• Janine Westlund
  • Mark E
  • Janine Westlund
  • Mark E

South America 2026

Et 103-dags eventyr af Janine & Mark E Læs mere
  • Medallion Ceremony, Great Band

    9. februar, South Pacific Ocean ⋅ ☁️ 63 °F

    Loyalty Award Ceremonies are a good sea day event. We seem to have crossed the 'bronze medallion' level this trip for exceeding 100 actual sailed nights (we've apparently done 127 nts) which is different from their star-based Mariner Society which tallies promotional levels in addition to actual sailed nights for something called 'cruise day credits' (we reached 4-star status on this trip, or somewhere over 200 cruise day credits -- almost everyone agrees that the best benefit to that level is free laundry. Yeah!) One couple was recognized for 3300 nights!!
    Mark borrowed an officer's jacket for our pic ... so the Captain displayed his arm to clearly present his rank.
    Men. 😆
    Lastly, the 'Dam Band' did a Santana night -- they were great.
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  • On to the next leg of our journey....

    11. februar, Chile ⋅ ☀️ 73 °F

    We disembarked the cruiseship and headed to Santiago for our flight the next day to Easter Island.
    Really looking forward to this leg -- our visit aligns with the final few days of the annual Tapati Festival.Læs mere

  • Full Day Tour, pt.1

    12. februar, Chile ⋅ ☀️ 73 °F

    A great tour that took us around a sizeable part of this very manageable island.
    ==> First a few fun facts:
    1) Moai are carved from volcanic tuff between 1000 & 1650 CE, & represent deified ancestors & chiefs; they are traditionally positioned on 'ahus' facing inland to watch over their communities.
    2) ALL moai were toppled during historic conflicts. Those standing were raised by restorers.
    3) "Ahu" means sacred stone platform, the foundation for moai statues.
    4) The official languages of Easter Island are Spanish & Rapanui. Written Rapanui consists of 20 characters (10 consonants & 10 vowels including their long form) & a 'glottal' stop represented by an apostrophe. (Glottal? Apparently a sound produced by the glottis which is an opening in the throat that's closed when you swallow. Who knew?? 🧐)
    5) the 'Ŋ' in the signage is one of the Rapanui consonants, is pronounced 'ng' like 'king', & is translated as such in western language & writing.

    Now, the tour:
    First stop: Vaihu -- an archaeological site on the south coast. It features a large, unrestored ceremonial platform w/ 8 toppled moai that were left as they fell during 18th century clan conflicts. It's believed they were not raised to symbolize the crumbling of civilization.
    Following along the south coast, we visited Ahu Akahanga. Traditionally known as the burial place of the first king: Hotu Matu'a. History is sketchy here & largely driven by oral tradition. But it's suggested the first settlement arrived on Anakena Beach ~400CE. Akahanga has 13 fallen/broken moai, some still w/ their pukao (aka: 'topknots') still around. It was also the ancestral home of our guide whose great grandfather was born here ~1841 and lived here for ~10 yrs.
    Next visit: Rano Raraku -- an extinct volcanic crater that served as the primary quarry for ~95% of the moai statues carved over the course of ~500 yrs. There are ~400 unfinished or abandoned Moai here.
    The USAF was stationed on Easter Island between 1966 & 1971 operating a satellite station to support military projects & minor satellites. Apparently when they were bored they occasionally used the moai as shooting targets. :(
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  • Full Day Tour, pt.2

    12. februar, Chile ⋅ ☀️ 75 °F

    3 more stops:
    AHU TONGARIKI: the iconic symbol of Easter Island, it's the largest ceremonial site featuring 15 restored* moai statues on a 200m long platform [*the moais were toppled during the island's civil wars, and then in 1960 the ahu was swept inland by a tsunami. The site was restored in the 90's by Chilean & Japanese teams.]
    TE PITO KURA: famous for one of the largest once-erected moai (10m tall, 80-ton, excluding its 12-ton 'hat') known as Paro which lies toppled near a highly magnetic, smooth, round stone called " Te Pito te Henua". Also considered the naval of the light, it is peculiarly round & is believed to be full of 'mana energy'. Today we're not allowed to touch it, but our guide told us he placed a compass on it when he was a child (before it was closed off from the public) & the needle just spun.
    ANAKENA BEACH: aside from the white coral sand, there are 2 ahus: Ahu-Ature (which has a single moai) & Ahu Nao-Nao (which has seven, two of which have deteriorated.
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  • A little more island touring

    13. februar, Chile ⋅ ☀️ 75 °F

    Our morning-ish tour visited 2 stops:
    Rano Kau Volcano: an extinct volcanic crater standing 324m tall and featuring a freshwater crater lake with floating reed islands.
    Orongo Ceremonial Village: serving as the center of the Birdman Cult*, it features 50+ low, semi-buried stone-walled houses.
    * from the 16th to the 19th centuries, chiefs competed here in a dangerous annual race to fetch the first egg of the manutara bird from the islet of Motu Nui to secure power.
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  • Final Festival contest & Parade

