Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Queen Maud Land


I hesitated making this the destination today, since I am not a snow and cold fan and also because I know for a fact that at least one reader has snow "for reals," but after the day I've had at work, going sompelace silent has great appeal. Perhaps next "trip" I'll try to do something equatorial, but today, the ice is like snow: a sound baffle that insulates my poor eardrums against one more assault by the telephone's insistent and seemingly incessant shrieking for my attention.








Remote.
Austere.
Uninhabited.
Incredible.









Queen Maud Land's borders are not as well-defined as one might expect in the 21st century. Apparently Norway, who claims it as a dependent territory, has never really bothered to delineate the northern and southern borders: just the eastern and western ones. In fact, as recenty as 2008, the Prime Minister of Norway was naming mountains, so you've got to figure on there being some space in which to stretch out and be alone in this vast area; maybe even a spot that is still unnamed.




I was reading a book recently (kind of a cheesy one, but okay for brain candy I guess), that had something in it about how it has been proposed (by whom I'm sure I don't know) that Antarctica be designated as a repository for the world's print library because of its being an ice desert. Apparently conditions are ideal for preserving paper there. I knew you could put a book (or other object, but let's face it: this is me, the unrepentant bibliophile) in the freezer to inhibit mildew, but I have to admit I never drew a line of logical progression between that and shipping a box of books to Antarctica for shelving. Maybe we could park the books in Queen Maud's back yard there where her border is a little fuzzy relative to the pole. Let's call that Library Land!

Friday, October 23, 2009

Rapa Nui

Lorana!

Rapa Nui is also known as Easter Island and Isla de Pascua. It is actually a territory of Chile. I didn't know that. It is 2,000 miles from its closest neighbors, Chile and Tahiti. "Lorana" is the traditional greeting in the Polynesian language Rapa Nui, though Chilean Spanish is the official language.

The Moai are amazing.



Why do these stone guardians circle the island?


What are they watching for?

What are they waiting for?

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Vacations

Vacations are necessary.


They are not necessarily affordable.


It is important to regroup,
re-affirm,and re-energize.

Living in a world where there is an information superhighway makes armchair vacations easier and more exciting than ever. Moreover, thanks to Hubble's imagery, the sky is no longer the limit.
There is so much to explore. I want to see it all.

This is how I plan to do it.
One imaginary trip at a time.