Beagle Channel, Argentina

Darwin and the Beagle Channel: on the Theory of the Evolution Route


The Dandi Jemmy Button
Actor on the Beagle Show plays Jemmy Button, a native who was taken by the Beagle expedition to England and turned into a dandi.
Tribute to Darwin
Charles Darwin's historical figure at the entrance to the Beagle Show show once on display in Ushuaia.
Nautical Contemplation
Sailor contemplates the mountains on the outskirts of Ushuaia on the ship Bark Europa
The "Beagle Show"
Beagle Show actors thank the audience in Ushuaia.
Island H
Short excursion participants hike on H Island, a small nature reserve island in the Beagle Channel.
Endless birds
Passenger photographs a slope of the Beagle Channel teeming with seabirds.
Almost contact
Passengers on a vessel watch the sea lions on the Beagle Channel.
Les Eclaireurs
Passengers on a vessel watch the sea lions on the Beagle Channel.
Alpha male
Adult sea lions communicate their territorial dominance with great fanfare.
in the sun
Sea lions huddled on high rocks in the Beagle Channel.
Bark Europe Stunts
Sailor takes care of the sails of the Bark Europa ship.
Penguin. Score.
One of thousands of specimens from the Martillo Island penguin colony.
A Sector of the Pinguineira
Isolated clan of the penguin tree of Martillo Island.
Shadows from the "Beagle Show"
Silhouette of Darwin and Captain Fitz Roy during one of their dissertations on the origin of beings and their evolution.
Ushuaia Lights
Dusk seizes Ushuaia, the southernmost city in the world.
Beagle Channel View
A resident of Ushuaia contemplates the strangely still water of the Beagle Channel.
In 1833, Charles Darwin sailed aboard the "Beagle" through the channels of Tierra del Fuego. His passage through these southern confines shaped the revolutionary theory he formulated of the Earth and its species

The small sailboat plies the icy blue waters of the Beagle Channel.

It reveals to us, with each mile gained, perspectives of the semi-snowy mountain range around.

Little or nothing has changed these mountains in the almost five centuries that have passed since the pioneering incursion of Fernão Magalhães and the following ones, by other European navigators, through these places.

It is early autumn in the Southern Hemisphere. Only 1000 km north of Antarctica. If the first days of exploration granted us surprising sunny afternoons that could even be tolerated in T-shirts, meteorology took its revenge on the unforeseen.

Beagle Channel, Evolution, Darwin, Ushuaia in Tierra del Fuego

A resident of Ushuaia contemplates the strangely still water of the Beagle Channel.

It launched a cold front from the depths of the frozen continent that alerted the region to what awaited and stirred up the hitherto calm waters of the Beagle Channel.

The Passage of HMS Beagle, Fitz Roy and Darwin through the Beagle Channel

Luckily, or more likely due to the good nautical sense of the reputed Captain Robert Fitz Roy, in its second expedition, the “HMS Beagle” sighted Tierra del Fuego on December 18th, in the middle of austral summer.

Bark Europa, Beagle Channel, Evolution, Darwin, Ushuaia in Tierra del Fuego

Sailor contemplates the mountains on the outskirts of Ushuaia on the ship Bark Europa

In the Beagle's first expedition, a group of Yaghan indigenous people reportedly stole one of the ship's auxiliary vessels. In return, Fitz Roy decided to take the accused's family hostage, awaiting a return that never came to pass.

As a result, the natives ended up traveling to England. There they received aristocratic and religious education and training until they became exotic celebrities.

Fitz Roy, an inveterate believer, had other plans: to bring them back to Tierra del Fuego where they would assume the role of Anglican missionaries among their own.

Colony of sea lions, Beagle Channel, Evolution, Darwin, Ushuaia in Tierra del Fuego

Sea lions huddled on high rocks in the Beagle Channel.

As we explore Isla de Los Lobos and Isla de Los Pajaros we find only noisy and conflicting colonies of sea lions, seals, loons, penguins and others that certainly dazzled Darwin.

Neither on dry land nor on the rocky islets that dot the Beagle Channel do we detect any signs of human life. It reinforces the border mysticism of those confines.

Pinguineira, Beagle Channel, Evolution, Darwin, Ushuaia in Tierra del Fuego

Isolated clan of the penguin tree of Martillo Island.

