One of the real joys of the polar and near-polar landscapes are all the opportunities to work with ephemeral, beautiful ice. Some spots are easy to work, it would be very difficult to take a bad image in an ice cave under Vatnajökull. In other cases, such as this image from Chile's fantastic Parque Nacional Torres del Paine, it was more a matter of seeing great tones and forms in the details of a recently-turned iceberg in the park's Lago Grey. Cloudy conditions and a unsteady boat made picking this out with a 300mm telephoto tricky but possible.
I don't I'll ever get enough of these amazing blues. (If you're used to thinking of glaciers as white, they are, air gets into the ice near the surface. The best colors are generally found where a recent break has exposed a new surface, or where water has melted the white surface layers.)