Baffin Bay, 8/10/2018, National Geographic Explorer
Aboard the
National Geographic Explorer
Arctic
After bidding farewell to Greenland yesterday we struck out across the famous Baffin Bay, named for William Baffin, the 17th century explorer who set out in search of the Northwest Passage for England. Motoring at a steady pace, we filled the day with bird-watching and informative lectures about many different aspects of the Arctic. The fog came and went and every once in a while, a huge iceberg would quietly float by.
Pacific Northwest born James Hyde grew up immersed in the Salish Sea, on Vashon Island with Seattle as his backdrop. A passionate traveler from a young age, James explored four continents before finishing his degree at Western Washington University's...
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Our great ship, National Geographic Explorer , meandered her way into the beauty of one of Greenland’s most picturesque fjords, heading to Kangaamiut. Our morning was filled with presentations by Emmett Clarkin giving a presentation on “The Motion of the Ocean,” followed by Karen Copeland discussing “Feeding the North.” In the afternoon, guests were given the opportunity to cruise as close as possible to the calving ice of a very active glacier. The cracks and growls and roars and howls were incredible as ice fell into the ocean, delighting guests and staff alike.
After crossing Baffin Bay
from Nunavut, we arrived in Ilulissat on Disko Bay, on the west coast of
Greenland. Parking proved a little difficult and required the intervention of two Zodiacs to nudge a small iceberg out of the way before the ship could be berthed. Our destination was the
nearby Ilulissat Icefjord, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Boat tours took us among the fjord’s icebergs, past multiple pods of humpback whales, and by a solitary minke whale. We visited the Sermermiut
archaeological site which overlooks the icefjord. The site has played a key
role in establishing the archaeological chronology of Greenland. Occupied for more than 4,000 years, first by the Saqqaq, then the Dorset and, finally, the Thule, it was ultimately abandoned in 1850, after cooling temperatures caused the ice to advance so far that seal hunting became impossible. After exploring the town, we returned to the ship, cruising past icebergs and humpback whales en route to Kangaamiut Kangerluarsuat, our next destination.
Seemingly endless flocks of dovekies (little auks) streamed by us as we crossed through the middle of Baffin Bay. The weather was kind, decidedly mild for this latitude, with sunshine, slack winds, and a broad, gentle swell that rolled beneath the us as we worked steadily southeastward. As we sailed over the continental shelf edge of western Greenland, we spotted a couple of sperm whales and approached them for a closer look.