From the category archives:
Yendys
Riding the waves home
Yendys and Hobart are due very soon. They will sail into Storm Bay and up the Derwent River to the port of Hobart.
For those of you who know the book Sydney of the Antarctic, you will remember how Sydney used to sit on the blue chair and watch all the ships sail south, until they slipped over the horizon, swallowed up by the great Southern Ocean.
I will be watching in the dawn light for the approach of the Kapitan Khlebnikov, with my binoculars near, hoping to spot a pair of red and white spotty ears.

They have just visited Macquarie Island, a speck in the Southern Ocean, a refuge to thousands of birds and seals. As you can see from this photo, Sydney met with some King Penguins last time he was there… so perhaps this time he has met them again, and has a thousand tales to tell.

It may be hard for him to find them again in such a crowd, but toys have a way of finding each other and so do penguins. I just hope he doesn’t lose himself in the crowd, if he’s there.

Or perhaps he has curled up around some of the island’s other residents?
I wonder if he is on the ship, if Yendys and Hobart did find him and are bringing him home?
I know that I will just have to wait to see if Mr S and the others have any news for me… until then, I am dreaming of him and hoping.
We will know in a couple of days and will keep you posted.
Ahoy, Coral.
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Happy New Year

It’s a privilege to voyage to the white continent. Its power and size are humbling, and leaving the ice is always sad.

As the ship moves through the last of the ice and into the Southern Ocean it will pass by ice-covered mountains and into Cape Adare.

Perhaps the last of the penguins will be seen dwarfed by the landscape, on their way to adventures, like Sydney, Yendys and Hobart.
I can only hope that Sydney is snugly sleeping on board, or perhaps he’s doing some long forgotten domestic duties, like this old photo of him shows: resting after hanging out the washing in the cabin.
As they head north, the air will be getting warmer and the ocean will give up its cloak of white and the ship will start riding the great waves north.
Knowing Sydney, he may be keeping his rescue a secret and I suppose we’ll have to wait until the ship returns to port to find out what has happened… until then, I keep hoping we may get a message.
Soon, they will be arriving at Macquarie Island, then home.
Keep those fingers crossed.
Ahoy, Coral.
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We’re coming for you, Sydney
Our travellers, Yendys, Hobart and Mr. S. have been sailing the seas for eight days now. Their first stop was to be at Enderby Island, a magical place where the albatross nest on the plateau and teach their babies to soar on the wind.
Below them in the red-flowered Rata forests, parakeets dive through the mosses and tangled wood. A fern-lined creek where baby seals learn to swim without the current, runs to the sea through an open field, spongelike in depth, it makes everyone walk like they are on the moon. Small watery grottos carved from the bases of volcanic columns sway with the weight of heavy kelp. Occasionally a Hooker sea lion emerges, but the yellow-eyed penguin keeps its distance.
Sometimes obscured by a frosty smoke rising from the ocean’s surface, Perserverance Harbour is a safe entry to Campbell Island, the second of New Zealand’s sub-Antarctic islands that our travellers have visited. Its sides tower above the ship. Sea lions come out to greet the vessel and follow those who go to shore. Steep paths wind up sculptured valleys, high into the realm of the albatross. Grasslands of tussock rise between the mega herbs and ferns. From here the ship leaves to navigate through the Great Southern Ocean and on to Antarctica.
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The search for Sydney starts
On Sunday evening, from the flooded belly of an ancient volcano, the Kapitan Khlebnikov set sail for the Antarctic.
As it left Lyttelton harbour in New Zealand to speed southwards, it carried two passengers that visitors to this site will know well, Yendys and Hobart.
They have travelled a long way from the parallel world in their quest to find Sydney, and they were helped on their way by their human companion Mr. S.
Unfortunately, due to ill health, I have not been able to travel to find Sydney, but know that my dear companions, Yendys, Hobart and Mr. S. will do all they can, along with a ship full of passengers to search for him.
During the next few weeks I will keep you informed of their travels and hopefully their prize!
Ahoy, Coral.
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Ready for the ice

Yendys and Hobart are ready for the ice.
Recent photographs show that the intrepid pair have been doing some icy training to prepare them for their trip to Antarctica.

I’m sure that they will be a great help in the search for Sydney, as it looks like they’ll be able to slip into the secret spaces that toys inhabit.
I’m so proud of them. I’m just a little worried that perhaps they won’t want to come home either…
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Hobart’s emergency — Yendys to the rescue

Hi Coral
Hobart and I are getting into training ready for the Antarctic. While on board ship last week Hobart managed to damage his leg.
I came to the rescue with my first aid training. It was a really bad gash just on the ankle, I was not too squeamish although you could see all this cotton wool sticking out.
When we finally got home, our friend Steve had to put fifteen stitches into the ankle.
Will write giving more details of our time at sea once Hobart has fully recovered.
Love,
Yendys
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