Thursday, December 28, 2006

Log/Pic 38 The Andes Mountains

So this is the path we took up to Martial Glacier in the Andes Mountains.
The path got steeper and deeper.
Freddy, one of my Spanish professors, paved the way with some help from his snowboard.


On the peek!


Chile!





Ushuaia in the background. Strait ahead is the passage out to Cape Horn, Drakes Passage, and onto Antarctica! Notice the red jacket-a true symbol of the 7th continent!


More Chilean mountains.




Freddy ready to snowboard down the mountain. I slid down head first on my back.




I think i´m ready for Antarctica










Tuesday, December 26, 2006

Log/Pic 37 Ushuaia, Argentina

So this is Ushuaia! The world's most southern town. It's a quaint little town that reminds me of Seward, Alaska. Pretty much each day here it is cold, warm, sunny and raining in its 18 hours of daylight. I imagine it's the same in the winter, without the heat and change the daylight to dark.
Boats in the bay, cold, clear, mountains in the background. Its only 650 miles from Antarctica...this is a problem for me.

Even the seagulls are cool looking!


This is a view from above looking down on the town. The mountains of Chile in the background.



This is the Spanish school where I'm taking class and these are the instructors and other students.

Hiking in Patagonia...yeah!!

Woodpecker or carpintero patagonico

Lots of cool lichen throughout the park and surrounding area. I heard there is lichen in Antarctica, I need to go find out!








Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Log/Pic 36 Isabela Island, Galapogos

So after a hellish three-hour boat ride on a tiny craft in the Galopogos rough seas, we arrived in the beautiful island of Isabela. The first thing I did was head to Sierra Negra on horseback. This volcano that erupted like less than two years ago, claims the 2nd largest caldera in the world. It was a very clear day in the highlands, and we could see all the way across.
I saw flamingos, pelicans, frigates, boobies, stingrays, sharks, sea lions, turtles, iquanas, eels and of course penquins. These are the 2nd smallest type of penquins. We saw them swimming, paddling on the surface in groups of 15-20, and sitting on the rocks.
After a few days I took another small boat on a terrible ride to the island of Floreana to do some snorkling at Diablo Corona (Devils Crown). We then went on to San Cristobol. The only thing I liked about this island was the enormous sea lion colony that took over most of the beach and some of the boardwalk. Oh yeah, and it was the place to go to get to Española!Within a week, I was missing Isabela. So were the two German guys I had been traveling with since Santa Cruz, and our new friends Larry and Sandy from Mexico/California. So we flew back to Isabela on a four passenger plane and had a great view of the rest of the Galopogos Islands.


Now back on our favorite island, we enjoyed more animals at the Tunnels, Los Tintoraras, and the rest of this peaceful paradise.

More bonding.



Iquana and baby sea lion.




More besos (kisses).

This huge iquana was either coming for a kiss or to fight, I couldn't tell.


I still cant tell.






I sat on some lava and watched these two go at it for like 10 minutes-3 rounds. In the background there were two more fighting. They were still going at it when i left. I dont know how many more rounds there were. I had to go check out more wildlife-plus my ass really hurt!









Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Log/Pic 35 Española, Galapogos

So I know I promised no more Galopogos photos, but this is Española!
Above is the masked boobie.
This is a sally light-foot crab.

The marine iguanas on this island where red and some where green. It is December but I think they are this color all year round.

see website for additional pics of Galop

This is what makes this island famous. The only nesting place for the Waved Albotrose. The baby is the fat, fury one. The babies get bigger than their mom and have to lose weight before they can fly. They can spend six months at sea and will return to this nesting place when they are six years old.



Two adult Albatros chilling. We saw probably 25 of them, one in flight from our four-hour boat trip from San Cristobol.




Here we saw dozens of Blue-footed boobies. This one was performing the ritual mating dance.

These two were doing their famous march.


A Galopogos hawk. We saw two males and a female.

Red-beaked tropic bird in flight.


Me bonding with a baby sea lion. Can't touch the wildlife, but I didn't read anything about kisses!