking boots into the rubber boots kept my feet much warmer
than they had been during the morning.
That night, after a hearty meal of lasagne, we relived the excitement of
the day’s landing in the lounge before turning in early to enjoy a night of
deep, refreshing sleep in a calm anchorage.
I felt as though the main course of our Antarctic expedition had begun.
Juvenile king penguin rookery |
Our second day on South Georgia,
November 3rd, began with a landing at Salisbury Plain, the so-called
Serengeti of the South. As we lined up
for our Zodiacs to go ashore, I realized that there were three tourists dressed
in penguin suits: Ricky and Renee, an
American-Malaysian couple on their honeymoon, and Jenny, a Canadian oilsands
engineer. We found ourselves in king
penguin heaven, a huge nesting colony filling most of the land area of the
beach. There were of course elephant
seals in huge harems, as well as preening fur seals, and Antarctic terns
wheeled in great numbers in the air. The
endemic South Georgia pintail duck was well represented on the various
meltwater streams that cut the beach at regular intervals, necessitating muddy
river crossings or long detours. But
overwhelming our senses were the king penguins by the tens of thousands, many
walking in single file to or from fishing expeditions in the ocean. Thousands were moulting, standing apart from
the crowd as they flapped their wings in irritation at what must have been an
itchy experience.
Perfect fur coats |
Tens of thousands of
juveniles, almost a year old, stood in huge aggregations, some of them coming
right up to us in curiousity. They cawed
furiously for their parents, and Terri and I were amazed that they could find
each other in the cacophony of penguin calls.
Here and there a penguin skeleton littered the beach, victims of
stillbirth or skua attack or starvation.
It really was overwhelming, and after a while I stopped taking photos
and just squatted down and watched the penguins come up to us within touching
distance and stare at us. I had the same
feeling as I had had twenty years before with mountain gorillas in Zaire, that
I was intruding into their living room with my camera. Eventually we pulled ourselves away to return
to the ship, sated with the sensory overload of too many penguins in one place.
Ruins of Stromness whaling station |
After lunch and picture
downloading and sorting, it was time for a different sort of landing in the
afternoon. We sailed down the coast to
Stromness, one of the whaling stations that once dotted the shoreline of South
Georgia. Monika had given us a lecture
on the history of whaling in the South Atlantic, and I was amazed (and somewhat
horrified) at how widespread the use of whale products was in foods, industrial
processes and even tennis racquet gut until the 1960s. Stromness had been a Norwegian station until
the abandonment of South Atlantic whaling in 1964, and now lies abandoned and
in ruins, with warning signs keeping us 200 metres away from the shattered
buildings. There is both a physical
danger, from winds sending scrap metal flying through the air, and a biological
hazard from the asbestos used to insulate the buildings. We landed on the beach in another driving
snowstorm and set off inland, glad to stretch our legs and walk an appreciable
distance for the first time since Port Stanley.
A glacial valley led inland from the ruins, between glaciated peaks, and
along the path small, hardy gentoo penguins strolled along.
Gentoo on a mission, Stromness |
Gentoos, despite their comical appearance and
small size, are the hardiest mountaineers of the penguin world, and often
establish colonies inland in order to avoid competition for space with king
penguins, elephant seals and fur seals.
We followed one individual for a long way; he was completely unfazed by
our presence, and despite his tiny legs and waddling gait, he set a pace that
was barely slower than our own.
Eventually we gave up the pursuit, as the gentoo colony appeared much
further from shore than we felt like walking.
On the way back we passed skua couples setting up nesting sites, a few
more gentoos and (of course) elephant seals, a single outsized male keeping an
eagle eye over the much smaller females of his harem in case a rival male should
suddenly appear. Pintails were
everywhere, swimming in the meltwater ponds.
A huge steel anchor lay on the beach, a still-life memento to the
impermanence of human endeavour.
Walking up into the hills behind Stromness |
This whaling station has historic
connotations to do with Shackleton, as it was here, in 1917, that Shackleton
and his companions completed their 36-hour dash over the island in search of
help from the whalers. Looking up into
the snowy mountains, I was once again impressed by their speed, determination
and mental toughness, crossing unknown mountains with no equipment in a
do-or-die mission. That night at dinner,
we spotted our first icebergs floating past on the currents from the Antarctic
Peninsula.
Terri, Alejandro the biologist and the MV Ushuaia |
Our third full day on South
Georgia began after a restless night of steaming around, as prevailing heavy
winds prevented the captain from finding a calm anchorage anywhere along the
coast. We departed early (8 am) for a
landing at Fortuna Bay. It was in some
ways my favourite landing site, enclosed by some of the most rugged scenery
seen so far. There were, of course,
National Geographic quantities of fur seals, elephant seals and king penguins
all over the beach. The fresh-fallen
snow blanketing everything (it was, of course, another driving blizzard) lent
an air of drama and photographic contrast to everything. There were skuas nesting everywhere, giant
petrels scavenging dead elephant seal pups, gentoos climbing high above the
beach up steep couloirs and then tobogganing down, king penguins sauntering
around in large groups like bus tourists on a Florida beach.
Elephant seal love |
As we returned to the boat, Terri and I saw a
male elephant seal holding down one of his (relatively) tiny mates with a
flipper. Eventually he decided to mate
with her, and we watched, captivated, like voyeur zoologists, as he had his way
with her. As soon as it was over, she
scooted free, moving with surprising speed for such a big animal, probably
relieved to have escaped. Again I felt
as though David Attenborough should have been narrating the morning’s
proceedings.
