I was walking past a window and saw a whale. Surely the night's highlight. My co-worker left on a morale trip for the south pole. She will be there for an hour before it's time to turn around and come back.
The last day to mail packages from McMurdo is in two days. I sent home many the things (mostly excess clothes) that I won't be needing for my travels in New Zealand.
I've started thinking about post-Antarctic work.
Thursday, January 31, 2008
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
January 29
It's been a few days since I last posted a blog entry. Campus is packed full these days. There's a bunch of Navy guys and Kiwi military folks that are here to unload the supply vessel when it arrives. About 30 Russian folks on their way home from the Russian base are in town. There are three ships out in the bay: the icebreaker, the research vessel and the fuel tanker. All of their crews take some R&R time on campus. South pole folks are passing through here on their way home. The winter folks are starting to arrive. Most the field camps are closing down and passing through here on their way home. It's kind of exciting and kind of fascinating. Last night we were 10 people below capacity and rumors are that we will be over capacity tonight. I still have an empty bed in my room.
All is well. I am enjoying myself.
All is well. I am enjoying myself.
Friday, January 25, 2008
January 24th
All is well in Antarctica. It is now 1 month until I see my girlfriend again and I'm missing her so very much.
The weather has turned super windy, which is nice as it's blowing a lot of the ice (the icebreaker broke up) out of here. Many have told me that more open water = more whales.
Work continues to be routine. I attended open mic night at the bar.
Everyone is talking about their post-Antarctica travel plans. Many have plans to travel for three or more months and to all types of exotic locations.
The weather has turned super windy, which is nice as it's blowing a lot of the ice (the icebreaker broke up) out of here. Many have told me that more open water = more whales.
Work continues to be routine. I attended open mic night at the bar.
Everyone is talking about their post-Antarctica travel plans. Many have plans to travel for three or more months and to all types of exotic locations.
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
January 22nd
This is my 100th post. Makes one realize how long he's been here.
Attended a travelogue of someones travels to the Falkland Islands. She had tons of pictures of birds, including skuas, several types of penguins and these birds with blue eyes. The rockhopper penguins have yellow mohawks and apparently jump vertically and the king penguins have such pretty colors.
Saw a penguin all by its lonesome near the boat dock.
Morning janitor meeting was about avoiding burn-out and coping with irritability.
Attended a travelogue of someones travels to the Falkland Islands. She had tons of pictures of birds, including skuas, several types of penguins and these birds with blue eyes. The rockhopper penguins have yellow mohawks and apparently jump vertically and the king penguins have such pretty colors.
Saw a penguin all by its lonesome near the boat dock.
Morning janitor meeting was about avoiding burn-out and coping with irritability.
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
January 21st
I attended the "Polar Palooza". It was essentially a series of short documentries about work being done at both the north and south poles. Some guy has a job of driving around on ice that has been there for a super long time and looking for meteoites. There was a short documentry on a guy that I've met that makes a living drilling holes in ice.
I spent hours mopping.
I spent hours mopping.
Monday, January 21, 2008
January 20
I saw another whale. They are called 'minky' whales and are on the small side of whales.
The fuel ship scheduled to arrive here today or tomorrow will be a few days late due to bad weather or something.
My clustermates held a party at the house on campus last night. They mostly made homemade pizzas, visited and listened to a guy play the guitar. It struck me how special of an occasion it was to cook a meal in a house and enjoy each other's company. During the job fair the other day, one of the interviewers told me that "You don't know you want to come back to the ice until your off the ice and you still want to come back."
It's fun to wonder if I will see anything in a different light after my time here.
The fuel ship scheduled to arrive here today or tomorrow will be a few days late due to bad weather or something.
My clustermates held a party at the house on campus last night. They mostly made homemade pizzas, visited and listened to a guy play the guitar. It struck me how special of an occasion it was to cook a meal in a house and enjoy each other's company. During the job fair the other day, one of the interviewers told me that "You don't know you want to come back to the ice until your off the ice and you still want to come back."
It's fun to wonder if I will see anything in a different light after my time here.
Sunday, January 20, 2008
January 19th
My highlight of the last several days has been whale sightings! Yesterday I went for a walk on the ob hill loop trail and witnessed two whales using a little pond of open water to come up for air. It was the first time I've ever seen a whale in my life. There were seals and penguins as well, so it made for a nice morning.
I'm sure lots of other exciting things have happened as well, but they have all lost significance. My predicted departure date from the ice has been set for February 21. The first sunset on February 20. I was here the first night the sun didn't set. I think it's neat, anyways.
