King Penguins, St Andrews Bay |
From everything I’d heard there was
a huge amount to do and see on South Georgia and a few days was never going to
do it justice, particularly give the unreliability of the weather. It was clear to me that I wanted to find a trip that offered
more than just a few days – eventually step forward Steppes Travel, who I met
at Wild Photos 2010 in London, who were able to find me a trip that focussed on
South Georgia and, better yet, did so starting from Stanley in the Falklands
which both reduced the sea time and gave me the perfect excuse to spend time in
the Falklands before-hand.
Plancius, Stanley Harbour, Falkland Islands |
King Haakon Bay under clouds |
Orca in South Georgia |
Over the next seven days we had 12
successful off-ship excursions – and probably lost four other excursions to the
weather. These excursions were all on
the north side of the island – this is the more sheltered side of the islands
and also where almost all the wildlife is to be found. Sheltered is a relative term in this part of
the world – some of the bays are wide open and the winds can whip across very
fast indeed. The ‘nightmare scenario’
for all the expedition boats is putting 100 people ashore in calm conditions
and then being caught out by rapidly changing weather. On a couple of occasions we needed curtail
landings to ensure that we didn’t get caught, and on one other occasion the
expedition staff needed to resort to pulling the zodiacs onto the beach stern
first to ensure that they were going to be stable enough to allow passengers to
get back on. Over the course of the week
every one got to fully appreciate the term ‘wet-landing’.
I’m going to pick out four of the sites we visited during the trip –
three involved using zodiacs to get ashore, the fourth (Drygalski Fjord) was a
ship-based cruise along one of the deep fjords at the southern tip of the
island. There will be more about all the
locations I visited on South Georgia in the Place Notes site that I’m currently
developing.
Our first big penguin colony
landing was at Salisbury Plain and it introduced us to lots of aspects of being
ashore in South Georgia. We had a wet
landing, aggressive fur seals, wild changing weather and lots of king
penguins. Salisbury Plain (named because
of supposed similarity to central Wiltshire – although I couldn’t see it
myself) is a big wide sweeping beach with a hill behind it and fresh water
running down into the bay. This is ideal
terrain for seal and penguin colonies – but very exposed to the elements. When
we landed the weather was still and calm, by the time we’d been on the ground
for two hours the ship was disappearing in low cloud and the dry sunny weather
had degenerated into horizontal rain. We
did get to learn about the various techniques for evading fur seal (it involves
a lot of growling back), and we also got to know the king penguins and their
chicks. December is a really good time
to see lots of king penguins – at this time of year (early summer) all the
penguins are on the beaches. Last year’s
chicks are going through their final moults, the mature adults are either
moulting or are getting into their courtship routines or are sitting on
eggs. The one things the Kings aren’t
doing, is spending a lot of time out at sea – so the beaches and colonies are
full to bursting.
The landing at St Andrews Bay was,
for me, the highlight of the time on South Georgia. We needed two attempts to get ashore here –
the first attempt was scuppered by high winds.
No one was saying this at the time, but the aborted landing was a good
thing. If we had got ashore on that day
when the visibility was poor we wouldn’t have seen the colony in its real
glory. As with the Salisbury Plain landing,
we went ashore quite a long way from the main colony site, in this case at the
north end of the beach.
We were then led inland up towards an outlook point which looked down on the colony – stepping up onto the outlook point and seeing upwards of 400,000 penguins in front of me is something that I’m not going to forget anytime soon. One of the reasons for coming all the way to South Georgia was to see huge single species colonies like this. I’ve seen David Attenborough talking about these sites on numerous television programmes over the years, I knew I was going to be seeing a lot of penguins, but somehow really seeing it was still a shock to the system.
We were then led inland up towards an outlook point which looked down on the colony – stepping up onto the outlook point and seeing upwards of 400,000 penguins in front of me is something that I’m not going to forget anytime soon. One of the reasons for coming all the way to South Georgia was to see huge single species colonies like this. I’ve seen David Attenborough talking about these sites on numerous television programmes over the years, I knew I was going to be seeing a lot of penguins, but somehow really seeing it was still a shock to the system.
The Drygalski Fjord is the biggest
inlet at the south tip of South Georgia – and it’s both big enough and deep
enough to allow a reasonable sized ship to cruise in, and to go right up to the
end face of the Risting glacier at the end of the fjord. So that’s what we did.
Our final landing in South Georgia
was at Grytviken and is the one place where it’s possible to wander round an
old whaling station – and to send postcards and buy souvenirs. There were at one time seven active whaling
stations dotted along the north coast of South Georgia. Some of those have been completely cleared
away, others (like Stromness and Prince Olav Harbour) haven’t been cleared but
have been declared out of bounds (flying debris and asbestos being the main
risks). Grytviken has been made safe, so
it is possible to wander round looking at the remaining buildings and some of the old, abandoned whaling boats – the most
shocking aspect is the sheer scale of the machinery.
