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Old 08-10-2009, 17:24   #1
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Antarctica

Have any of you ventured to this southern destination? What I'm looking at are the feasible areas to visit. I know the Antarctic Peninsula is the easiest to access, and is hence the area most visited by tourists. But what I'm more interested in is the area around Commonwealth Bay in remote Eastern Antarctica. I can't seem to find a whole lot of information on this area. It's regarded as the windiest place on earth (winds of 150+), which isn't exactly a high selling point when you're on a sailboat. But I've found various vessels who do sail there, so it is doable. What I want to know is, how the conditions there vary throughout the year. When is the best window of time to get in? Are there other, more feasible spots to make landfall?
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Old 08-10-2009, 17:30   #2
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150+ winds? I think just about anyplace on the earth would be a more feasible landfall Just kidding...good luck - this all sounds pretty ambitious. I would talk directly to captains, crew and those few that have actually sailed there and know the area well... And probably no one else.

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Old 08-10-2009, 17:37   #3
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I wish I could say I was headed that way now, but I don't have a vessel capable of that kind of voyage at the moment. It's more of a down-the-road idea. I'm also working on a book (a present for my fiance... about sailing... it kind of jumps ahead a few years from now and shows us getting our dream boat and heading off on our great adventure!). But Antarctica IS truly one place I would love to sail to. To see animals, such as the Emperor Penguin, in their natural antarctic habitat would just be truly an amazing experience. The challenge of it all is just too irresistible.
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Old 08-10-2009, 17:43   #4
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Yeah, I have to say, it looks beautiful in its own inhospitable way. I have a private boat I run for some folks here at home, and all they do is travel (not always on their own hull...they like taking small, private cruise ships all over the world...oh, to have unlimited $$, eh?!?) Anyway, their last cruise was a 92 day trip to the south pacific. But just before that, they took a 3 week trip down to Antarctica. The stories and pictures they brought back were nothing short of incredible.

Taking the trip on yourself, on a small boat? if it's a challenge you're looking for...you're headed the right direction, I'm sure of that! Good luck, though...it does sound like an amazing trip!

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Old 08-10-2009, 18:07   #5
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You could try Morgan's Cloud|Offshore Sailboat Voyaging|Attainable Adventure Cruising , they do a lot of high latitude sailing, but Greenland, Iceland, Norway. While the info may not be specific to Antarctica, the general requirements of outfitting the boat should be the same. Also, I imagine high latitude sailing is a pretty small fraternity, so they probably know people who've done such a trip.
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Old 08-10-2009, 18:10   #6
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I have a pilot chart (#105) for the southern Atlantic, I'll peek and see if it covers the area you are looking at. Utube has some pretty good film footage, try that to get a good idea what you are looking at.
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Old 08-10-2009, 18:18   #7
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Nope, my pilot only goes to latitude 60. They do have an antartic pilot chart (106?), that would be a good place start in your research to see wind/wave conditions 12 months of the year. I'll lite a candle for ya
Erika

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Looking at the pilot chart for that neck of the woods made me think of a song about the Edmond Fitzgerald -"Does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the minutes to hours"
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Old 08-10-2009, 18:19   #8
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No bloody fear!!!
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Old 08-10-2009, 18:46   #9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PilotJesse View Post
Have any of you ventured to this southern destination? What I'm looking at are the feasible areas to visit. I know the Antarctic Peninsula is the easiest to access, and is hence the area most visited by tourists. But what I'm more interested in is the area around Commonwealth Bay in remote Eastern Antarctica. I can't seem to find a whole lot of information on this area. It's regarded as the windiest place on earth (winds of 150+), which isn't exactly a high selling point when you're on a sailboat. But I've found various vessels who do sail there, so it is doable. What I want to know is, how the conditions there vary throughout the year. When is the best window of time to get in? Are there other, more feasible spots to make landfall?
PilotJ, you've seen THIS, yes?
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Old 08-10-2009, 20:11   #10
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I spent some time at Admiralty Bay on King George Island, Antarctic Peninsula. This is a complex embayment providing some shelter (in different areas) from many winds. Colonies totalling over 10,000 penguins on hills to port as you enter ...

Conditions: Even this far north in the "Banana Belt" expect severe gales and storms, particularly spring and autumn. Ice (bergy bits, etc) dissipates a lot mid-summer. (I.e easier to get around, and find reasonably clear anchorages.) Even up here, only 10-20% of the island is ice free in mid-summer.

I have gone through the pack in a 120M steel vessel later in the season south of Perth (to Mirny Stn) and got holed. So think carefullly before heading towards any shore the wind might pile ice up against. Probably had 2-3 winds of force 11-12 in six months (only one on a ship). Watch out for winds coming off ice covered mountains (when closer to land) - just a more extreme form of usual risk areas.

Again not your main focus, but the following link takes you to 300 DPI TIFF charts of the NZ Antarctic claims, if of interest. Click on chart number, then chart, then the TIFF link to download ...
NZ202 Chart Catalogue : Southern Ocean and Ross Dependency
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Old 08-10-2009, 20:57   #11
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Hobart to CommonwealthBay is 1,300nm's where the Ushuaia to Peninsula run is only 600 nms and can be done in a weather window. The areas there are tourist savvy.

The CommonwealthBay research station owned by Australia will not allow mere peasant tourists anywhere near. Can you get a media accreditation to say you are making a doco?

There is a USA base there and a French one close by. They might be more amenable

1,300 miles would be a daunting trip most of which would be outside the range of cargo ships or even Naval rescue vessels...

It would be a wonderful adventure for someone already thoroughly experienced in Antarctic cruising.


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Old 08-10-2009, 21:03   #12
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Buy the book Icebird by Dr David Lewis; essential reading IMO before Antarctic cruising.
Here is one possible supplier: ICE BIRD - TRAVEL
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Old 09-10-2009, 00:46   #13
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Unless you have a metal boat you are better off taking a charter.

Sailing charters in Antarctica, yacht charters in Antarctica

However, I had a beer with Dutch couple in the sailing club in Puerto Williams Chile who took a Beneteau 35 there.
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Old 09-10-2009, 01:22   #14
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There is an American guy called Ron Davis who has been sailing singlehanded in the Southern Ocean visiting the Falklands and South Georgia in a Nicholson 32 but I can't find a website.
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Old 09-10-2009, 02:23   #15
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[QUOTE=PilotJesse;343973Commonwealth Bay in remote Eastern Antarctica. How the conditions there vary throughout the year. When is the best window of time to get in? Are there other, more feasible spots to make landfall?[/QUOTE]

Pretty easy question:

It will be cold (water will be about -1.5C),

and windy (you will see and have to be prepared to deal with 60kts, 150kts would be rare expect in some sort of williwaw)

and not much protection (zero shelter from the wind, hard to find shelter from the ice unless you have a lifting keel and can get into really shallow water).

Sure, it's quite possible, but you would not have much company for quite good reasons.

Unlike the Arctic, where the summers are relatively pleasant and the winters are brutal, the difference between the summer and winter in the Antarctic is less extreme, but still you want to do it during the summer because of the sunlight (no point in going there and having it be dark all the time). I don't know if the pilot charts show this but our experince is that the fall and spring tend to have the most difficult winds because crush zones set up between the highs and lows.
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