    13. februar, Chile ⋅ ☀️ 75 °F

    Today was the final day of the Tapati Festival -- the last day for the 2 ladies competing to win the title of 'queen' to accumulate points. At the end of the day, it seems this is a popularity contest.
    We started by walking along the floats in queue for the parade. Those were fun. Then we wandered into the final points-earning opportunity: the body painting.
    Oh dear ... this almost defied description.
    Anyone who wants to participate is eligible; you just show up (in minimal attire) at the 'prep site' of the queen you want to support (we were at a site supporting a young lady named Heilanie; the other site a few blocks away was for Heremeta), hop into a mud-tub of your color preference, and then get painted with various local symbols. Really ... who wouldn't find this fun? Hmm.
    We decided our fun was more on the voyeuristic side: watching the active, excited participation of locals & non-locals alike. It almost made you want to toss aside a few clothes and participate.
    Almost.
    It certainly was entertaining to watch!
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  • Final Festival Day: pt.1

    14. februar, Chile ⋅ 🌬 77 °F

    We wandered a bit in the late morning before our last tour & happened to stumble on the last competition of the Tapati Festival. Even though the results were final after yesterday's painting/parade event, the bareback horse race was still on. Wow.

    Tour stop today: Ahu Vinapu -- famous for its advanced, tight-fitting masonry of the walls; similar to those found in Cusco.

    The Closing Ceremony of the Tapati Festival in the evening was SO fun -- we wanted to save as many audio/video clips as possible; so it's a multi-part posting. The band that played before the Crowning of the Queen ceremonies was great.
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  • Sunrise at Tongariki, more roaming

    15. februar, Chile ⋅ 🌙 75 °F

    Sunrise was 8:05a -- that made this experience a bit easier than what we would consider 'crack of dawn'.

    After the sunrise, we drove around to take a look at some of the sites not covered by tours.

    Pu o Hiro: a 1.25m stone wind instrument traditionally used to produce a "deep, trumpet-like sound to attract fish to the coast; or to invoke Hiro: the ancient Polynesian god of rain, during droughts".

    Papa Vaka: "stone canoe" features marine-themed petroglyphs .
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  • Last full day

    16. februar, Chile ⋅ ☀️ 77 °F

    Our last full day -- we drove into town & roamed around it for a bit, returned the car and then one last tour in the afternoon.

    The tour covered 4 stops:
    Ahu Uri Urenga -- one lone moai, not near the water. Aligned to face the winter solstice sunrise, he's an ancient solar calendar. Another unique property: he has 2 pairs of hands. Our guide said this was b/c the sculptor didn't carve him correctly the first time and had to 'fix' the problem.
    Puna Pau: the quarry where the red stone for the pukao, or topknot, comes from.
    Ahu Akivi: also located inland, but they are the only moai statues facing the ocean: they are positioned to face sunset during Spring Equinox & have their backs to the sunrise during Autumn Equinox.
    Tahai Village: has 3 ahus -- Ahu Vai'Uri (5 moais), Ahu Tahai & Ahu Ko Te Riki (1 moai each). It's one of the few places where the sun sets behind the statues.
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  • Quito, Day 1 - pt.1

    19. februar, Ecuador ⋅ ☁️ 64 °F

    We took a hop-on/hop-off bus and did a few interesting stops:
    The Basilica of the Consecration of Jesus: a 19th century church featuring ornate neo-gothic styling & great city views.
    National Pantheon for the Ecuadorian Heads of State located near the base of the Basilica.Læs mere

  • Quito, Day 1 - pt.2

    19. februar, Ecuador ⋅ 🌧 64 °F

    Lunch in a nice 2nd-floor restaurant overlooking Plaza San Francisco.
    After lunch we visited the Basilica of San Francisco -- signage asked that ameras not be used, so I pulled one pic from the website so I'll remember it.
    We then walked a block to the Church of the Society of Jesus. Opened in 1765, it has more gold than I think we've ever seen in one place.
    We ended our day in a nice little jazz club Mark found near our hotel. Really nice, relaxing music.
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  • Quito>Guayaquil>Galapagos, boat

    21. februar, Ecuador ⋅ ☁️ 66 °F

    Largely a travel day ... it took about 5 hours total (door to door) to get to Baltra Island. Once we landed, a brief (3 min) bus ride to the "port' where we boarded zodiacs for a 5 min ride to our ship: Endeavor II. It has a capacity of 96 passengers & the boat is full for our trip.
    After lunch and settling into our cabins, there was a brief trip to the nearby beach for a little visit. A nice opening experience.
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  • North Seymor Island

    22. februar, Ecuador ⋅ 🌙 79 °F

    What a day! It was a day for us to observe partner-seeking behaviors!!!
    We saw male Frigatebirds with their red chests puffed up to attract a female.
    We saw another type of (male) frigatebird doing a quirky neck-twist combined w/ an equally-quirky gaggle-sound also designed to attract a mate.
    And probably most adorable of all: we had the fortune of seeing a pair of blue-footed boobies check each other out. The scenario went something like this:
    -- A male & female eye each other from a distance.
    -- The male closes the distance; they evaluate each other close up.
    -- The female opens her wings to say "I'm interested in you", the male does the same.
    -- They both walk around in a little circle displaying displaying their blue feet as if saying "Look how nice & blue my feet are".
    -- The female approaches the male again displaying her wings to reiterate her interest.
    -- The male seems to evaluate the situation for a bit and after a few moments he flies off leaving the female (and us) slack-jawed!
    The video captured our guide's explanatory commentary nicely.
    Over lunch we watched dolphins play near our boat.
    In the afternoon we took a walk to see a lagoon where some flamingos & oyster catchers were hanging out.
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