International Date Line (June 28-28)

We are in the middle of the Bering Sea heading to Alaska and just crossed the International Date Line. Going east (as we are) you add a day; going west, you lose a day. So we get two June 28s! Groundhog Day for real, anyone?

Although the Cossack, Semyon Dezhnev, sailed the Sea in 1648, both the Sea and the Strait are named for Vitus
Bering, a Danish-born Russian explorer who sailed the Sea in 1728. Bisecting the area and running north to south, is the International Date Line, a somewhat arbitrary delineation separating one calendar day from the next.

As with crossing the equator, certain rituals apply: When we crossed the equator, we transitioned from Scallywag to Shellback (see January 29 post). Crossing the IDL, we have now been initiated into the Silent Order of the Far East Mysteries.








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