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Antarctic Sights...
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Apr 1, 2023 02:53:15   #
jak86094
 
My trip to South America and Antarctica in January and February provided a wonderful variety of scenery and wildlife to photograph. While I've posted photos of some of the birds, the main focus of the trip, taken on land and from the deck of a cruise ship (see prior posts in the bird photos subdirectory), we also enjoyed wonderful views of the unique scenery and some non-avian wildlife, which I present here.

Fur Seals and Elephant Seals frequent the icy Antarctic, where cold currents foster lots of food. While we didn't see a lot of these pinnipeds, they did show up from time to time. This Fur Seal is shows the ears, long foreflippers, the ability to walk on all fours that demonstrate its closer relationship to Sea Lions than true seals.

I was fascinated by the iceberg that immediately reminded me of Moby Dick, the great white sperm whale in Herman Melville's whaling novel. (I cut off the other end of the iceberg to emphasize the "wholeness" I saw). While we did see Sperm Whales in the Antarctic waters, none of them were white and none were as huge as Melville's creature.

After a day of rain, snow, and fog when we first entered Antarctic waters, we were greeted by glacial, scenic views as we sailed south along the Antarctic Peninsula. I've included several photos of the beautiful but stark scenery, which is disappearing as global warming cuts back the ice fields.

Not really sure which are better swimmers, dolphins or penguins, but both were wonderful sights to behold. These Long-nosed Common Dolphins porpoised in and out of the surface of the icy waters, accompanying our ship for a while before bounding off on their own errands (presumably in search of food).

Fin Whales are the second larges whale species...after the Blue Whale. We saw several species of whale in the cold, southern waters, including a Blue Whale, Fin Whales, Humpbacked Whales, Sperm Whales, and Minke Whales. The icy waters of the Antarctic produce an abundance of krill and fish that attract the whales and other mammals and birds. While we saw a nice variety of whales during our cruise, a couple of weeks before we got there these waters were filled with over a thousand whales of varies species. That would have been fun to see. This photo shows the large, somewhat unique blow hole of the Fin Whale. A baleen whale, a Fin Whale eats up to 2 tons of food each day, taking large volumes of water into their mouths and then straining out krill and other creatures as they force the water out through their baleen. It was fun to watch for whale spouts and try to identify the whale from the spout, which varied in size and form...some being fairly compact and vertical, while others were broader and larger.

I'll probably post one or two more sets of bird photos, but hopefully you'll enjoy these even if you're not into bird photography. If you want to see penguins...see my previous post of just penguins.

jak

Fur Seal
Fur Seal...
(Download)

Moby Dick???
Moby Dick???...
(Download)

Antarctic Peninsula in the sun
Antarctic Peninsula in the sun...
(Download)


(Download)


(Download)


(Download)

Long-beaked Common Dolphins
Long-beaked Common Dolphins...
(Download)


(Download)

Fin Whale - second largest whale species
Fin Whale - second largest whale species...
(Download)

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Apr 1, 2023 05:10:13   #
Delderby Loc: Derby UK
 
Good pics - thanks for show - enjoyed the views

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Apr 1, 2023 05:52:50   #
Robertl594 Loc: Bloomfield Hills, Michigan and Nantucket
 
Wow! What a magnificent trip, documented by wonderful photos, accompanied by a very well written overview. This is the complete package. Thank you for sharing your creativity. You have accomplished what all of us camera gear schlepping photographers all aspire to. Very well done.

Reply
 
 
Apr 1, 2023 07:06:20   #
Manglesphoto Loc: 70 miles south of St.Louis
 
jak86094 wrote:
My trip to South America and Antarctica in January and February provided a wonderful variety of scenery and wildlife to photograph. While I've posted photos of some of the birds, the main focus of the trip, taken on land and from the deck of a cruise ship (see prior posts in the bird photos subdirectory), we also enjoyed wonderful views of the unique scenery and some non-avian wildlife, which I present here.

Fur Seals and Elephant Seals frequent the icy Antarctic, where cold currents foster lots of food. While we didn't see a lot of these pinnipeds, they did show up from time to time. This Fur Seal is shows the ears, long foreflippers, the ability to walk on all fours that demonstrate its closer relationship to Sea Lions than true seals.

I was fascinated by the iceberg that immediately reminded me of Moby Dick, the great white sperm whale in Herman Melville's whaling novel. (I cut off the other end of the iceberg to emphasize the "wholeness" I saw). While we did see Sperm Whales in the Antarctic waters, none of them were white and none were as huge as Melville's creature.

After a day of rain, snow, and fog when we first entered Antarctic waters, we were greeted by glacial, scenic views as we sailed south along the Antarctic Peninsula. I've included several photos of the beautiful but stark scenery, which is disappearing as global warming cuts back the ice fields.

Not really sure which are better swimmers, dolphins or penguins, but both were wonderful sights to behold. These Long-nosed Common Dolphins porpoised in and out of the surface of the icy waters, accompanying our ship for a while before bounding off on their own errands (presumably in search of food).