The Return of Jemmy Button and the Yaghan Indigenous Approach

With Fitz Roy and Darwin, things turned out differently.

As soon as they detected the familiar shapes of the territory they once lived in, the three kidnapped Yaghan rejoiced in the imminence of their return. Dozens of natives appeared on top of the cliffs, followed the ship along the coast, and shouted at the crew for hours on end.

The next morning, Fitz Roy decided to establish contact with the indigenous people. The group that landed offered them bright red fabric. The natives were immediately friendly.

An improvised dialogue ensued in which Jemmy Button – the most famous of the kidnapped natives – acted as interpreter.

Jemmy Button, Beagle Channel, Evolution, Darwin, Ushuaia in Tierra del Fuego

Actor on the Beagle Show plays Jemmy Button, a native who was taken by the Beagle expedition to England and turned into a dandi.

Darwin was astonished by the natives' ability and tendency to imitate the gestures and words of the English – they even managed to repeat entire sentences.

And he described his unceremonious initial impression: “these poor bastards didn't grow up as they should, their hideous faces smeared with white paint, their dirty and greasy skin, their disheveled hair and discordant voices, their violent and undignified gestures .

Seeing such men, we can hardly believe that they are similar creatures and inhabitants of the same world”.

It was just the first of many contacts the naturalist had with the natives. And if Darwin quickly got used to analyzing them from an anthropological perspective, Fitz Roy persisted in his idea of ​​establishing Anglican missions. Despite several desperate setbacks, it was relatively successful.

A Short Navigation on the Nearest Beagle Channel

Almost 200 years too late to follow the original events, we focus on the best that sailing can offer us and on feeling the historical trail of the place.

Les Eclaireurs Lighthouse, Beagle Channel, Evolution, Darwin, Ushuaia in Tierra del Fuego

Les Eclaireurs lighthouse, in the middle of the Beagle Channel, a few miles from Ushuaia

We go around the emblematic Les Eclaireurs lighthouse, reverse the route and return to the starting point. Even surprised by a thunderstorm, we disembarked safely.

Without waiting, that night, with our feet firmly on the ground, we continued to follow the adventure of the captain and the scientist.

The recent influx of visitors coming from the north and interested in Ushuaia, the southernmost city in the world, was the mobile that Raúl Podetti – a businessman with other businesses in Argentina – was looking for to put into practice a cultural project he kept up his sleeve: to stage a multimedia show that reconstituted the adventures of Fitz Roy and Charles Darwin in Tierra del Fuego.

Beagle Channel, Evolution, Darwin, Ushuaia in Tierra del Fuego

Charles Darwin's historical figure at the entrance to the Beagle Show show once on display in Ushuaia.

To this end, he erected a replica of the HMS Beagle brigantine supported by an adjacent room.

The Beagle Center and the Beagle Show Theatrical Reenactment

Thus, the Beagle Center was created. That's where an underpaid mix of young actors Fuegians e Porteños (from Buenos Aires) combine scenography, puppets, giant puppets, black theater, shadow play and special effects, all taking place on a stage that mimics the deck of the original ship, overlooking the homonymous canal.

Apart from the Beagle show, the Beagle Center is also a bar, lounge and dining room. After the show, the audience meets some of the actors and extras.

You can dine there, either in a space that alludes to XNUMXth century Plymouth – the English port from which the HMS Beagle set sail – or in another adjacent one, which imitates the villages and Yaghan and Yamaná canoes found by Fitz Roy and Darwin along the canals.

In the latter, the tables are lit by small bonfires similar to those that almost always warmed the indigenous people and that ended up causing European navigators to name the region as Tierra del Fuego.

We found the show more fun than we expected. We ended up staying for dinner. During an affable conversation with the director, we got permission to photograph a new showing of the show with full backstage access.

Two days later we returned. The action is already taking place when one of the extra boys leads us through dark corridors and stairs to the dressing room area.

Shadow of the "Beagle Show", Beagle Channel, Evolution, Darwin, Ushuaia in Tierra del Fuego

Silhouette of Darwin and Captain Fitz Roy during one of their dissertations on the origin of beings and their evolution.