Attended the live music show at the bar last night. One of the bands that was playing was military guys, so lots of the military folks from around campus were at the bar. As were folks from the icebreaker (their all Swedish), so it was a fun mix of people. We all had a good time, lots of dancing.
My friend asked why an icebreaker is here. McMurdo's main source of supplies for the next year is a big boat that arrives near the end of the season each February. The ocean is frozen here, so the icebreaker comes to clear the way for the supply vessel (and for an additional boat that brings all of the fuel we need for the next season).
I'm sure lots of other exciting things have happened as well, but they have all lost significance. My predicted departure date from the ice has been set for February 21. The first sunset on February 20. I was here the first night the sun didn't set. I think it's neat, anyways.
Attended the live music show at the bar last night. One of the bands that was playing was military guys, so lots of the military folks from around campus were at the bar. As were folks from the icebreaker (their all Swedish), so it was a fun mix of people. We all had a good time, lots of dancing.
My friend asked why an icebreaker is here. McMurdo's main source of supplies for the next year is a big boat that arrives near the end of the season each February. The ocean is frozen here, so the icebreaker comes to clear the way for the supply vessel (and for an additional boat that brings all of the fuel we need for the next season).
Thursday, January 17, 2008
January 16th
I attended the 'on ice' job fair this morning. I gave my resume to the guy that hires 'solid waste technicians' and the guy who hires janitors. I gave Alex's resume to the guy who runs the campus store, the person who hires administrative folks and the guy who hires janitors.
Met a lady who works 8 months a year on a ship that drives around Antarctica with scientist.
I met a guy whose made a career of drilling holes in ice. He works here during the Antarctican summer and in Greenland during it's summer. His career started when he was offered a job shoveling snow for an ice drilling team while he was an undergrad.
I shared another penguin sighting experience with the night janitorial team. This time the sighting was from the library window.
Suluay, my co-worker, was super excited because she found out that there's another person from Thailand on campus. Suluay was the second ever person from Thailand to visit Antarctica and he is the sixth. He's in the biology class that's here. The first person from Thailand to visit Antarctica was a princess and she was only here for a couple hours, so really I don't even know if she should really count.
The icebreaker is still going strong and breaking ice.
Met a lady who works 8 months a year on a ship that drives around Antarctica with scientist.
I met a guy whose made a career of drilling holes in ice. He works here during the Antarctican summer and in Greenland during it's summer. His career started when he was offered a job shoveling snow for an ice drilling team while he was an undergrad.
I shared another penguin sighting experience with the night janitorial team. This time the sighting was from the library window.
Suluay, my co-worker, was super excited because she found out that there's another person from Thailand on campus. Suluay was the second ever person from Thailand to visit Antarctica and he is the sixth. He's in the biology class that's here. The first person from Thailand to visit Antarctica was a princess and she was only here for a couple hours, so really I don't even know if she should really count.
The icebreaker is still going strong and breaking ice.
Monday, January 14, 2008
January 13
Attended this evening's science lecture. It was about long-term ecological research and how they are monitoring lots of different biological and physical indicators to study change over time. They showed a picture of the longest river in Antarctica and I more imagined myself canoeing down the river instead of listening to the science lecture.
Sunday, January 13, 2008
January 12

Like each Saturday evening, I awoke to the sound of my alarm clock. As Alex pointed out, my day off is the only day I have to set an alarm to wake me. I like attending the ballroom dancing class that starts each Saturday at 6pm.
This evening was the annual art show. It's absolutely amazing how much talent there is crammed into a town of 1,000 folks. After the art show, I enjoyed the company of my clustermates for a while, sent out some e-mails, called the girlfriend and went on a long walk on one of the designated hiking trails. I don't get as excited about the seals as I had when they had first arrived in the area.
The icebreaker boat docked, allowing the crew an evening on land.
Saturday, January 12, 2008
January 11
All of the snow had melted by the time I woke. At the midnight meal, my co-worker and I delivered a fresh salad to her husband who is stuck working at the power plant and unable to leave. He normally works at the water plant but has been moved to the power plant due to staffing issues.
The icebreaker boat is right close, it's scheduled to dock at noon tomorrow. It's fun to watch the boat work. It backs up, gets a running start, skids up onto the ice in front of it and the falls through the ice, breaking it all up as it goes. As I understand, now we wait for the heavy winds to blow the ice outta here. I think it's all kind of fascinating. People boarded this ship somewhere in the northern hemisphere where ice exists that needs broken, drove the thing down and over the equator, all while the seasons were changing. They break up our wee bit of ice then turn around and go back over the equator and to break some ice on the other end of the world. The ship is especially noisy and seems like it would be super crazy bumpy as it breaks up the ice. It would be a hard life breaking up the ice, but maybe the trips back and forth across the equator wouldn't be so bad.
