Life is hard for a boating officer

March 12, 2010   

Ashley and Jonny helping CTD- from Amber
Down here at Rothera our last name is what we do so Claire is Claire Doc, I am Ash Boat etc. So the above picture is Ash Boat and Johnny Mech out with the girls (AFI PHD beakers) doing world class science. There isn’t enough room on the CTD boat so we take out two and raft them up so the three or four beakers have a science platform and we have a sunbathing one!

Diving Rose Gardens

March 11, 2010   

sealbones
Wow what a dive. The visibility seemed to be endless. Rose Gardens is a pinnacle dive just off Anchorage. There was quite a lot of swell on the pinnacle itself so we got dropped in a little swim away.

Fossil dive 2010 011
We went in to take back the marine equivalent of a wood lice and also to collect some seal bones (see above picture).

Amazing photos

  

Mike Shortt - Shag Formation Flying

There are some really amazing photographers down here on Base. This picture was taken by Mike Shortt of Shags.

The end of the season is approaching

March 10, 2010   

twin otters fly by

The end of season is approaching fast. In less than three weeks I will be on the RRS Shackleton heading north on a 14 day cruise stopping at all the BAS stations doing last call or closing them up for the winter. In some ways I am looking forward to the cruise as it is something I have wanted to do for years but I am going to miss a few things about this place.

Last night at 11:30pm the last two twin otters headed North to Punta and today the two otters that left last week got into Calgary where the BAS planes live for the southern winter. It was an amazing site to see the apron, hanger and the runway all lit up for them to take off. However, as it was a night take off they didn’t do the traditional low fly by. Danny was on SAR so he has the boat on the crane down at the wharf.

Dash 7
This morning the Dash 7 left with 9 people onboard for Punta and north onto Canada. She will be back October 16th when the first summer people come back onto base. Their fly by was pretty low but not the lowest I have experienced – I was out on SAR at South Cove on the boat to wave them off and said good by on the Aero VHF to the pilots Alan and Mark.

We are moving to winter work hours starting this weekend which means no working saturday or sunday and 9-5 monday thru friday. So more time to head out into the hills and bag some more peaks.

Work at Fossil Bluff

March 9, 2010   

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I didn’t really write a lot about my week at Fossil Bluff and seeing as at the moment we have had a few days of bad weather on base and I have only been doing paperwork I thought I would write a little about what you do at Fossil Bluff. The place is a fueling stop for the twin otters taking field parties south into the deep field. We make sure the runway is clearly marked and the flags and drums are maintained. When a plane comes in we man a fire sledge and give them the latest wind speed and direction and after landing we fill them up with fuel from the drums.

So basically you are a fuelling attendant and also a met observer when you are there. Every hour we do met observations for the airplanes and call Rothera on the HF radio with the information which includes – wind speed, direction, dew point, temperature, cloud cover and height, contrast and horizontal definition, pressure etc.
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This is the met office at Fossil Bluff! The file folders have reports going back to the early 60’s when the base was used as a base for geological studies. They had a few dog teams at the hut to get field parties further south and across to the antarctic peninsula.

This picture shows how anything that is left on the snow eventually melts in and then freezes in so it is a daily job to hack away at the ice with an ice axe and make sure that drums of fuel stay on wooden pallets so they can be used and then the empties removed back to Rothera. In previous decades the drums were emptied and then left but now BAS is being responsible and all dunnage is taken out. We spent a few days digging out dunnage from the ice from many years ago.
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Some days planes don’t come in but we still have to do the met obs but we can do them on the satellite phone allowing us to go for climbs and walks in the local area.

Oil Spills

March 8, 2010   

LMG Exercise Jan 2010 - 06

LMG Exercise Jan 2010 - 04

When the Gould came in for calibration of our CDT and Gould night we also did an oil spills excercise. The ship had according to the scenario got a hole in the port side tank and was leaking fuel out. So the people on base that had been trained in oil spill response went to work. We slipped launched the boat in North Cove and came around to assist in putting the boom around the stern of the boat.

The fast tank was assembled and the skimmers by the guys on land and we then pretended to skim the fuel off the surface into the tank.

oil spill-6

Reptile Ridge walk

March 7, 2010   

DSCN5259A month ago or so we walked Reptile Ridge past Repeater Buttress but then it was late in the day so we came off about half way to Vals. On Saturday we made it one little bump before Vals and then abseiled down off the ridge. It turned out to be a beautiful afternoon.
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Wood turning

March 6, 2010   

bowl

DSCN5230The weather has turned wintery here so I have spent the last two evenings in the woodwork shop learning how to turn things on the lathe. I got hold of a block of mahogony which was the old bar and made a bowl. There is a lot of patience involved but it is very therapeutic.

Lloyd’s last dive

March 5, 2010   

T, JJ, L and Ash

Professor Lloyd Peck (Biologist) is off on the Dash on Monday he is the last of our visiting scientist to depart. Despite it meaning over 20 knots we went out for his last dive this year for a little 15 minute jolly at 30meters. This was around his 530th Antarctic dive having visited the Antarctica 10 times in his career. In 2009 he was awarded a Polar Medal. The Polar Medal was instituted in 1904 for members of Captain Scott’s first expedition to the Antarctica. Regulations required that ‘acquisition of knowledge of polar regions shall normally be ten years such service to be considered a medal’. Greater emphasis is now placed on individual service.

engines
In the meantime this morning I fitted a choke to an engine that didn’t have one and prepped three engines to be sent out on the ship back to the UK for sale. Yesterday we got in quite a bit of boating but Wednesday was a wash out with it blowing up to 50 knots.

This afternoon I will be making creme brulee after many people asked for an encore!

Frozen Planet

March 4, 2010   

BBC Boat Filming 46
The camera boat Terra Nova with Danny driving.

BBC Boat Filming 35
The carbon fiber camera used for filming Frozen Planet a BBC sequel to the Planet Earth.

BBC Boat Filming 38
All three boats rafted together while filming for the Frozen Planet program at Rothera.

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