Beagle Show's Hectic Backstage

We pass by the also dimly lit stage where Fitz Roy introduces his epic. And we find the wooden booths in which the other actors get dressed and undressed.

As is to be expected in that world of sailors, there are no women in the cast. We came across messy dressing rooms, full of paintings and messages written on the walls and a certain odor of testosterone.

At first, almost everyone is surprised by the presence of the foreign couple, but short conversations in Castilian break the ice. They give rise to jokes and jokes that almost always amuse us. Prevailing mirrors confuse the order of things and help to disrupt time.

It's our fault, in more than one scene, Arius and Marcos – the actors who play Fitz Roy and Darwin – have to run out to avoid breaking the sequence of the performance.

And among wigs, sailors' outfits, brooms and ironing boards, the rest line up in the hallway, puppets in hand and prepared to join the protagonists in a long musical scene. The group acts and lives for months in Tierra del Fuego.

You share an intimacy that doesn't always prove healthy. Backstage, two extras push each other and exchange insults: “Shut chubby!” or having faith in the strong accent Buenos Aires"cajate boludo” is the expression that gives rise to exaggeration and the joke goes wrong.

While the show continues, the two post-teenagers end up getting involved in a child's brawl that only ends with the intervention of several colleagues. We don't know what to say nor do we have anything to say.

That was the real backstage show and it just occurs to us to keep shooting. But the use of flash is prohibited from the start and everything takes place in a dim area under the stage.

It wasn't just in true history that Fitz Roy commanded the Beagle. Arius returns from the long dramatic monologue in which he confesses his disillusionment with Darwin's heretical ideas. He finds out about what is happening and heals the disagreement.

A little later, it is Marcos – Darwin – who appears. He informs us that he is just coming back for the final thanks. We took the opportunity to talk to him and take some relaxed portraits.

Beagle show, Beagle Channel, Evolution, Darwin, Ushuaia in Tierra del Fuego

Beagle Show actors thank the audience in Ushuaia.

As we are told, the Beagle Show once had more viewers and better financial health. The guys in the cast enjoy your work as much as they can.

Something that neither Fitz Roy nor Darwin could ever enjoy: the cozy nightlife of Ushuaia.

Cape of Good Hope - Cape of Good Hope NP, South Africa

On the edge of the Old End of the World

We arrived where great Africa yielded to the domains of the “Mostrengo” Adamastor and the Portuguese navigators trembled like sticks. There, where Earth was, after all, far from ending, the sailors' hope of rounding the tenebrous Cape was challenged by the same storms that continue to ravage there.
Mactan, Cebu, Philippines

Magellan's Quagmire

Almost 19 months of pioneering and troubled navigation around the world had elapsed when the Portuguese explorer made the mistake of his life. In the Philippines, the executioner Datu Lapu Lapu preserves the honors of a hero. In Mactan, his tanned statue with a tribal superhero look overlaps the mangrove swamp of tragedy.
Boat Trips

For Those Becoming Internet Sick

Hop on and let yourself go on unmissable boat trips like the Philippine archipelago of Bacuit and the frozen sea of ​​the Finnish Gulf of Bothnia.
Salta and Jujuy, Argentina

Through the Highlands of Deep Argentina

A tour through the provinces of Salta and Jujuy takes us to discover a country with no sign of the pampas. Vanished in the Andean vastness, these ends of the Northwest of Argentina have also been lost in time.
Rapa Nui - Easter Island, Chile

Under the Moais Watchful Eye

Rapa Nui was discovered by Europeans on Easter Day 1722. But if the Christian name Easter Island makes sense, the civilization that colonized it by observant moais remains shrouded in mystery.
Chiang Khong - Luang Prabang, Laos.

Slow Boat, Down the Mekong River

Laos' beauty and lower cost are good reasons to sail between Chiang Khong and Luang Prabang. But this long descent of the Mekong River can be as exhausting as it is picturesque.
Ushuaia, Argentina

The Last of the Southern Cities

The capital of Tierra del Fuego marks the southern threshold of civilization. From Ushuaia depart numerous incursions to the frozen continent. None of these play and run adventures compares to life in the final city.
Puerto Natales-Puerto Montt, Chile

Cruise on board a Freighter

After a long begging of backpackers, the Chilean company NAVIMAG decided to admit them on board. Since then, many travelers have explored the Patagonian canals, side by side with containers and livestock.
Ushuaia, Argentina

