Oceania trip to the Amazon Læs mere

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Krydstogtskib, Natur, Ferie
  • 13,5krejste miles
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  • 76fodaftryk
  • 24dage
  • 1,0kfotos
  • 193kan lide
  • TRINIDAD & TOBAGO- 1 of 3

    5. januar, Trinidad og Tobago ⋅ 🌬 82 °F

    Have you ever visited or heard of Trinidad & Tobago? Many people know of their big Carnival celebration. Today we visited Tobago, and discovered that it is actually two islands (about 20 miles apart and 2-3 hours by boat) but one Country called the Republic of Trinidad & Tobago. It is the southernmost Country in the Carribean (the earliest settled more than 5,000 years ago). They became Independent in 1962 and became a unified Republic in 1976. The Country is only 9 miles from Venzuela, so of the 70,000 people that live here, 17,000 are Venezuelans. The size of Trinidad is 1800 sq miles and Tobago 120 sq miles.

    We docked in Scarborough, the capital on the southwest coast of the island of Tobago. and proceed with our first rainforest of the trip and a visit to do the “Trek to Argyle Waterfall”. We had a minivan with driver and excellent tour guide drive us to the area beginning with what they called their downtown … very quaint. She was a teacher so we learned a lot about the education system and the schools which are part of the Caribbean school system as well as about the way of life in Tobago. In the 18th Century this was a British port (Colombus discovered it in 1498). It history is also Spanish and French controlled prior to British in1797. African, Indian and European influences are seen in the area as most of the population is a mix of African and Indian today.
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  • TRINIDAD & TOBAGO - 2 of 3

    5. januar, Trinidad og Tobago ⋅ 🌬 82 °F

    When we arrived at the rainforest we had an addition guide join us to take us through the forest and point out all the vegetation. On the hike to the waterfall we saw beautiful terrain (forests covering 40% of the Country), rolling hills, trees from all over the World. The area has 3,300 species of plants (very few endemic), 350 species of trees, 472 bird species, about 100 mammals, about 90 reptiles (we were told they were not dangerous!) We saw so many of these plants, trees, and herbs it was impossible to remember but some we saw included: guava, papaya, cocoa, apples, cashews, bamboo, mahogany, Chinese coconut, dasheen, and cocorite.

    Argyle is the largest of the 25 or so waterfalls here with a 3-level drop of 178 feet into a series of pools surrounded by Jungle. We had the option of swimming in the pool … Karen and I did. The sound of Argyle’s waterfall is heard long before you see it. Only 3 of us dared to climb the rocks and get into the pool’s cool waters. Beautiful and refreshing!!!
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  • TRINIDAD & TOBAGO - 3 of 3

    5. januar, Trinidad og Tobago ⋅ 🌙 79 °F

    Hike to the WATERFALL and then the reward .... a dip into the pool at the basin!!!

  • Traveling South

    6. januar, North Atlantic Ocean ⋅ 🌬 81 °F

    Easy going day at sea on Sirena. She is 25 years old but has been updated a few times (last time 5 years ago). With 684 guests and 400 crew from 52 Nationalities, the wonderful personalized service continues. The ship, 593' by 84', weighing 30,77 tons traveling between 16-18 knots as we trek to the Amazon.

    We met ATW23 friends wherever we went today ... we think there are at least 24 people from this group. Two great presentations today, "The Amazon: Canopy of Life for the Earth", and "Making it Memorable: How to Take the Very Best Travel Photos". The evening began with the Captain's Cocktail Celebration and then dinner with friends as we celebrated Saul's Birthday. The evening ended with "The Broad's Way" with vocalist Jeri Sager... a favorite from a past cruise.
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  • Making our way South (see red dot)

    6. januar, North Atlantic Ocean ⋅ ⛅ 82 °F

    12 noon- From Tobago to the Amazon is approximate 1,000 miles, so far we have gone 300 ... it will take 3 days to get to the entrance of the Amazon area (Macapa). THE LARGEST RAINFOREST IN THE WORLD (larger than the next 2 combined). The size of the 48 states in the U.S. !!!!Læs mere

  • AMAZON- The Lungs of Our Planet

    6. januar, North Atlantic Ocean ⋅ 🌬 81 °F

    Our planet is under a threat of losing the 20% of oxygen that comes from the Amazon. The tree cover (68% in Brazil) captures 150-200 billions tons of CO2 a day and because of evaporation, creates its own clouds and rain system and therefore puts 20 billion tons of water into the atmosphere every day.

