Today was another day when the skies opened and graced us with a bluebird day, and we wondered again how we could be so lucky. It makes you want to ask the weather reporter, “How can you be so confident, and so wrong?” For the second day in a row, the prediction was for pea soup fog, but again the reality was anything but.
- Daily Expedition Reports
- 23 Jun 2023
Southern Spitzbergen, Arctic Svalbard, 6/23/2023, National Geographic Resolution
- Aboard the National Geographic Resolution
- Arctic
Jeff Litton, Naturalist/Certified Photo Instructor
Jeff Litton is a dedicated advocate for our planet, igniting a passion within people to cherish our Earth. His circuitous journey involves leading individuals into the untamed wilderness, where he unveils the hidden splendor of the natural world. Jef...
Read MoreShare Report
Svalbard, Iceland & Greenland's East Coast
VIEW ITINERARYSign Up for Daily Expedition Reports
Fields with an asterisk (*) are required.
Enter travel details to receive reports from a single expedition
Send Daily Expedition Reports to friends and family
*By clicking the submit button, I authorize Lindblad Expeditions to email me; however, I am able to unsubscribe at any time. For more details, see our Privacy Policy.
Related Reports
7/1/2023
Read
National Geographic Resolution
Ísafjörður, Iceland
We woke up to stunning, misty views of Isafjordur, Iceland. Isafjordur is nestled in the Westfjords of the country’s northwest corner, and it is home to a mere 2,800 citizens. Incredibly colourful buildings and art cover the waterfront city, and a steep, green tundra and steep mountain slopes are in the background, offering guests a true “postcard moment.” Guests enjoyed a long hike to a hidden waterfall, a tour of the city’s flora and fauna, and finally, a tasting tour. After a particularly wonderful morning, we slowly cruised through the fjords on our way to Vigur. Almost everyone was out on deck to take in the dreamy landscapes. We spotted some wild horses on Aedey, plenty of puffins, and around 15-18 humpback whales! After learning about Happywhale and the art of citizen science, every person with a camera worked hard to get some photographs of the flukes. The underside of a humpback tail is completely unique, similar to a human fingerprint. As photos were taken, they were brought to Eva, our on-board marine mammologist. She was able to “Live ID” the whales! We positively identified nine flukes of whales previously spotted in Iceland. We uploaded the flukes to Happywhale’s website and shared them on the Facebook page, “Whale Sightings in Iceland.” The page collects cetacean sightings throughout Iceland. After our afternoon tea, we arrived on Vigur, a private island covered by grasses and home to countless birds, including eiders, puffins, and arctic terns. During nesting season, female eiders use their down feathers for nesting material. After eiders leave their nests, locals collect the down to produce filling for apparel. With our “tern poles” held firmly above our heads, 61 guests braved walking across the island, a known breeding site for arctic terns. We enjoyed Hjonabandssaela (“happy marriage cake”) made with fresh, locally grown rhubarb while we mailed postcards from the smallest post office in Europe! Our first day in Iceland was wrapped up with a barbecue buffet, complete with a donut wall!
6/30/2023
Read
National Geographic Resolution
Crossing the Denmark Strait from Greenland to Iceland
We are in a water world: freshwater rain, saltwater ocean, ice in the form of icebergs, sea ice, multiyear ice, and water particles in the fog and clouds that hide the horizon. As Captain Martin tells us, “You really learn how to drive a ship in ice because that’s where it’s really tricky.” The Bridge Team does an exceptional job. The sea covers 71% of the Earth, containing 97% of all water on our planet. Life originally evolved out of the sea. As Rachel Carson explains in The Sea Around Us , “When they went ashore the animals that took up a land life carried with them a part of the sea in their bodies, a heritage which they passed on to their children and which even today links each land animal with its origin in the ancient sea. Fish, amphibian, and reptile, warm-blooded bird and mammal — each of us carries in our veins a salty stream in which the elements sodium, potassium, and calcium are combined in almost the same proportions as in seawater. This is our inheritance from the day, untold millions of years ago, when a remote ancestor, having progressed from the one-celled to the many-celled stage, first developed a circulatory system in which the fluid was merely the water of the sea.” Following last night’s crew talent show (and a gloriously splendid iceberg lit by sunshine just off the starboard side for a finale), everyone was given a chance to sleep in and enjoy a midmorning brunch. What better way to spend a rainy, stormy afternoon than by enjoying a series of provocative and exciting presentations, beginning at 1200 with Macduff’s, “The Very Question of Nature—A Cultural Context.” A Q & A was fielded by staff afterwards. At 1400, Brett gave a presentation of expedition diving, bringing along his underwater camera housing and flashes and a dry suit. We learned that Brett’s great-great grandfather was the sports fisherman and writer Zane Grey. Riders of the Purple Sage was his most popular book. At 1600, the photo team, Jeff and Macduff, answered questions about cameras and photography, followed by Kerstin’s presentation on “Male or Female: The Art of Sexing Polar Bears.” This was followed by recap and a splendid evening meal. After dinner, Jeff and Macduff conducted their well-attended, second photo critique session of this expedition voyage. Even before they finished at 2200 as we neared Ísafjördur, we sighted the windswept, mountainous coastline of Iceland from the lounge.