Last Station: End of the World

Until 1947, the Tren del Fin del Mundo made countless trips for the inmates of the Ushuaia prison to cut firewood. Today, passengers are different, but no other train goes further south.
Perito Moreno Glacier, Argentina

The Resisting Glacier

Warming is supposedly global, but not everywhere. In Patagonia, some rivers of ice resist. From time to time, the advance of the Perito Moreno causes landslides that bring Argentina to a halt.
El Chalten, Argentina

The Granite Appeal of Patagonia

Two stone mountains have created a border dispute between Argentina and Chile. But these countries are not the only suitors. The Fitz Roy and Torre hills have long attracted die-hard climbers
Iberá Wetlands, Argentina

The Pantanal of the Pampas

On the world map, south of the famous brazilian wetland, a little-known flooded region appears, but almost as vast and rich in biodiversity. the Guarani expression Y bera defines it as “shining waters”. The adjective fits more than its strong luminance.
El Calafate, Argentina

The New Gauchos of Patagonia

Around El Calafate, instead of the usual shepherds on horseback, we come across gauchos equestrian breeders and others who exhibit, to the delight of visitors, the traditional life of the golden pampas.
Mendoza, Argentina

Journey through Mendoza, the Great Argentine Winemaking Province

In the XNUMXth century, Spanish missionaries realized that the area was designed for the production of the “Blood of Christ”. Today, the province of Mendoza is at the center of the largest winemaking region in Latin America.
San Ignacio Mini, Argentina

The Impossible Jesuit Missions of San Ignacio Mini

In the century. In the XNUMXth century, the Jesuits expanded a religious domain in the heart of South America by converting the Guarani Indians into Jesuit missions. But the Iberian Crowns ruined the tropical utopia of the Society of Jesus.
Iguazu/Iguazu Falls, Brazil/Argentina

The Great Water Thunder

After a long tropical journey, the Iguaçu River gives a dip for diving. There, on the border between Brazil and Argentina, form the largest and most impressive waterfalls on the face of the Earth.
Colónia Pellegrini, Argentina

When the Meat is Weak

The unmistakable flavor of Argentine beef is well known. But this wealth is more vulnerable than you think. The threat of foot-and-mouth disease, in particular, keeps authorities and growers afloat.
Mendoza, Argentina

From One Side to the Other of the Andes

Departing from Mendoza city, the N7 route gets lost in vineyards, rises to the foot of Mount Aconcagua and crosses the Andes to Chile. Few cross-border stretches reveal the magnificence of this forced ascent
Tierra del Fuego, Argentina

A Farm at the End of the World

In 1886, Thomas Bridges, an English orphan taken by his missionary foster family to the farthest reaches of the southern hemisphere, founded the ancient homestead of Tierra del Fuego. Bridges and the descendants surrendered to the end of the world. today, your Estancia harberton it is a stunning Argentine monument to human determination and resilience.
savuti, botswana, elephant-eating lions
Safari
Savuti, Botswana

Savuti's Elephant-Eating Lions

A patch of the Kalahari Desert dries up or is irrigated depending on the region's tectonic whims. In Savuti, lions have become used to depending on themselves and prey on the largest animals in the savannah.
Annapurna Circuit, Manang to Yak-kharka
Annapurna (circuit)
Annapurna 10th Circuit: Manang to Yak Kharka, Nepal

On the way to the Annapurnas Even Higher Lands

After an acclimatization break in the near-urban civilization of Manang (3519 m), we made progress again in the ascent to the zenith of Thorong La (5416 m). On that day, we reached the hamlet of Yak Kharka, at 4018 m, a good starting point for the camps at the base of the great canyon.
Architecture & Design
napier, New Zealand

Back to the 30s – Old-Fashioned Car Tour

In a city rebuilt in Art Deco and with an atmosphere of the "crazy years" and beyond, the adequate means of transportation are the elegant classic automobiles of that era. In Napier, they are everywhere.
Passengers, scenic flights-Southern Alps, New Zealand
Adventure
Aoraki / Mount Cook, New Zealand