    The Amazon is so big covering 1% of the earth’s surface and the river is 5 times larger than any other river on Earth (its 12 times the size of the Mississippi) and has an additional 1100 tributaries.

    With all of the deforestation, there are 390 billion trees (16,000 species) under threat as the land has been cleared. In addition, there are: 2.5 million species of insects, 1400 species of butterflies, 430 species of animals (10% of the Worlds wildlife, some very dangerous like anacondas and poisonous frogs) and 1300 species of birds! The Amazon has 25% of the Earths biodiversity. The chemicals, wood and plants here are used worldwide and are used to create new medicines all the time with new plants that are continuously discovered.

    The population of people in the Amazon is 47 million (350 different ethnic groups) with 1.6 million being indigenous tribal people that have never had contact with outsiders but live in harmony with the environment here.
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  • Another day going further South ...

    7. januar, North Atlantic Ocean ⋅ 🌬 81 °F

    Two interesting lectures today:
    "Portuguese Brazil: Why the Royal Court of Lisbon Came to Brazil" and
    "The Deep:What Lies Beneath Us"

    Music at the piano with Tetiana and strings with The Bright String Quartet before dinner. Then we had a fun, interesting and delicious dinner with Derren, the Officer in-charge of HR on the ship. How would you like to be responsible for 400 employees that speak over 50 different languages. Soo many questions!

    Then we saw an old friend Tom ... "An Attitude with a Tie" and ended the evening with the Show band and the Entertainers singing 2000 Radio Hits.
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  • "The Deep: What Lies Beneath Us"

    7. januar, North Atlantic Ocean ⋅ 🌬 81 °F

    The Last Frontier- The Ocean Floor

    The OCEAN covers 71% of earth. Just the Atlantic Ocean itself is 20% of the Earth’s surface and covers 41 million square miles. 50% of the known creatures on Earth are in the Atlantic but 90% live deep in the photoic zone (where there is sun) which is only 2% of the ocean’s mass. Algae is only found here and importantly produces 70% of the World’s oxygen and 98% of our biomass. Plankton is 49% of this and it alone provides 50% of our oxygen!

    Unfortunately, people can only freedive to 100’ before their bodily functions start to shut down (yes, a few divers can go down 300’) but this is literally “scratching the surface” of where is life. At 1,000’ only blue light is let in, sunlight never gets in.

    At 2500’, it is permanently black with the pressure at 75 times the surface pressure (sea water is 840 denser than air so that 10’ of water is equivalent to the pressure at 10,000’ in the air). At 99’, everything gets pressured to squeeze it to ¼ its original size! Does any life survive there? Yes, 4,700 species at depths below 2500’ with 600 species living at 13,000-35,797’, still with an estimated 30 million undiscovered species. At this depth there are the greatest amount of animals with 600 species that live without light and 85% of life living below 3000’.

    Levels of the Ocean: The Epipelagic level is from the surface to 300’. The Mesopelagic level is 300’-1000’ where sharks and dolphins live. The Bathypelagic level is 1,000’-10,000’ where whales travel. The Abyssopelagic level is 10,000’-28,000’ and Hadalpelagic level below 28,700’ where xenophyophores (the smallest organisms) live. In the Hadal zone at 20,000’-35,850’, the pressure is over 1000 times the surface where there is never light or oxygen. The temperature is 800 degrees but a single cell that is 4” square thrives and there are 700 species. There are still 30 million undiscovered species in the ocean while there is only 1.4 million on land.

    Whales are slowly becoming extinct as 25,000 were killed each year in 1800’s until that was mostly stopped and Japan and other countries are still killing them. Of the main whale species, 3 are already gone and 3 are getting close to extinction. We are losing the opportunity to learn from them … just like we are losing this opportunity to learn about animals and plants and trees in the Amazon that are becoming extinct.
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  • Crossing the EQUATOR

    8. januar, North Atlantic Ocean ⋅ 🌧 81 °F

    Yes, the King Neptune Line-Crossing Ceremony!
    We did it in 2018 (see last photo)

    Note: see our ATW trip for details: https://findpenguins.com/bruce-loves-to-travel/…