In late November / early December 2024, I ran my semi-annual wildlife expedition to the world’s most southerly Emperor Penguin colony at Gould Bay, deep in the Weddell Sea region of Antarctica. For this expedition, we flew from Punta Arenas at the bottom of Chile on a privately chartered Iceland Air 757 to the naturally occurring blue ice runway at Union Glacier in Antarctica. From this point, we overnighted at Union Glacier Basecamp before we took a 2nd smaller Basler aircraft another three hours out to the remote sea ice at Gould Bay, where we landed on the sea ice and established camp with the Emperor Penguins.
This year, for the trip report, I decided to utilise the video I recorded during each stage of the expedition to better illustrate the travel process to the Emperor Penguins and what it is like to camp, live with and photograph the emperor penguins. This year, we were fortunate to spend a full seven days (six nights) camped out at the colony. This provided us phenomenal opportunities and the chance to photograph in various weather conditions. Personally, my favourite day was heavily overcast with light snow. I have yet to encounter a full-on blizzard out at the colony, but I am hopeful for future years!
I am still working through the more than five thousand images I made during the course of the week spent out on the sea ice with the penguins, but I have included a few favourites already processed below from what I felt was our best few days – heavily overcast conditions and light snowfall.





The above montage footage was all shot with the new Canon EOS R1 at 4K 120 fps with the Canon RF 600mm F4L IS handheld. This was the first outing with the new Canon EOS R1, and I am blown away by both the ergonomics and performance of this camera. There is a purity and depth of colour to the 14-bit RAW files I have only seen before in much more expensive medium format cameras. The eye tracking focus (yes it can track the black eye of an Emperor Penguin against black feathers), the pre-capture, the build quality and overall performance all stack up to make this the best camera I have yet used. I will have more to say about this in a future podcast.
I will return to the world’s most southerly Emperor penguin colony in early November next year (2025) to lead another small group of photographers on this incredible expedition. If you have ever wanted to photograph the world’s largest and most elegant, photogenic penguin, this is the expedition for you. Limited places are still available on this extraordinary expedition. Please contact me for more details.