The Aeronautical Conquest of the Southern Alps

In 1955, pilot Harry Wigley created a system for taking off and landing on asphalt or snow. Since then, his company has unveiled, from the air, some of the greatest scenery in Oceania.
Saida Ksar Ouled Soltane, festival of the ksour, tataouine, tunisia
Ceremonies and Festivities
Tataouine, Tunisia

Festival of the Ksour: Sand Castles That Don't Collapse

The ksour were built as fortifications by the Berbers of North Africa. They resisted Arab invasions and centuries of erosion. Every year, the Festival of the Ksour pays them the due homage.
Sirocco, Arabia, Helsinki
Cities
Helsinki, Finland

The Design that Came from the Cold

With much of the territory above the Arctic Circle, Finns respond to the climate with efficient solutions and an obsession with art, aesthetics and modernism inspired by neighboring Scandinavia.
Meal
Markets

A Market Economy

The law of supply and demand dictates their proliferation. Generic or specific, covered or open air, these spaces dedicated to buying, selling and exchanging are expressions of life and financial health.
Pitões das Junias, Montalegre, Portugal
Culture
Montalegre, Portugal

Through Alto do Barroso, Top of Trás-os-Montes

we moved from Terras de Bouro for those of Barroso. Based in Montalegre, we wander around the discovery of Paredes do Rio, Tourém, Pitões das Júnias and its monastery, stunning villages on the border of Portugal. If it is true that Barroso has had more inhabitants, visitors should not miss it.
combat arbiter, cockfighting, philippines
Sport
Philippines

When Only Cock Fights Wake Up the Philippines

Banned in much of the First World, cockfighting thrives in the Philippines where they move millions of people and pesos. Despite its eternal problems, it is the sabong that most stimulates the nation.
Jeep crosses Damaraland, Namibia
Traveling
Damaraland, Namíbia

Namibia On the Rocks

Hundreds of kilometers north of Swakopmund, many more of Swakopmund's iconic dunes Sossuvlei, Damaraland is home to deserts interspersed with hills of reddish rock, the highest mountain and ancient rock art of the young nation. the settlers South Africans they named this region after the Damara, one of the Namibian ethnic groups. Only these and other inhabitants prove that it remains on Earth.
EVIL(E)divas
Ethnic
Male Maldives

The Maldives For Real

Seen from the air, Malé, the capital of the Maldives, looks little more than a sample of a crammed island. Those who visit it will not find lying coconut trees, dream beaches, spas or infinite pools. Be dazzled by the genuine Maldivian everyday life that tourist brochures omit.
Sunset, Avenue of Baobabs, Madagascar
Got2Globe Photo Portfolio

days like so many others

Maui, Hawaii, Polynesia,
History
Maui, Hawaii

Maui: The Divine Hawaii That Succumbed to Fire

Maui is a former chief and hero of Hawaiian religious and traditional imagery. In the mythology of this archipelago, the demigod lassos the sun, raises the sky and performs a series of other feats on behalf of humans. Its namesake island, which the natives believe they created in the North Pacific, is itself prodigious.
Pico Island, west of the mountain, Azores, Lajes do Pico
Islands
Pico Island, Azores

The Island East of the Pico Mountain

As a rule, whoever arrives at Pico disembarks on its western side, with the volcano (2351m) blocking the view on the opposite side. Behind Pico Mountain, there is a whole long and dazzling “east” of the island that takes time to unravel.
Northern Lights, Laponia, Rovaniemi, Finland, Fire Fox
Winter White
Lapland, Finland

In Search of the Fire Fox

Unique to the heights of the Earth are the northern or southern auroras, light phenomena generated by solar explosions. You Sami natives from Lapland they believed it to be a fiery fox that spread sparkles in the sky. Whatever they are, not even the nearly 30 degrees below zero that were felt in the far north of Finland could deter us from admiring them.
Couple visiting Mikhaylovskoe, village where writer Alexander Pushkin had a home
Literature
Saint Petersburg e Mikhaylovkoe, Russia

The Writer Who Succumbed to His Own Plot

Alexander Pushkin is hailed by many as the greatest Russian poet and the founder of modern Russian literature. But Pushkin also dictated an almost tragicomic epilogue to his prolific life.
Suspension Bridge, Cabro Muco, Miravalles volcano
Nature
miravalles, Costa Rica

