Argentina
Bahía Ushuaia

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    • Day 13

      Relaxed Ushuaia

      March 14, 2020 in Argentina ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

      Alles hat sich wegen 👑👑👑👑👑geändert. Alle weiteren Ausflüge sind abgesagt. Wir bleiben bis morgen 12.00 Uhr an Bord. ⚓Von hier geht es dann direkt zum Flughafen in Ushuaia.
      Nach jetzigem Stand werden wir in BuenosAires wieder im Hilton übernachten. Ausflugslos geht's dann zum Flughafen und ab nach Europa. I will keep you updated 🧳💺🛫
      Alles ist gut, nein super!!! 🌞🌞🌞👼👼👼
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    • Day 8

      Kanał Beagle

      January 3 in Argentina ⋅ ☁️ 10 °C

      Dzisiaj dzień odpoczynku, wsiedliśmy na katamaran i podziwiamy brzegi wysepki kanału siedząc wygodnie i popijając kawkę 😎
      Popłynęliśmy w kierunku wschodnim, czyli w kierunku Atlantyku podziwiając po drodze kormorany (trochę podobne do pingwinów, tylko że latają 😜), lwy morskie i w końcu też pingwiny.
      Na wysepce Martillo mają kolonię aż trzy gatunki pingwina: pingwiny Magellana, które już znamy, pingwiny gentu (z czerwonymi łapkami i dziobami) oraz jedna para pingwinów królewskich, które nie wiadomo dlaczego się tu zabłąkały. Jako stworzenia stadne nie mają specjalnie szans na odchowanie potomstwa. Podobno przeżywają to bardzo i nawet już próbowały adoptować maluchy od innych pingwinów. 🐧💚
      Pogoda super 🌞
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    • Day 17

      Day 15 - Glaciers and the End

      January 12, 2019 in Argentina ⋅ 🌬 43 °F

      The daily newsletter told us we'd be passing glaciers as we cruised through the Beagle Channel on our way to Ushuaia. Getting up about 4:00, we saw several glaciers in the gradually brightening morning light. It's summer here and sunrise is about 5:00, sunset about 10:00 PM. At 4:00, it was already light enough to see the mountains plunging into the Channel only a quarter mile or less from the port side (left side).
      Our stateroom is on the port side so we could look out the veranda sliding door at the rock and ice gliding by. The clouds hovered only a thousand feet or less but there was enough light to see glaciers against the dark mountains. For an hour or more, we saw half a dozen or so rivers of ice flowing down the mountains. One tall, blue one emptied right into the Channel only 500 feet off the ship. A fantastic sight to wake up to.

      A bit later after breakfast we docked in Ushuaia. The city is the furthest south city in the world and our first port in Argentina. There is a Chilean town of about 2,000 a bit further south but Ushuaia is a major metro area of 70,000 plus. The Eclipse actually docked at a pier so we didn't need to tender to shore. Soon after we docked, we left the ship and boarded a large bus for our "Drive to the End of the World" excursion.

      Our excursion started off just after 10:00. Our guide, Olna, kept up a running description in excellent English of what we were seeing as we drove out of the city and into Tierra del Fuego Nat'l Park.

      The largest industry in Ushuaia is electronics assembly. They assemble components made in China and elsewhere into finished products for domestic consumption. The second largest industry is tourism. The city is only 750 miles from Antartica and tours and resupply mission leave here regularly. The southernmost peaks of the Andes range surround the city on three sides with the Beagle Channel and its Pacific Ocean currents on the fourth side. These peaks exhibit the classic glacial features like cirques below the jagged tops, U-shaped valleys, and hanging waterfalls.

      Our tour took us to the Park, about 12 miles west of the city. It was cold (about 40), very windy and sprinkling rain. Everyone was as bundled up as possible. I wore the long underwear I'd brought specifically for this purpose and was toasty.The huge park stretches to the Chilean border further west. There is evidence of human passage here as far back as 10,000 BC and human settlement as long as 6,300 years ago. The indigenous peoples here when the Europeans arrived were wiped out by introduced diseases or hunted to extinction- sounds familiar.

