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It doesn’t sound special unless
the “rocks” are 87,000 years old. Linda and I took a cruise
on the Skorpios II to see glaciers “up close and personal”.
While we’ve seen glaciers from the deck of a Holland American Cruise
Line, it’s not quite the same when a small ship (95 passengers) can
actually put you at the face of the glacier. I stood there
and looked up. And up. And up. And placed
my hand on the face of the glacier and tried to imagine movement in
such a gigantic mountain of ice. A surprise was promised, and a
surprise was delivered. One of our guides leaned over the
side of the ship and snagged a small iceberg. It was then
chopped up, put into glasses, had whiskey poured over it, and served to
all of us. Now I’m not much of a whiskey drinker (don’t like
the taste) but I drained my glass. After all, how many more
times in my life will I have the opportunity to order a drink and not
ask for the age of the Scotch but, instead, ask for the age of the
rocks. All was going quite well until someone mentioned the
possibility of a cave man urinating in the stream before the glacier
formed. (I thought the whiskey looked a little
strange. Just kidding).
What? You thought I
made a mistake in the title? Nope. Travel down into
the southern portion of the Baja Peninsula during the “right months”
(Early December to early March) and you’ll see what I mean.
The various bays, including Magdalena Bay, are to the west of Baja, and
this is where we spent a week camped out in tents on the beach (Oh My
back!) Each morning we woke up to a bay filled with dozens of spouts
from mother grey whales and their offspring. I can contrast
that to “whale watching (?)” off Cape Cod, where the closest we got to
a whale was the captain saying: “See that oily patch on the
ocean? That means that a whale was just recently here” Oh, Please!