Chile – Cape Horn

South by Expedition Ship

The Chilean expedition ship Ventus Australis carried us south from Ushuaia to visit the southernmost point of South America, Cape Horn..

A Small Cruiser

An expedition ship carries about 200 passengers and has the shallow draft it takes to get into unimproved destinations. Cabins are not as luxurious as on the big cruisers, but quite comfortable.

No Outside Dining

The public spaces of the Ventus Australis are to large lounges and a dining room. We eat all our meals together.

With our cold-weather layers on, we line up to board the Zodiac boats to land at the Cape.

The Cape Island

After a rough but short transfer in Zodiac boats, we land at the base of a steep cliff. We climb this steel stairway.

Hiking to the Albatross Monument

All that grows here is grass, and in this season of early Spring, nothing but rock moss has come to life.The Cape monument marks the top of a hill where we can look down on land’s end, and the Drake Passage. Although it is the first of our two targets on this morning’s hike, the weather is marginal and we may have to cut the hike short.

A Rising Wind

Here at 56 degrees south latitude, the weather is highly changeable. Though the sea is relatively calm today, we are starting to get wind-driven snow. We need to hurry.

The Drake Passage

Because the prevailing wind pushes wave swells around teh world with no land to stop them, this water can be extremely rough. but the path to Antarctica lies this way.

The Memorial

Two blasts of the ship’s whistle means we have to start back! There is just time for a quick dash to the monument. Depicting an albatross in the negative space between two aluminum sheets, it is a memorial to the innumerable sailors who have died rounding this perilous cape.

Heading Back

The driving snow is a white-out as we stood on the monument, and we immediately have to start our return to the ship.

The Lighthouse

Cape Horn’s modern lighthouse, on a fork from our boardwalk trail, was our second destination this morning, but the rising wind means we won’t be going there today.