Welcome to our travel blog. We are Tabitha and Nic. In 2011 we 'retired' in our early 40s and set off to travel the world. We spent our first year in South America and have been lucky enough to make two trips to Antarctica.

Our blog is a record of our travels, thoughts and experiences. It is not a guide book, but we do include some tips and information, so we hope that you may find it useful if you are planning to visit somewhere we have been. Or you may just find it interesting as a bit of armchair travel.



Showing posts with label Perito Moreno Glacier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Perito Moreno Glacier. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Highlights

I said in an earlier posting that both while we were travelling, and since we have been back, we frequently have been asked which was our favourite country or place.  I also said that I find it impossible to give a single answer to that question as I don't feel I can reduce such a fabulous year down to just one 'best' thing.

So instead, we have come up with a short-list of our highlights from this first year.  In no particular order, it would have to include:
* laid back and gastronomically fabulous Palermo area of Buenos Aires, not least for its cafes, cakes, steak and wine.
* amazing scenery on the Bolivian Altiplano between the Atacama Desert and the Uyuni Salt Flats;
* satisfaction at managing a proper conversation in Spanish with our home stay host in Raqchi, even if our teacher would have been horrified at all of the mistakes;
* exhilaration of adventure activities, such as ziplining, white water rafting and sand boarding;
* relief that we all made it safely out of the fire at Shangri-la
* unconditional friendliness from Colombians who were so pleased to welcome us as tourists to their country;
* seeing the moai left as they were abandoned in the quarry on Easter Island;
* watching - and more particularly hearing - chunks of ice cleaving off the vast and beautiful Perito Moreno glacier;
* grandeur of the fjords, lakes, mountains and volcanoes of southern Chile;
* experiencing the strange feeling of being in a village in England despite being 8000 miles away in the Falkland Islands and having the chance to talk to the islanders first hand about how they feel about the question of their nationality;
* being pecked by penguins and watching their comical antics in the Falklands and Antarctica;
* simply being in Antarctica, the coldest, windiest, driest, and highest place on earth;
* getting wet at the spectacular Iguassu Falls;
* meeting some fabulous people, some fleetingly, some who have become friends and we will hopefully be seeing again sometime, somewhere in the world!

Over the coming weeks I may add a few posts about some of these highlights and what made each of them so special.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

El Calafate

El Calafate
In the morning we got the early bus to El Calafate.  And just to make me out to be a liar after my posting about the border crossings between Chile and Argentina, we made it through this one in just an hour and five minutes, which was a massive improvement on the previous times.

As we had only just managed to get the last couple of seats on a full bus, we figured we should buy our bus tickets for the next few trips as soon as we arrived, because undoubtedly everyone travelling with us, and those arriving on other buses, would have plans similar to ours.

Perito Moreno Glacier


We pottered around the town for a while before dinner, spotting another Dragoman truck along the way.  The town is largely one main street of restaurants, tour companies and souvenir shops, with residential areas and a few other bits off the edges.  However whilst this could be horribly tacky, it is actually quite nice.  A bit similar to Pucon, but even smaller.


Perito Moreno Glacier

The main purpose of being in El Calafate is to visit the Perito Moreno glacier in the nearby Los Glaciares National Park.  The glacier is one of the biggest advancing glaciers in South America.  The size of the glacier increases by one or two metres every day, but this is in part balanced by the fact that at the lower end, sections cleave off into the lake.  We were visiting this lower end of the glacier where it meets the lake.
Perito Moreno Glacier

We started off by taking a boat out to the face of the glacier.   The boat doesn't go right up to the edge, as the pieces come off without any notice and, as well as potentially landing on you, they can create some fairly big waves when the fall.
Perito Moreno Glacier



But still we were close enough to be able to appreciate the height of the glacier, which reaches well over 50 metres above the water, or the equivalent of a seventeen story building.  Including the section below the water the height is around 170 metres. We could see some people walking on the glacier and they looked like ants on it.
Perito Moreno Glacier


From the water, you could easily see the little caves that are created in the glacier and the different colours that form in it.  The deeper blue colours often appear where water runs through.  You can also see that the surface of the glacier is anything but smooth.  It is a multitude of jagged peaks and crevices, and you could spend hours just looking at the different shapes that the ice forms itself into.
Perito Moreno Glacier



After the boat trip we were dropped off closer to the glacier where you could see across the top of the glacier as it works its way down through the mountains.

Perito Moreno Glacier






The Perito Moreno is around 97 square miles in size.  The front edge is five miles wide.  We followed a series of walkways to get down nearer to the edge of it for some amazing views of the ice.

Ice breaking off the Perito Moreno Glacier
Ice breaking off the Perito Moreno Glacier
We could hear the ice creaking and groaning as it moved, and we were lucky enough to see a number of pieces break off and drop into the lake.  As they fall, they make a huge noise like a thunderclap, and then you see the waves spread out from the area where the piece fell.  Occasionally a piece must break off from below the waterline, as you see a swell of water and then a chunk of ice bobs to the surface.


Perito Moreno Glacier

Perito Moreno Glacier
This is one of those sights that is pretty much indescribable, and the pictures really don't do justice to the real thing, but I hope that they at least give you an idea of the magnificence of this huge glacier.

Perito Moreno Glacier