      We got out at the ""Post Office at the End of the World" to take pics and walk a trail on the shore. Next the bus took us to Lake Roca where we did more pics and a nature walk with Olna. She explained the trees and animals and we saw a family of kelp geese. Olna kept explaining things and showed pictures of some things for better explanation. We stopped at the interpretive center then continued to the end of the Pan American highway. This road runs from Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, to here in Tierra del Feugo. A walk on a wooden boardwalk over the peat bog took us to a viewpoint overlooking the bay and the Beagle Channel. Then it was back into town and the end of our excursion - one well worth taking.

      On board, we had lunch and relaxed. We went to an upper deck to watch the ship pull out of port but saw people still coming back. The wind on the pier was so fierce that the port police were escorting some people across the windswept pier to keep them from falling! We attended the show - a Canadian singer who gave a powerful performance. At the end of the show, the cruise director came on stage to announce that the ship hadn't left, yet, because the harbor was closed because of high winds. Later, as we ate with our table mates, the captain announced we were underway and would maintain our previous schedule.

      Tomorrow Cape Horn and out to sea.
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    • Day 27

      In Ushuaia angekommen

      February 1, 2023 in Argentina ⋅ ☁️ 10 °C

      Heute liegen wir noch auf Reede, geht mit Tenderbooten an Land.
      Temperatur 7 Grad.
      22 Uhr: Jetzt haben wir unseren Platz gewechselt und liegen an der Pier.

    • Day 30

      Einlaufen Ushuaia

      November 14, 2017 in Argentina ⋅ 🌫 8 °C

      Das Einlaufen in die Bucht von Ushuaia ist bereits ein tolles Erlebnis. Deshalb waren wir bereits um 5:00 auf Deck elf. Es war wolkenlos, eiskalt und sehr windig. Der Beagle Kanal ist von beiden Seiten mit Bergen umgeben. Mitten durch diesen Kanal führt die Grenze zwischen Argentinien und Chile..Read more

    • Fin Del Mundo

      November 16, 2014 in Argentina ⋅ 🌬 50 °F

      I remember when I was in the Southern most point of the US. It was the day before Hurricane Andrew hit, and we were camping in the Florida Keys; but, that's a story for another time. Today we landed in the most Southern point of the Americas, fondly known as the end of the world. You can think of Ushuaia like Breckenridge by the ocean. Hotel Albatross, our accommodations, even looks like Beaver Run Resort but on a smaller scale. Similar to Colorado's mountain towns, Ushuaia's architecture includes many chalets and sloping roofs.

      We arrived at the airport around 2pm and were greeted by the Quark Expedition folks. They quickly ferried us and eight other passengers to our hotel, sharing interesting information along the way. For example, Ushuaia has approximately 16,000 inhabitants, and it is sandwiched between the Andes Mountains and the water. Our hotel is a block off of the water, near all the amenities of town. From our window we have a clear view of the water and the mountains just to the north of us. Did you know that the Andes are the longest mountain chain in the world, running from Venezuela, all the way to here?

      After a well-deserved nap, we had a 6pm briefing with the Quark representative. She gave us quite a bit of information and then opened the floor for inquiries. We board tomorrow afternoon, so this was our time to allay any concerns. There were a lot of good questions, but some of my favorites were: "You're saying that wifi is not complementary?" "I was supposed to bring my own gloves and waterproof pants?" "What if I have to go to the bathroom while we're camping?"

      Following the briefing, we did a bit of shopping, and then slid into an Irish pub for dinner. It seemed only appropriate to have an Irish meal, in an Argentine town that looks like it belongs in the middle of the Alps.
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Bahía Ushuaia, Bahia Ushuaia

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