Morning: we arrive at Cape Horn. The ocean is calm, where so many ships have been tossed and wrecked. It appears that we will be able to make a landing and climb to the Cape Horn lighthouse. |
Longitude and latitude of Cape Horn. |
A Zodiac carries crew members to shore to make certain that landing will be ok. |
It's a wet landing, with waves, but several crew members hold each boat and help us to the dock at the end of the stairs. |
And we climb the stairway on the way to the lighthouse and the monuments to sailors who have died in these waters. |
The monument: the image of an albatross. More stairs to climb! |
An albatross. |
Cape Horn lighthouse. Inside it's warmer. A Chilean naval officer and his family live here and care for the premises. |
A shelf of books inside the lighthouse. Visitors are rare. |
Another monument, with the albatross monument in the background. |
Once we return -- having climbed down the stairs and having ridden back on the Zodiac -- we watch the lighthouse disappear into the distance. |
The southern-most point of Cape Horn is a little beyond the lighthouse. The waters are sufficiently calm that the captain takes the boat for a tour here. |
The nautical map of the area, which I photographed on the bridge. |
2 comments:
It looks like quite a memorable trip! Thanks for sharing!
I'm liking that green lots better than the snow and ice. What a landing!
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