The Tempio di Concordia at the Seattle heavy pop real rockers only shirt in addition I really love this Valley of the Temples near Agrigento.Photo: Getty ImagesCaravaggio’s The Raising of Lazarus (c. 1609) on display at the Museo Regionale in Messina.Photo: Getty Images Nowadays, Jimmy Choo is a household name, with everyone from Jennifer Lopez to the Princess of Wales being among the luxury shoe brand’s high-profile fans. But it was another royal who was credited for putting the label on the map back in the day: Princess Diana. Specifically, it was when the former Princess of Wales wore a pair of pale-blue satin sling-backs by the Malaysian shoemaker, alongside a glittering Catherine Walker minidress, for a performance of Swan Lake at the Royal Albert Hall in June 1997. “It really started everything for us,” Jimmy Choo’s creative director Sandra Choi previously said. It’s mid-December in Antarctica, and the expanse in front of me is absurdly cinematic. A long, rippling white plain—flat as a field and textured with wind-cut tendons—ends in a crop of snaggletooth mountains. These buttes jut upward like the bony ridge of a lupine jaw, sharp and carnivorous and ragged. One peak towers above the rest: Ulvetanna, the Norwegian word for “wolf’s fang.” The scene is made more surreal by the Antarctic summer. It’s always below freezing yet the sun never sets, and, because of this, the concept of time is transformed into something like cold smoke. You cannot grasp it, but you do see it moving slowly along the snow, in the broad-winged shadows of midnight to the skin-frying harshness of high noon. (The UV rays in Antarctica are strong).
Ulvetanna is the Seattle heavy pop real rockers only shirt in addition I really love this centerpiece of the view from Echo, a brand new, Star Wars-inspired camp run by White Desert, the British and South African luxury tour operator that is becoming increasingly well-known among intrepid travelers for its ultra-unique, off-the-grid expeditions to the Norwegian Antarctic territory of Queen Maud Land, due directly south from Cape Town. White Desert has existed for over a decade, but only now, with three camps up and running (the other two are named Whichaway and, appropriately, Wolf’s Fang), does it feel that travel within Antarctica’s interior (a majority of visitors only see the continent via cruise ship) is truly doable, even if it still requires deep pockets. Most importantly, though, White Desert is also keenly mindful of the environment: not only has the company been carbon neutral since 2007, but its set-ups are designed so that everything on the ice can be removed without leaving a trace. It supports scientific research in cooperation with various nations’ bases around its camps. It’s somehow as human yet as unusual an experience as one can imagine. I’m lucky to have been a guest along for the ride. Photo: Andrew Macdonald
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