This morning, National Geographic Explorer guests awoke to calm seas and little wind in Orleans Strait. After breakfast we dropped anchor in Mikkelson Harbor and the fog lifted as we headed to the small island of D’Hainaut (aka Bombay) for our morning landing. At the landing, there was evidence of the area’s past in the form of ribs of an old boat peeking through the snow. Before we headed up the hill to the gentoo colony, a naturalist shared the history of whaling in the area and the floating factories that moored here in the summers of 1910-1917. Whale bones around the water boat helped to tell the story of this interesting, yet grim past. Exploring further from the landing, we observed the amazing dynamics of the gentoo colony.

After lunch the ship headed south to Cierva Cove along the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula. We jumped into Zodiacs and spent the afternoon exploring the incredible glacial ice while the ship headed towards the head of the fjord and the face of Breguet Glacier.

We could not have asked for a more perfect day. Calm conditions in the morning and bluebird skies in the afternoon.