As our Zodiac got close to the ship,
an unmistakeable aroma filled the air. “Barbecue! It’s a parillada!” And sure enough as we came around the stern,
we could see the kitchen staff gathered around a huge grill lashed to the
portside railings of the ship. We
started with sausages as an appetizer in the lounge, and then moved to the main
course, huge slabs of grilled beef, at the lunch table. I ate until I thought I might possibly
explode; I love Argentinian beef! By the
time we had finished our delicious dessert, we had steamed into Grytviken
harbour. Grytviken had once played host
to three separate whaling stations (two Norwegian and one Scottish), and is now
the capital of South Georgia, inhabited by the couple who administer the entire
archipelago and a handful of British scientists. After two and half days of dreadful weather,
suddenly the skies cleared and the sun glinted on the thick blanket of fresh
snow that covered everything. While our
passports were being stamped (with a neat entry stamp featuring penguins), we
listened to the wife of the First Family talk about the huge effort being made
to exterminate every single last rat on the entire archipelago. It’s too early to tell yet, but the first
indications are that there are no rats left alive anywhere. If that is true, it’s great news for nesting
seabirds. There are currently 55 million
birds nesting on South Georgia and its outlying islands; in the absence of rats
(which prey on the eggs and chicks of ground-nesting birds like pipits,
pintails and wandering albatrosses), that number could grow fairly rapidly to a
mind-boggling 180 million. Several of
our fellow passengers were impressed enough with the project to donate to the charitable
trust doing the restoration work.
Terri and the Boss, Grytviken |
We were eventually released to go
ashore, and we spread out along the beach and through the remains of the
whaling station (which, unlike Stromness, has been cleaned up enough not to be
hazardous to visitors). There is an
impressive museum, staffed by a succession of volunteer curators, which has an
amazing collection of objects, animals and information about the history of
whaling, the Falklands War (which started on South Georgia) and Shackleton (a
replica of the lifeboat he sailed from Elephant Island to South Georgia lies in
one building of the museum). The current
curator, a young Englishman, gave a couple of historic walking tours, but Terri
and I tore ourselves away to visit the whaler’s church (where I got to play the
organ and toll the bell), write postcards (South Georgia makes good money
selling postcards and its own stamps) and take pictures of the elephant seals
that now dominate a landscape that was once redolent of death and horror. We walked out to Sir Ernest Shackleton’s
grave with Oz, the 86-year-old Aussie Antarctic addict and Shackleton fan, and
tried to locate the grave of Frank Wild, Shackleton’s second-in-command, who
was re-buried here five years ago, under the thick snow.
Finally located under the snow: The Boss's right hand man |
The visit ended with everyone at Shackleton’s
grave, drinking a toast to “The Boss” and listening to a very brief speech by
Oz. We were completely happy as we
Zodiacked back to the MV Ushuaia, watching the sun play on the fresh snow atop
the high peaks lining the fjord.
Peak above Grytviken |
November the 5th, our
last day on South Georgia, was a great send-off for us. We finally had a great night of restful sleep
in a very calm anchorage, and everyone woke up refreshed. We got to St. Andrew’s Bay, perhaps the
largest king penguin nesting colony in the world, only to find that high winds
were driving waves onto an exposed, steep, dissipative beach. After a brief confab, Monika and Agustin
decided that it was too rough to land, but instead we would do Zodiac tours of
the coast. At first we were
disappointed, but it quickly became clear that it was a brilliant
solution.
Leopard seal |
We had a completely different
view of the animals and birds than we did from the shore, and we had a
memorable encounter with a leopard seal who followed our Zodiac, showing us his
huge top predator teeth. An elephant
seal swirled around in his own pseudo-Jacuzzi pool, while two other elephant
seal males fought a blood-soaked duel on the beach.
Five tons of elephant seal facing off against another five tons |
We watched giant petrels fishing offshore,
and trying to take off with a comic-book series of running steps across the
water. We were surrounded by groups of
king penguins fishing, wading ashore or diving into the surf. We were in our Zodiac with Ivan and Guille,
two of the Argentinian photo tour group (although Ivan is a Guatemalan), and it
was mesmerizing to watch them trying to take good photos from the bottom of our
violently bobbing boat. Looking at the
final results, though, I was impressed at the quality of the photos; of course,
if, like Guille, you take 4000 photos in 90 minutes, you should end up with a
few good shots.
Giant petrel takeoff run |
In the afternoon, after lunch, we
started the long sail southwest towards the Antarctic Peninsula. Yesterday’s sunny weather was a distant
memory as we detoured up the Drygalski Fjord, sailing up between towering
mountains and hanging glaciers as snow accumulated on the deck and passengers
had snowball fights. We felt very small
and insignificant as we got to the head of the fjord and stared up, way up, at the
calving face of the glacier. We slowly
turned around and then steamed out to sea, past a series of huge icebergs,
headed for Antarctica proper after four unforgettable days of wildlife
encounters on the magical island of South Georgia. It was hard to believe that we had been part of such an orgy of birdlife and mammals. It was also hard to believe that Antarctica itself could compete with this, making us glad that we had signed up for the full three-week three destination experience.
Iceberg floating past the southeast corner of South Georgia |