Deciding whether to hitchhike to the moon (seriously; I emailed commercial space flight agencies and everything) or to travel from the North Pole to the South Pole was hard. I was 26 and, after a previous 6-month backpack trip, had seen the light: everything is possible. 

But, if everything is possible, what will I choose to do? My first plan seemed a bit too ambitious at the time, so North to the South Pole it was. It was a trip of a lifetime, and it was then that I got acquainted with my favorite place on Earth: Antarctica.  

I mean, my trip provided enough material for comparison: the lonely wilderness of Alaska, the extensive salt plains of Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia and the colorful wildlife of Costa Rica, to name only a few examples. But Antarctica is something else.

Antarctica will humble you. Antarctica will steal your heart. Antarctica will change your perspective on planet Earth.

Antarctica is the coldest, windiest and driest continent on the planet, and it’s bigger than the U.S. The most common route for visiting this marvel is via a place called Ushuaia, in the southern tip of Argentina. You can either fly or take a boat. The latter takes you to the tip of the Antarctican peninsula in a day; the former takes just a few hours. My plane landed on a make-shift gravel airstrip on a former Soviet base. I got on a medium-sized boat called Antarctic Dream. My adventure began.

It was the sternness of the silence that I noticed first. No traffic, no ringtones, not even the occasional bark of a dog.

Our first landing was on an island called Brown Bluff. The silence was rudely interrupted by not 1, or 10, but 20.000 loudly breeding penguins. Literally everywhere I looked I could see, hear, and smell (there was penguin shit everywhere) the lovely little creatures. And they’re super nosy, too!

Back in the Zodiac (a small rubber boat), and back on the boat. We’re soundlessly floating again, past moaning icebergs higher than an elephant stacked on a double-decker.

On the next landing, I step on the actual landmass of the continent for the first time and hike to a nearby vantage point. The view is mesmerizing, depicting a miniature world with a red toy boat among the dominant white mountains. On the way back, the boat gets bigger and bigger again, until we’re making our way through the floating pieces of ice.

Then, a curious red and black building with a British flag appears. It turns out to be a military station founded in WWII and currently serving as a museum and post office. A post office! In Antarctica! It truly blew my mind. I learned that a small team of staff operates this charming base for 6 months a year, and, sure enough, you can actually send a postcard home. Meanwhile, a big piece of ice breaks off nearby.

Every place I visit on our route is immersed in history. Structures were raised to accommodate the rising whaling industry, or as strategic bases in the Second World War. Since Antarctica has been protected under a treaty since 1959, many of the old buildings are still present, be it rusted, windswept and partially swallowed by the earth they stood on.

As my STTTD (Stupid Tourist Thing To Do), I ran into the Antarctic water for a very brief swim. It was cold, of course, but the adrenalin (and vodka that was afterward provided by a Russian fellow passenger) made it bearable. I guess it gives me something to ramble on about when my daughter is a bit older.

We loop back and conquer the turbulent Drake passage between Antarctic and Argentina, and suddenly I remember why I don’t like boats.

I return a different person. I feel like a true explorer, like someone who has just hitchhiked to the moon and back. 

Antarctica is my favorite place on earth. It is extreme, fierce, but a fairytale at the same time. A place truly worth protecting.

  • Victor Eekhof
  • : It’s me, 30-something Dutch explorer Victor Eekhof. My home base is Amsterdam, but I have always found ways to get back on the road as much as I can. Using my extensive travel experience (60+ countries on 7 continents, ranging from Antarctica to North Korea) as a basis I aim to provide useful budget tips, hacks and guides for lesser-known destinations. I write about topics like local food, accommodation and cultures, but I also touch upon just about anything travel-related from packing to returning home after a long trip.
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  • : My blog is all about traveling on your own terms and not following the masses. It’s for people who are happiest with a big backpack on their backs and a smaller one on their front; people who walk where others take a cab, or take a bus where others take a plane. I absolutely love to go where not many people would think to travel. Places like Mongolia, North Korea, Antarctica or Venezuela. I write about my experiences visiting these places and how you too can visit them, including prices, insider tips and (alternative) routes.
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  • : This is the first time this story has been published.