By Kerry Sanders, NBC News Correspondent
If you’ve followed each blog post, and you’ve wondered how to venture beyond the web and touch the so-called seventh continent, you have one choice: Go by boat.
There is no commercial airport in Antarctica.

Nery Ynclan / NBC News
Icebergs in Antarctica
Antarctica doesn’t even have a government. This land is controlled by a treaty with numerous nations. The companies that take passengers (tourists and scientists alike) generally sail from New Zealand or Argentina. That means you have to fly before you can sail. Then you need to buy passage on a ship. Some ships are comfortable, some a little more spartan, but all are so-called "expedition ships." Costs to travel are in the thousands of dollars, but for those willing to book 18 months early, the passage can be significantly less expensive. Just remember: This is not a cruise in the Caribbean.
Our ship, the Ocean Diamond, had seven decks and room for about 180 passengers. Not everyone on our voyage was a journalist or scientist. On our passage, we met a 13-year-old boy holding strong with some of the huskier men who spend their weekends camping and hiking.

Nery Ynclan / NBC News
A Zodiac boat and the Ocean Diamond expedition ship
If you're prone to seasickness, then it’s certain you will feel the motion of the ocean on the notorious Drake Passage, just off the southernmost tip of South America.
On our return, the waves were more than 17 feet high as we rounded Cape Horn. At one point, winds hit the ship at gusts of 127 miles per hour. The Drake Passage has been a graveyard for many explorers over the centuries because of these rough conditions, but it can also be quite still. On the way down from Argentina, the Drake Passage became more like the Drake Lake. The swells were only a couple of feet against our hull, making it feel like we were sailing through a bathtub.

From left, Nery Ynclan, Kerry Sanders and Kyle Eppler
If you want to experience this trip, I’d recommend you have no fear of water. Not that falling in is likely, but much of those up-close, inspiring moments I've been writing about are best experienced in the inflatable Zodiacs as they skip across the seas.
If you do make the trip, be sure to bring a camera and take some amazing photos and videos, like those you see here. But don't be afraid to put the camera down once in a while and take it all in. With so much change happening here, Antarctica won't look like this forever.
Day 1: Greeted by dirt, not ice
Day 2: Climate change decimates food supply for penguins
Day 3: Watching Mother Nature in action
Day 4: How to sleep outdoors in Antarctica



We are told by the alarmists that it is the use of fossil fuels that causes global warming. NBC has done much over the years to support the claims of the alarmists.
But now NBC wants us to use fossil fuels to travel to Antarctica?
The Maldives claim that CO2 is going to cause the oceans to rise and will drown its island nation.
But the Maldives is building new airports and resorts to bring more fossil fuel using tourists to the Maldives.
Al Gore and other alarmists say we must stop using gas and oil and quit driving and flying.
But the alarmists continue to live in huge houses and fly private jets and ride in limos.
All so confusing.
I really enjoyed this series! Very good read and film clips. What a fantastic insight into a sadly changing environment. Thanks!