Sleep came easy the night before and by 0630 we were coming
into moor at the coal quay in Longyearbyen.
Brunnich’s and Black Guillemots paddled around and the Eider were
checked for Kings but with no joy.
It was snowing quite hard as the Ortelius moored up
All too soon we were leaving the Ortelius for the last time
and bidding farewell to the crew and expedition team who had looked after us so
well.It seemed odd to be back on dry
land for longer than a few hours as we were taken back into the town to await
our coach back to the airport just a short 90 minutes later.
The ultimate nod to Longyearbyen's mining history...
Lex managed to capture some of our team and almost all of the Ortelius expedition team as we left. We were waving from our coach!
But there was one last treat in store.As we got off the coach we were told to look
off shore where a large pod of milky white Belugas were following the coast up
into the fjord.I reckoned about 40 or
so but someone had been doing a proper official count and had got to 52. Jim
and Jacqui had missed the ones the previous day so this was more than ample
recompense.
Belugas - so much better than it looks! - Jim Willett
Belugas - Jim Willett
Our journey home from here via a night in Oslo went via
Tromso about which we shall not talk but by mid-morning the following day we
were back at Heathrow and on the final leg home.
Trips are often about managing expectations – nothing is
guaranteed in nature but this one exceeded any notional hopes and aspirations
for the adventure from the outset.We
had travelled so far north as to be the most northerly humans on the planet,
seen a ridiculous 12 Hollandaise Polar Bears, heard the breath of Blue Whales, found
six different Pinnipeds from dinky Ringed Seals to whopping great blubbery
Walruses, watched Arctic Foxes bounding through the snow, heard the chittering
of swarms of cliff top Little Auks, seen the sunlight refracting through
arching fogbows, had ghostly Ivory Gulls drift overhead, listened to glaciers
shifting and calving baby icebergs, watched Black Guillemots in a dizzy
circular Maypole dance and ended with a herd of placid mini Moby Dicks.
If you have not been before, go before it is too late. You
will not be disappointed.
We spent the night heading south past the west side of Prins
Karl Forland before re-entering the sound from the south and heading north back
up to Poolepynten where we hoped to land to see Atlantic Walruses up on the
beach.
'There be Walruses capt'n'
Just before all meeting up a shout went up for Beluga on the
port side and some of us got there in time to watch at least three ebony white
shapes slowly rise and fall with a huge glacier behind.They were not close but it was still
memorable and slightly different to watching one in the Thames off Gravesend!
Beluga - it is that little white hump bottom centre!
It was time to board the zodiacs and I was trying to re-find
the Belugas when a big Whale blew and a big back arched before the tell tale
white underside of the tale flukes were seen as it dived confirming that we had
now also seen a Humpback!It came up
three more times before we had to make our way down the gangway.
Unlike other landing parties, we could not all go at once
and our group was amongst the first 40 to head to shore in the zodiacs. After a
careful approach we found ourselves within a very respectful distance of these
vast blubbery Pinnipeds.Seven were on
the beach and another was bogging at us with bloodshot eyes from the surf.They had not been up on the beach for too
long and were still jostling for position and clashing with much grunting and
bellowing.
We had been warned about the smell but oddly, although downwind from them we could only smell it at one spot.I was like a very ripe, sweaty bowl of seaweedy fish had been left out in the sun for a week.
They were also not just pinky blubbery things as I imagined but had a short pelt of warm tan and ginger.Those stiff, bristly facial whiskers of a Walrus are called mystacial vibrissae – I had to look it up as I had forgotten but what a great name.Their lips are so mobile that the bristles can all point up or down or out to the side.I have no idea why they all had bloodshot eyes though!
Two of the seven decided to undulate like giant grubs at speed down to the surf line where they were joined by the third one that had been lingering offshore.
Atlantic Walrus
Our time was up as the next group had arrived but they had
all settled down and I do not think that the others had any of the interaction
that we did.The pool just inland of the
beach held Ringed Plover, Purple Sandpipers, two immaculate Turnstones and a
summer plumaged female Grey Phalarope.She may not have been that close but I could see the brick red plumage,
white face and dark cap as she fed just out of the water along the edge.
Red-throated Divers flew out to sea and Bonxies, Arctic Skuas, Glaucous Gulls, Kittiwakes and Arctic Terns milled around with the latter nesting amongst the Alaskan driftwood that was stranded there.Most was sawn and had simply escaped on its river route to be shipped and drifted until it found a suitable beach.There was a little rubbish, which we collected, and I found a few interesting little bits to collect including a roll of Birch bark that had survived intact.As we headed back to the boats an inquisitive Harbour Seal came to say hello.
Arctic Terns
Arctic Terns
Tufted Saxifrage
Dog Whelk egg case or similar
Spitzbergen Reindeer
Birch bark - a long way from home
The past
Refuge and navigational beacon
Random Reindeer limbs...
An almost black Black Guillemot
Metal bouncer related to old bottom dredging
George and I
Blubber & I
Next group
Onwards and south again before our final landing of the
voyage.It had begun to snow quite hard
and with poor land visibility it was looking unlikely as no one would see a
Polar Bear creeping up but just in time it lifted and we were able to beach
land below the imposing height of the Alkhornet. This towering Toblerone of
rock is the edge of the huge glacial cirque that that loops beyond it in an ark
and is hope to tens of thousands of pairs of Kittiwakes and Brunnich’s
Guillemots.
Our ever changing view of the Alkhornet fading in and out of view with the only constant being the sound of the birds.
The snow created a very different landscape to the one we
had been expecting and if anything made it all the more special.Arctic flowers poked through the recent
dusting and Reindeer scuffed through it to get to the greenery below while the
reflected light in the white of the seabirds added another magical element.
Pygmy Buttercup - Ranunculus pygmaeus
Reindeer
Reindeer - I love the black eye masks - perhaps they should be called Pandeer?
Brunnich's Guillemots
Brunnich's Guillemots
The Kittiwake ledges
Arctic Skuas were on patrol and Pink-feet and Barnacle Geese were dotted about in pairs and were obviously nesting here while plump, fluffed up Snow Buntings were still displaying from the boulders.
Arctic Skuas in the snow
Snow Bunting
Pink-feet still arriving. Amazing to think I may have last seen these in North Norfolk
Pink-feet
Pink-feet and Barnacle Geese
Pink-foot on guard duty
Finding Arctic Foxes was our other goal here
and we got lucky and got to watch an adult on a ridge carrying off a recovered
egg while two bundles of fluff cubs played tumble in the snow and chewed on the
wing of a goose. Some of my crew were with the photography group and enjoyed
even closer views of four cubs at another den nearby!It was quite literally the perfect end to our
final day.We could not have asked for
more.
Arctic Fox cubs
Arctic Fox cubs - Jim Willett
Arctic Fox cubs
Arctic Fox cubs - the other family - Alexis Bodycomb
final departure
Goodbye Alkhornet
A final evening with the expedition team was well
appreciated and many a glass was raised in thanks.