Antarctic Trips Inspire Tired Travelers
Arranging unusual vacations for bored travelers is a business on the rise in America. Monte Carlo and Mexico no longer appear to seasoned American travelers. People who have cruised before don?t want to go back to the Caribbean. They?d like to go somewhere unusual and odd. Antarctic trips are the most foreign and exotic that can be taken.
It is easier than ever to get there. You’ll fly out of New York for a 24-hour plane ride to the diminutive town of Ushuaia, South America, the southernmost city in the world, and then take a three-day boat ride to Antartica.The US Navy presence in Antarctica makes tourists feel protected. The US, and several other countries, has had active bases on Antarctica since 1957. It is rumored that some of the Navy men are a little disconcerted by the influx of tourism, but nonetheless it is nice to know the Navy is on the job in case your cruise ship founders in the ice or you slide down a crevasse. Detailed affordable antarctica tours resources can be found there.
What can a person do in Antarctica? Penguins, seabirds, seals and whales abound in Antartica, waiting to have their pictures snapped by vacationers looking for the perfect photos.If you’re more into active geologic phenomena you can get your wish in the form of an active volcano. An ice cone twelve-thousand feet up spewing plumes of white smoke into the sky. This stunning volcano beats any other volcano in appearance.
What kind of traveler will pay up to $5,000 for travel fares to Antarctica? Tourists are more often than not doctors or scientists. You?ll also see normal married couples on holiday. In addition, on some trips grandmothers have been on board. A travel agency spokesperson said there is a huge increase in interest in Antarctica of late. He goes on to say that gone are the days when only a few of the most intrepid explorers would make the trip to this breath-taking continent; just about anyone has the opportunity to see it up close today.
The spokesperson for the USNavy is quoted as saying that the only restriction placed on tourists wishing to visit Antarctica is that they can meet certain safety standards, can take care of themselves and that they agree to follow the conservation and preservation agreements that have been put in place for the well-being of the Antarctic continent. Conservationists and scientists do have several concerns, however. Tons of tourists could swarm the continent, littering and harassing the wild life. They could destroy the few historical monuments there. Expert resources on antarctica holiday are located on that site.
One of these is a hut frozen in time — an explorer’s hut at Cape Royds which has been preserved just as the explorer’s party left it in 1907, with neat stacks of canned food lining the walls, garments neatly hanging in closets, and portraits of the reigning British royalty of the time, King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra, still hanging on the walls. Still open on the table lays a copy of a big city European newspaper.
One often sees tourists scrambling up the side of the small promontory to snap photos of the arresting Antartic Mountain Range, an enduring sentinel of the South Pole, 900 miles in the distance. Pioneers and explorers were first met with additional miles of crusty ice when they first reached the pole. Today you can arrive to see a real “South Pole” replete with shiny silver ball on top and orange and blue stripes spiraling up its eight foot length.
Filed under travel and leisure by on Sep 19th, 2010.
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