The volcano that Miravalles

At 2023 meters, the Miravalles stands out in northern Costa Rica, high above a range of pairs that includes La Giganta, Tenório, Espiritu Santo, Santa Maria, Rincón de La Vieja and Orosi. Inactive with respect to eruptions, it feeds a prolific geothermal field that warms the lives of Costa Ricans in its shadow.
Sheki, Autumn in the Caucasus, Azerbaijan, Autumn Homes
Autumn
Sheki, Azerbaijan

autumn in the caucasus

Lost among the snowy mountains that separate Europe from Asia, Sheki is one of Azerbaijan's most iconic towns. Its largely silky history includes periods of great harshness. When we visited it, autumn pastels added color to a peculiar post-Soviet and Muslim life.
Lake Manyara, National Park, Ernest Hemingway, Giraffes
Natural Parks
Lake Manyara NP, Tanzania

Hemingway's Favorite Africa

Situated on the western edge of the Rift Valley, Lake Manyara National Park is one of the smallest but charming and richest in Europe. wild life of Tanzania. In 1933, between hunting and literary discussions, Ernest Hemingway dedicated a month of his troubled life to him. He narrated those adventurous safari days in “The Green Hills of Africa".
Museum of Petroleum, Stavanger, Norway
UNESCO World Heritage
Stavanger, Norway

The Motor City of Norway

The abundance of offshore oil and natural gas and the headquarters of the companies in charge of exploiting them have promoted Stavanger from the Norwegian energy capital preserve. Even so, this city didn't conform. With a prolific historical legacy, at the gates of a majestic fjord, cosmopolitan Stavanger has long propelled the Land of the Midnight Sun.
female and cub, grizzly footsteps, katmai national park, alaska
Characters
PN Katmai, Alaska

In the Footsteps of the Grizzly Man

Timothy Treadwell spent summers on end with the bears of Katmai. Traveling through Alaska, we followed some of its trails, but unlike the species' crazy protector, we never went too far.
Mahé Ilhas das Seychelles, friends of the beach
Beaches
Mahé, Seychelles

The Big Island of the Small Seychelles

Mahé is the largest of the islands of the smallest country in Africa. It's home to the nation's capital and most of the Seychellois. But not only. In its relative smallness, it hides a stunning tropical world, made of mountainous jungle that merges with the Indian Ocean in coves of all sea tones.
Jerusalem God, Israel, Golden City
Religion
Jerusalem, Israel

Closer to God

Three thousand years of history as mystical as it is troubled come to life in Jerusalem. Worshiped by Christians, Jews and Muslims, this city radiates controversy but attracts believers from all over the world.
The Toy Train story
On Rails
Siliguri a Darjeeling, India

The Himalayan Toy Train Still Running

Neither the steep slope of some stretches nor the modernity stop it. From Siliguri, in the tropical foothills of the great Asian mountain range, the Darjeeling, with its peaks in sight, the most famous of the Indian Toy Trains has ensured for 117 years, day after day, an arduous dream journey. Traveling through the area, we climb aboard and let ourselves be enchanted.
Society
Military

Defenders of Their Homelands

Even in times of peace, we detect military personnel everywhere. On duty, in cities, they fulfill routine missions that require rigor and patience.
Ditching, Alaska Fashion Life, Talkeetna
Daily life
Talkeetna, Alaska

Talkeetna's Alaska-Style Life

Once a mere mining outpost, Talkeetna rejuvenated in 1950 to serve Mt. McKinley climbers. The town is by far the most alternative and most captivating town between Anchorage and Fairbanks.
Fishing, Cano Negro, Costa Rica
Wildlife
Caño Negro, Costa Rica

A Life of Angling among the Wildlife

One of the most important wetlands in Costa Rica and the world, Caño Negro dazzles for its exuberant ecosystem. Not only. Remote, isolated by rivers, swamps and poor roads, its inhabitants have found in fishing a means on board to strengthen the bonds of their community.
Napali Coast and Waimea Canyon, Kauai, Hawaii Wrinkles
Scenic Flights
napali coast, Hawaii

Hawaii's Dazzling Wrinkles

Kauai is the greenest and rainiest island in the Hawaiian archipelago. It is also the oldest. As we explore its Napalo Coast by land, sea and air, we are amazed to see how the passage of millennia has only favored it.