54o25'S
36o10'W
Chart
3597,
South Georgia
The shelter offered by the headland at
the N end of the beach is better than it appears on the chart and
provides protection from the sea from S through W and N to NE. Tuck
well into the northern corner and anchor in about 5.5m. No kelp.
A very large King Penguin colony is
situated at the moraine close behind the beach. In clear weather,
with Mount Paget and the other peaks for a backdrop, it is a
spectacular sight and a popular place for visiting wildlife camera
crews.
To visit the penguin colony it is
easiest to land S of the glacier stream, if the swell permits. The
stream runs very strongly and is usually at least 60cm deep. Several
people have been knocked over by the force of the current. The
landing at the N end of the beach is less subject to swell. Near the
round bluff that projects from the headland, there is a narrow
channel in the flat rocks where landing may be possible, even with a
large surf on the beach.
On the N side of the moraine, several
hundred metres from the beach is a BAS hut, now used as a refuge.
Even if there is too much swell to land
so that one can visit the penguin colony, it is well worth a sail
along the beach (6m depth quite close in) to view this spectacle.
ST ANDREW'S BAY, LOOKING S, CHANNEL
BETWEEN FLAT ROCKS IN FOREGROUND
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