It’s difficult, from the perspective of the 21st Century, not to see this as anything other a monstrously barbaric industry, and to be thankful that the industry became uneconomic before the whale populations had been completely wiped out. It seemed that there was something symbolic about our first real wildlife sighting of the trip being orca, and the final landing was at a disused whaling station. The reminder that a species can recover from incredibly intensive hunting comes from the Antarctic fur seals that now occupy every beach in South Georgia. These animals were really heavily targeted in the early 20th Century for their amazing soft thick pelts. I found how soft they were by stroking a sample in the museum in Grytviken, I certainly wasn’t about to try and stroke a seal on the beach. I don’t know if these animals were any more tolerant of man before we tried to make them extinct, however these days fur seals are extremely aggressive and will have no hesitation in coming after a Goretex-clad tourist. Their bite probable wouldn’t actually kill you, but I gather that their dental hygiene leaves something to be desired and disinfecting the wound probably wouldn’t be a pleasant process. Grytviken and its museum are fascinating places – and my only regret is that we didn’t get more time to both wander the old station and to do the museum justice.
It’s difficult, from the perspective of the 21st Century, not to see this as anything other a monstrously barbaric industry, and to be thankful that the industry became uneconomic before the whale populations had been completely wiped out. It seemed that there was something symbolic about our first real wildlife sighting of the trip being orca, and the final landing was at a disused whaling station. The reminder that a species can recover from incredibly intensive hunting comes from the Antarctic fur seals that now occupy every beach in South Georgia. These animals were really heavily targeted in the early 20th Century for their amazing soft thick pelts. I found how soft they were by stroking a sample in the museum in Grytviken, I certainly wasn’t about to try and stroke a seal on the beach. I don’t know if these animals were any more tolerant of man before we tried to make them extinct, however these days fur seals are extremely aggressive and will have no hesitation in coming after a Goretex-clad tourist. Their bite probable wouldn’t actually kill you, but I gather that their dental hygiene leaves something to be desired and disinfecting the wound probably wouldn’t be a pleasant process. Grytviken and its museum are fascinating places – and my only regret is that we didn’t get more time to both wander the old station and to do the museum justice.
One of the things I learnt more
about – and saw the impact of – was global warming. Like everywhere else South Georgia is getting
warmer. The most visible impact of this
is that almost all the glaciers are receding, which has the potential to completely
change the environment on South Georgia.
Until very recently almost all the glaciers did reach all the way to the
sea, now quite lot of them stop short of the coast. Even just comparing guide book images to
what’s visible on the ground highlights how rapidly this change is happen. This change doesn’t make a huge direct difference
to a lot of the species on the island in the short term, but it does to the
rats! South Georgia has had rats since
people first got there (and got ship-wrecked there) – and where there are rats
they have a really major impact on the ground nesting birds, and given the lack
of trees, almost all the birds are ground nesting! At the moment the areas that the rats have
been able to get to are limited by the glaciers, but if (or when) the glaciers
recede from the coast the rats will have the run of the island and would almost
certainly have a catastrophic impact on the bird populations. At the moment there is a pilot rat eradication programme underway on South Georgia with the aim of completely
clearing the rat population while it’s still constrained to limited areas.
Shackleton survived the Shackleton Challenge, but he died on his next visit to South Georgia in 1922. |
I started by talking about having
had this trip in mind for a long time – did it live up to my hopes and
expectations? The answer is a pretty
emphatic yes. I think we were pretty
lucky with the weather – we got 12 good excursions in our week around South
Georgia, and we also got to see how bleak it can be even in the southern
summer. I’m really pleased with some of
the pictures I took, although I’m still working through some of them, and I’m
really delighted to have seen the big colonies that South Georgia has to
offer. The sight of so many animals on
the beaches is one that is very difficult to get out of my head. Would I have wanted more time on South
Georgia, again yes. If anyone is
planning a three week trip to South Georgia coming out of Stanley, sign me up.
There are two quotes floating
around in the back of my head that relate to the trip. One of the Frozen Planet team assured me that
I’d really like South Georgia, “It’s like the Peninsula with the volume turned
up”. He was right. The other quote was from of the expedition staff. “If I had two weeks to live, I’d spend one
of them on South Georgia, and the other one getting there”. I think he was probably right too.
UPDATED 18/01/2012: More pictures are now online on Picasa and on Flickr
UPDATED 18/01/2012: More pictures are now online on Picasa and on Flickr