Monday, 12 January 2015

48 hours in Antarctica 13-01-15



At 11am 11/01/15 we departed Chch in a Hercules C130 for our 7 ½ hour flight to Scott Base. As we entered the plane we were given a paper bag of sandwiches, chippies, museli bars and cookies for the flight. As we got closer to our destination we could see amazing patterns of sea ice out the window!



We landed at Willys field and it was the most amazing feeling walking out the plane with all of my extreme cold weather (ECW) gear on and being blasted by the brightness of the landscape and also the strangely warmer temperature than I was expecting (or maybe I was just too excited to feel the cold!). We were dropped off to Scott Base where we had a safety briefing/late dinner and well deserved beer at the bar – The Tatty Flag. Everyone is incredibly friendly, I even met students with mutual friends, which is actually quite freaky.. I went to bed at about 1-2 am but it felt like lunchtime since the sun was still up and I was way too excited to be here! We were told due to how dry the area is, we will build up static really fast.. so there are pieces of metal attached to the walls that we touch to discharge.. It builds up so fast you have to touch metal beams or whatever multiple times while walking down the corridors, so strange!


The next morning (12/01/15) we undertook Antarctic Field Training (AFT) where we trooped out to the pressure ridges just in front of Scott Base. These are massive blocks of sea ice that have broken up and then pushed/buckled against the land (where Scott Base is located). While we were out there a haaglan managed to get stuck in a melt pool (the drama is real!) so our trainer/guide guy left Christina and I by ourselves, so we decided to begin a self-guided sea lion safari! While we were watching them they slept (majority of them), played in the melt pools and did weird callings to each other kind of like a grunt.. The babies are the cutest things ever and they smile when they are sleeping – very happy creatures I think. This is how I have probably looked ever since we arrived!


Due to expected bad weather we were told at 4pm that we would be flying out to Marco Zucchelli at 6pm, which is the Italian Base in Terra Nova Bay. From there we would transfer onto the Korean Icebreaker Research Vessel – the Araon on the 15th most likely… But who knows as our plans have already changed so much!
We flew in a Twin Otter to Browing Pass where a helicopter met us and took us over the ridge to the base.


We arrived late (about 11pm) and the first thing Christina and I were offered was coffee.. and you can’t refuse to drink their coffee.. We have been here just over 12 hours now and I have already had about 4 short blacks.. For someone who doesn’t drink a lot of coffee, this is not good..


In my first 48 hours of being in Antarctica my top 3 experiences (in no particular order):
1.      Seeing penguins.. even though they were ages away.. the zoom on my camera worked wonders! And also seals. I like seals
2.      My first step on Antarctic ice
3.      Flying from Scott Base to Marco Zucchelli – amazing views and my first helicopter ride!

Two things I miss so far:
1.      Understanding what people are talking about.. everyone speaks Italian.. (hardly understood our safety briefing..)
2.      Night time

I am so very fortunate to have the opportunity to be in Antarctica and be able to conduct research for my Masters thesis! While on board the Araon ship we will be collecting jumbo piston cores that I will use to ultimately reconstruct Holocene sea ice distribution and water column stratification using diatoms and stable isotopes.

The food is amazing here. I like chocolate pasteries for breakfast!

Bye for now!

***SOrry for the lack of photos... check out facebook instead.. will add them as I can!

Saturday, 10 January 2015

0 sleeps to go!

Todays the day I finally leave to Scott Base, Antarctica!

I was issued my clothing yesterday, which included (just to name a few) about 10 different pairs of gloves, a million jackets, scary moon boots and the essential item - the shewee - unfortunately I have not practiced using it.. hopefully I am a natural!

Lucky for me its meant to be 30 degrees today so dressing up in my extreme cold weather gear at the Antarctic Center and trooping across the tarmac to get on the Hercules at 11am could prove challenging... Maybe that will be my first goal - make it onto the plane without melting... or tripping. This is a pict of the flattering gear I will be wearing..


The weather is currently -3 degrees at Scott Base and it will be constantly daytime.

Off the the airport now! Finger crossed we are not boomeranged back to Chch!

See you in 7 weeks NZ