Sunday, 30 May 2021, early afternoon – about 30 arctic travellers would now board SV Antigua in the port of Longyearbyen and meet the crew and each other.
Not so today, for reasons that are not a secret. The trip does not happen for the second time in a row, just as our longer voyage in late June/July.
Nobody will ever know what we are now missing. That is the beauty of these trips: every trip is like the first one (well, almost), and even those who have been around for some time in Spitsbergen don’t know what exactly will happen. Any trip will bring experiences that will surprise everybody. You can never know where you will end up, what the weather will be like and where you happen to see the various sorts of wildlife.
With Antigua at the ice edge in Smeerenburgfjord, early June 2019.
It is nothing we could catch up with later. Next year will be a new year, also 2022 will be only 12 months long and it will bring whatever it will bring, regardless of what we may have missed in 2021.
Just for fun, we can do what we always do before any trip and have a look at the ice chart and weather forecast. As you can see, the north coast of Spitsbergen is locked in behind dense drift ice. In Storfjord, on the southeast side of Spitsbergen, there are, in contrast, some wide fields of more open drift ice. It would have been an interesting idea to set course for south and southeast Spitsbergen rather than to the north, where you currently have open water and the suddenly meet with an impenetrable ice edge. Spitsbergen’s southern fjords are beautiful and the ice in the southeast is tempting. It is amazing to be on a sailing ship and have ice floes in all directions around you.
The weather is, of course, another important factor. It would not have been a full week of blue skies and bright sunshine, but a week of normal arctic late spring/early summer weather, with a bit of everything from blue to grey skies and anything that comes with it. The forecast is anything but reliable. If you want to know what it’s like in Smeerenburgfjord or Hornsund on Wednesday, then you have to be in Smeerenburgfjord or Hornsund on Wednesday. As simple as that.
Sadly, we will not find out. About 40 people (including crew and guides) will miss an experience of a lifetime. Plus, there is the economical aspect for the ship owner, the Tallship Company, the tour operator, die Geographische Reisegesellschaft, and those who are working on the ship. I hope they (this includes me) get well through this period and towards better times.
We’ve still got some hope for the trips later this summer. If you want to travel anyway, and certainly if you want to travel on a small ship in a remote area: make sure, if you can, to get that vaccine in time. And then: fingers crossed.