Sissimiut
Another foggy morning!
Here's a sample of our daily schedule, which sometimes seems....less than relaxing. Having the ship announcements start at 0700 is not Sheila's preferred mode of waking up.
To our surprise, we got off the ship via a stairway onto an actual dock for the first time since we left Iceland. You can see a wee bit of it here, near where the person is.
Can you find the Resolution?
The only trail markers were occasional cairns
And it was more rugged than we had bargained for.
This was definitely not an easy hike!
But it WAS pretty!
Some fuzzy plants--bistort??
There are several low mounds indicating single-family turf houses from the Dorset culture.
This is a much larger, multi-family Thule turf house.
It was still in use into the 1950s!
Our local guide, trying to figure out which direction she needs to be speaking for everyone to hear!
An old friend from Colorado--Field mouse-ear Chickweed
This is apparently the perfect place to haul a whale up on land, which is why the turf houses are here.
It's pretty, but the hiking was quite difficult, so we opted to wait here while the rest went on to the gravesite.
Retired fishing boats
More art carved into rock walls
A White-tailed Sea Eagle above, and a seal below
A more modern turf house on the left
The interior of the turf house, intended for 2 families
Retired fishing boat
Fishing nets and floats
Lars spent the time on photographing the port from Deck 8:
Here you see how the water gets to houses.
The large pipes are double-insulated, and apparently rarely leak.
If they do, they are easy to reach and repair!
I visited a musk ox farm in Alaska, and like you, was really tempted by the skeins of heroically warm wool fiber, but the $$ made me pause!
ReplyDeleteI never even got to see a price! There were a very few finished items in a couple of shops (a hat, wrist warmers, a scarf, a shawl), but not a single skein of actual yarn. The ONLY yarn I found was made in Denmark--there wasn't even any Greenland sheep yarn.
Delete