Summer in Antarctica lasts 6 months, from October to March. During the central 4 months, 24 hours of complete daylight allow a summer temperature maximum around 2°C.
What about flora? Everybody knows about antarctic fauna - seals, penguins, birds - but are there some flowers ? Like the beautiful arctic flowers ?

Well, life is really hard for plants there. There are several mosses, fungi and lichens , but just two kinds of native flowering plants manage to grow:
- a fine-leaved, perennial grass, the Antarctic hair grass (Deschampsia antarctica), one of only two flowering plant species living below latitudes of 60 degrees:


- and Antarctic pearlwort (Colobanthus quitensis), that has white flowers and grows about 5 cm tall, with a cushion-like growth habit that gives it a moss-like appearance:



They are present mainly in the 1% of the region that is ice and snow free, along the warmer parts of the Antarctica Peninsula and in the South Orkney Islands and the South Shetland Islands.
Small clusters of the Antarctic hair grass can be seen among rocks and in moss-filled cracks in the bedrock.
Moss - on the better drained, stony slopes of the Antarctic Peninsula, mosses build up to a deep peat - as much as six and one half feet deep and 5000 years old !
Lichens - more than 350 species. They have proliferated in Antarctica because there is little competition from mosses or flowering plants.
Ultima Thule! Utmost Isle! Here in thy harbors for a while We lower our sails; a while we rest From the unending, endless quest
Friday, 27 January 2012
Antarctic summer colours
Monday, 16 January 2012
Piteraq in Kuummiut - Greenland at its best and worst
From Carl Skou's Kuummiut blog, I got this amazingly beautiful video:
(listen to the atmospheric music)
A violent Piteraq storm strikes Kuummiut village in March 2011. The Piteraq is a katabatic wind. Intensely cold heavy air drains off the Greenland ice cap. The cold descending air is channelled through the valleys and can blow at 40-80 metres per second. The Piteraq is characterised by deep blue skies, intense sunlight, clear dry air and much blowing snow which can obscure visibility. Most people stay indoors during a Piteraq. This Piteraq followed a period of overcast weather and heavy snowfall. The Piteraq strips the snow from the land and breaks up the fjord pack ice.
Tuesday, 20 December 2011
Saksun, the spirit of the Faröe Islands
Situated half way between Scotland and Iceland in the Northeast Atlantic, the Faröe Islands (Føroyar) are an archipelago of 18 fantastic mountainous islands, and a population of just over 47000.
Sea, green hillsides, sharp cliffs and mountains, strangely shaped islands, turf-roof houses...
and a gorgeous capital, Tórshavn:
Saksun, Streymoy island
This made the old harbour become a unaccesible seawater lagoon.
Saksun is now a picturesque village in the bottom of the lagoon.
The Dúvugarður Museum occupies a seventeenth century farm house
On display here are many old domestic utensils and household objects and furniture, which displayed in their original context help to give a lively impression of traditional life in the Faröes.
The beautiful church in Saksun was built in 1858 :
Repairing the turf roof :
Tuesday, 6 December 2011
Ultima Europa: Hamningberg and the witch memorial










































