Next we cross the Drake Passage (the roughest seas in the world as they flow round and round Antarctica and have nothing to get in their way, miles and miles of sea. The boat doesn't just pitch, or roll, it pitches and rolls and tips to 30 degrees and smacks up and down and grown men fall out of bed and your stomach spins and lurches and you have to cling on to everything including your stomach!
"You can't cross the sea merely by standing and staring at the water." - Rabindranath Tagore
[shame, that]
"You can't cross the sea merely by standing and staring at the water." - Rabindranath Tagore
[shame, that]
Four and half days of sea sickness accompanied the crossing. The most I could manage was to check on the other two, then a teeny tiny bit of food and to lie down straight away before I lost it again. After three days everyone was suffering cabin fever and the effects of the Dramamine patches were comatosing people. Some of the film crew persuaded me to go for a sauna which did us all good, at least if we couldn't exercise we could get the dross moving round our bodies. One of the guests on board had a bet with me that I would feel better than in the initial crossing (if he won I had to give him my Namibian dollars for his children's foreign money collection). We were ever so so thankful when we finally sighted Antarctica proper and as we came closer to land and were more land protected the motion of the ocean slowed a little. I handed over my dollars (more out of a mutual understanding of the love of collecting foreign currency than being 100% sure the second crossing had gone any better!).
"Horse sense is the thing a horse has which keeps it from betting on people." - W. C. Fields
We eventually started to see land and snow and ice and icebergs! Seriously large and very beautiful, here are the first few bergs and bits of land we saw

Is that an iceberg I see in the distance?
"Picture an iceberg. The bulk of its power lies beneath the surface. The part of the iceberg that sunk the Titanic, for example, was not the 10 percent abover the water; it was the 90 percent below the surface that did the damage. For human beings, it is also often true that the 90 percent below the surface- our unconscious beliefs, attitudes and habits sinks our fondest hopes and dreams."- Robert White
[lets hope not!]

This berg was flat on one side and had almost a church tower on the other from the way the sea had worn at it.
Ice dripping down the side
"Horse sense is the thing a horse has which keeps it from betting on people." - W. C. Fields
We eventually started to see land and snow and ice and icebergs! Seriously large and very beautiful, here are the first few bergs and bits of land we saw
Is that an iceberg I see in the distance?
"Picture an iceberg. The bulk of its power lies beneath the surface. The part of the iceberg that sunk the Titanic, for example, was not the 10 percent abover the water; it was the 90 percent below the surface that did the damage. For human beings, it is also often true that the 90 percent below the surface- our unconscious beliefs, attitudes and habits sinks our fondest hopes and dreams."- Robert White
[lets hope not!]
This berg was flat on one side and had almost a church tower on the other from the way the sea had worn at it.
The blue ice is very old - and is a line of minerals or dirt trapped in the berg
This one had loads of arches the sea had cut into it, on top it was flat and went on for hundreds of metres
This one TOWERED above the boat and we sailed round it for quite some time
Ice dripping down the side
Glacial front from the land and slushy bergy bits all around
leopard seal on a berg
Here are some land shots - crazy white going on forever
You can see why some cultures have an excessive number of words for snow!
"The Eskimos had fifty-two names for snow because it was important to them: there ought to be as many for love." - Margaret Atwood
pink lights on the snow as sunset starts
Sometimes you are in the shower or maybe it was the sauna and just don't have time to get dressed before you have to go and take a photo - plunged into minus so and so in my dressing gown all for that one perfect pic!
"Don't go out with wet hair you'll catch your death" - Grandma Lomax
Enjoying the view off the back of the boat
Time for a smoke - again! Despite having brought cigarettes Oma preferred the little metal pipe. Only a couple of puffs were needed on this one, then you pop a piece of paper back in the end, roll it in your hands to cool it and pop it back in your pocket - whilst I was praying she didn't set herself and the boat on fire!
Before we settled down for a few days in the 'iceberg graveyard' (where it literally looks like someone parked hundreds of bergs) we went through the Lamaire Channel. The mountains on either side of the channel reach up to 3000 metres, not that we could see this in eerie fog. we woke up at 530am to see the sights of this place - sunrise here was spectacular. The photos do not come close.
Picture the scene: you have just woken up, the sea is calm (for the first time in DAYS), you go outside, surrounded by craggy, inhospitable misty mountains, its cold and eerie and you are suddenly aware you are miles from anyone else and anywhere else. Sublime. You see the below images....
"If Antarctica were music it would be Mozart. Art, and it would be Michelangelo. Literature, and it would be Shakespeare. And yet it is something even greater; the only place on earth that is still as it should be. May we never tame it." - Andrew Denton
"To see the world in a grain of sand, and to see heaven in a wild flower, hold infinity in the palm of your hands, and eternity in an hour." - William Blake
Finally at anchor and still sea, the next part of the filming began. We rested a day when the light was not so good, which gave one of the other models a chance to do some filming for her dance project and us all to recover from rough seas.
Then to the ice arch...
See you in Part III
See you in Part III
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