Fin Whales are the second larges whale species...after the Blue Whale. We saw several species of whale in the cold, southern waters, including a Blue Whale, Fin Whales, Humpbacked Whales, Sperm Whales, and Minke Whales. The icy waters of the Antarctic produce an abundance of krill and fish that attract the whales and other mammals and birds. While we saw a nice variety of whales during our cruise, a couple of weeks before we got there these waters were filled with over a thousand whales of varies species. That would have been fun to see. This photo shows the large, somewhat unique blow hole of the Fin Whale. A baleen whale, a Fin Whale eats up to 2 tons of food each day, taking large volumes of water into their mouths and then straining out krill and other creatures as they force the water out through their baleen. It was fun to watch for whale spouts and try to identify the whale from the spout, which varied in size and form...some being fairly compact and vertical, while others were broader and larger.

I'll probably post one or two more sets of bird photos, but hopefully you'll enjoy these even if you're not into bird photography. If you want to see penguins...see my previous post of just penguins.

jak
My trip to South America and Antarctica in January... (show quote)


Great set!!!!

Reply
Apr 1, 2023 07:08:45   #
mvetrano2 Loc: Commack, NY
 
nice

Reply
Apr 1, 2023 07:09:16   #
Architect1776 Loc: In my mind
 
jak86094 wrote:
My trip to South America and Antarctica in January and February provided a wonderful variety of scenery and wildlife to photograph. While I've posted photos of some of the birds, the main focus of the trip, taken on land and from the deck of a cruise ship (see prior posts in the bird photos subdirectory), we also enjoyed wonderful views of the unique scenery and some non-avian wildlife, which I present here.

Fur Seals and Elephant Seals frequent the icy Antarctic, where cold currents foster lots of food. While we didn't see a lot of these pinnipeds, they did show up from time to time. This Fur Seal is shows the ears, long foreflippers, the ability to walk on all fours that demonstrate its closer relationship to Sea Lions than true seals.

I was fascinated by the iceberg that immediately reminded me of Moby Dick, the great white sperm whale in Herman Melville's whaling novel. (I cut off the other end of the iceberg to emphasize the "wholeness" I saw). While we did see Sperm Whales in the Antarctic waters, none of them were white and none were as huge as Melville's creature.

After a day of rain, snow, and fog when we first entered Antarctic waters, we were greeted by glacial, scenic views as we sailed south along the Antarctic Peninsula. I've included several photos of the beautiful but stark scenery, which is disappearing as global warming cuts back the ice fields.

Not really sure which are better swimmers, dolphins or penguins, but both were wonderful sights to behold. These Long-nosed Common Dolphins porpoised in and out of the surface of the icy waters, accompanying our ship for a while before bounding off on their own errands (presumably in search of food).

Fin Whales are the second larges whale species...after the Blue Whale. We saw several species of whale in the cold, southern waters, including a Blue Whale, Fin Whales, Humpbacked Whales, Sperm Whales, and Minke Whales. The icy waters of the Antarctic produce an abundance of krill and fish that attract the whales and other mammals and birds. While we saw a nice variety of whales during our cruise, a couple of weeks before we got there these waters were filled with over a thousand whales of varies species. That would have been fun to see. This photo shows the large, somewhat unique blow hole of the Fin Whale. A baleen whale, a Fin Whale eats up to 2 tons of food each day, taking large volumes of water into their mouths and then straining out krill and other creatures as they force the water out through their baleen. It was fun to watch for whale spouts and try to identify the whale from the spout, which varied in size and form...some being fairly compact and vertical, while others were broader and larger.

I'll probably post one or two more sets of bird photos, but hopefully you'll enjoy these even if you're not into bird photography. If you want to see penguins...see my previous post of just penguins.

jak
My trip to South America and Antarctica in January... (show quote)



Reply
Apr 1, 2023 07:56:01   #
tiphareth51 Loc: Somewhere near North Pole, Alaska
 
Great pics!

Reply
 
 
Apr 1, 2023 08:32:20   #
Longshadow Loc: Audubon, PA, United States
 
Nice set!

Reply
Apr 1, 2023 10:21:37   #
jdtonkinson Loc: Red Wing, MN
 
Enjoyable set

Reply
Apr 1, 2023 13:25:01   #
UTMike Loc: South Jordan, UT
 
Outstanding set, jak! It turns out that you are more than just a birder (LOL).

Reply
Apr 1, 2023 17:28:47   #
jak86094
 
Delderby wrote:
Good pics - thanks for show - enjoyed the views


Thanks very much, Delderby. Hope you have a great weekend and a fantastic new week. No April Fools joke there. jak

Reply
 
 
Apr 1, 2023 17:29:44   #
jak86094
 
Robertl594 wrote:
Wow! What a magnificent trip, documented by wonderful photos, accompanied by a very well written overview. This is the complete package. Thank you for sharing your creativity. You have accomplished what all of us camera gear schlepping photographers all aspire to. Very well done.


Robert, that's very kind of you. Glad I could entertain and maybe educate you a bit. Have a great week. jak

Reply
Apr 1, 2023 17:30:28   #
jak86094
 
Manglesphoto wrote:
Great set!!!!


Much appreciated, Manglesphoto. Enjoy your week. jak

Reply
Apr 1, 2023 17:31:07   #
jak86094
 
mvetrano2 wrote:
nice


mvetrano2, I appreciate the kind word and hope you have a great week. jak

Reply
Apr 1, 2023 17:31:48   #
jak86094
 
Architect1776 wrote:


Thanks, Architect 1776. Smile on. jak

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