The seas were remarkably calm, nothing even mildly close to the Drake in Antarctica, so calm that I immediately took note of it. Most of the time it was like glass, especially down the fjords.
Most of the time it was like this - ( and I’ll include a pic with a polar bear here) -
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Or this - from our sea ice zodiac cruise -
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Only one evening up north along the west coast on our overnight sail in more open waters did it get a little choppy, and I noticed it a bit just because it had been so smooth. By “a little choppy” I mean a few scattered mini-white caps, maybe a foot high at most and probably less. I did take a mild medication before bed, in case it got worse but it never did. I’ve had rougher seas sailing to Mexico out of San Diego.
If you zoom in on the lower quarter of this pic in front of the sea ice, you can see the extent of the scattered white caps, a few but not many - -
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The last zodiac cruise, it was a little bouncy because it was a bit windy that day, but nothing I needed Meds for and no white caps. Didn’t feel it on the ship, but many of us did in the zodiac as it affects our pictures a a bit -
Here’s a shot of some walruses, when the zodiac was calm -
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And a few minutes later, when there was more movement - hard to hold the camera straight & you can see a bit of rolling in the water in front of the walruses-
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We did two excursions each day except one, the day we were at our northern-most point. On that day, our morning was on the ship sailing among the sea ice looking for possible wildlife and the afternoon was a zodiac cruise in the sea ice. Also, since we had headed north, one morning we stopped at a research station settlement where we docked and had about 3 hours to wander the settlement to check out the little museum, some artifacts, and historical markers & buildings. This was a walk-off, so think hiking boots or sneakers rather than your rubber boots & waterproof gear.