Spitsbergen Cruise
MS Nordstjernen, Page 6
Continued from page 5

ABOVE: PolarCirkel boats in the Bockfjord,
with lifejackets piled on the icy beach. INSET BELOW: Watching out for polar
bears, and a mural in the Russian mining settlement of Barentsburg.
Shore
landings and port calls
During a three- or four-night cruise, the MS Nordstjernen
typically makes three wilderness shore landings and visits two ports.
Shore landings are made in PolarCirkel boats. A
PolarCirkel boat is a hybrid that offers the best features of a a rigid boat and
a Zodiac inflatable. The air-filled tubes beneath the boat provide a smooth ride
and allow easy beach landings, while the rigid hull's molded-in benches and
fixed handrails offer comfort and security for up to seven passengers.
On our Nordstjernen cruise, passengers were divided into
groups for shore landings (I was in the "Polar Bears"). When it was time to go
ashore, we donned lifejackets on the luggage deck, then went to the gangway (a
stairway fixed to the side of the ship) and walked down one at a time. Entering
the boat was easier than I'd expected: I could just step from the gangway onto a
molded platform at the bow of the PolarCirkel boat, grab the handrails on each
side of the platform, and step down into the boat. The first landing was a bit
tricky because the PolarCirkel boat was pitching up and down in the choppy sea,
but on the other landings, stepping into the PolarCirkel boat felt safer than
stepping into a bathtub.
When we reached the shore, we just stepped out of the boat onto
a plastic crate and hopped down onto the rocks or sand.
During our time ashore, we were required to stay near the
guides, who were armed in case of attack by polar bears. (We didn't see any
bears at close quarters, but on the previous voyage, the landing had to be
aborted when a group of polar bears came toward the landing area. The landing
was resumed after the bears had disappeared from view.)
Port
calls are made in two settlements: The Russian mining settlement of
Barentsburg, a few hours from our departure port of Longyearbyen by ship,
and the international scientific-research community of Ny ålesund, a former coal-mining village that
Roald Amundsen used as the departure points for his 1925 and 1926 expeditions by
seaplane and airship to the North Pole.
Next page:
Web links
|