The icebreaker boat is right close, it's scheduled to dock at noon tomorrow. It's fun to watch the boat work. It backs up, gets a running start, skids up onto the ice in front of it and the falls through the ice, breaking it all up as it goes. As I understand, now we wait for the heavy winds to blow the ice outta here. I think it's all kind of fascinating. People boarded this ship somewhere in the northern hemisphere where ice exists that needs broken, drove the thing down and over the equator, all while the seasons were changing. They break up our wee bit of ice then turn around and go back over the equator and to break some ice on the other end of the world. The ship is especially noisy and seems like it would be super crazy bumpy as it breaks up the ice. It would be a hard life breaking up the ice, but maybe the trips back and forth across the equator wouldn't be so bad.
Friday, January 11, 2008
January 10

Last night held a bit of excitement. During the midnight meal someone told us there were ~30 penguins on campus by the boat dock. We headed that way immediately and spent some time enjoying the penguins. They would walk up a hill only to turn around and slide back down. It didn't take long for a substantial crowd to develop. The penguins were curious and walked right up to the crowd.
McMurdo station made the news for reasons other than our science: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080109/od_nm/christmas_dc;_ylt=AldyT0kYRpzw3AjAHSeXhPms0NUE
During morning janitor meeting, we were told that the flu is going around campus with ~20 cases in the last week.
It's still snowing with at least 6 inches of accumulation and some knee-high drifts.
Thursday, January 10, 2008
January 9th
It's snowing, the most snow I've seen this summer. I spent the evening writing a letter to my girlfriend. Work was uneventful and routine. All is well.
Wednesday, January 9, 2008
January 8th
After a pork chop and fruit cobbler breakfast, I went for another walk to check out the icebreaker's progress. It's still out there, presumably slowly working itself this way. I heard a seal come up for air and breathing deeply, but never actually saw it.
Attended a travelogue of someone's travels to Mongolia. My favorite part was probably a picture of a yurt with solar panels and a satellite dish. In Mongolia you can buy a sheep for US$35 or an old horse for as little as $50. Cabbage, carrots and potatoes are the only veggies available outside of the big cities. The mountains were so pretty.
One of my co-workers showed up to work with a her arm in a sling. Apparently, the vacuum got the best of her elbow. The only upside was it gave the rest of us enough work to keep us busy all night.
Attended a travelogue of someone's travels to Mongolia. My favorite part was probably a picture of a yurt with solar panels and a satellite dish. In Mongolia you can buy a sheep for US$35 or an old horse for as little as $50. Cabbage, carrots and potatoes are the only veggies available outside of the big cities. The mountains were so pretty.
One of my co-workers showed up to work with a her arm in a sling. Apparently, the vacuum got the best of her elbow. The only upside was it gave the rest of us enough work to keep us busy all night.
Tuesday, January 8, 2008
January 7
I awoke late due to a 3pm fire alarm (middle of my night's sleep) which involved me standing outside for 20 minutes in my pajamas and big red coat. "Sonic Antarctic" is like a film festival but with just audio recordings; while I thought it sounded like a great idea, most of the recordings were just annoying industrial sounds from around campus and a bunch of scientist's recordings of the ground moving, etc. (equally annoying).
I found this cool looking rock and thought it was petrified wood and I showed it to a scientist and he said it wasn't petrified wood, but I still like my rock even if it isn't as cool as I once presumed.
I finished off the day by going for a walk to check out the progress the icebreaker ship is making. Lots of folks from the icebreaker were helicoptered onto campus, presumably to get a break from the boat. Isn't it kind of funny to think that they are all so happy to get onto campus while we would all be so happy to get to go on the boat?
I found this cool looking rock and thought it was petrified wood and I showed it to a scientist and he said it wasn't petrified wood, but I still like my rock even if it isn't as cool as I once presumed.
I finished off the day by going for a walk to check out the progress the icebreaker ship is making. Lots of folks from the icebreaker were helicoptered onto campus, presumably to get a break from the boat. Isn't it kind of funny to think that they are all so happy to get onto campus while we would all be so happy to get to go on the boat?
Monday, January 7, 2008
January 6
I KNOW! I've been really bad at keeping up with my blog. I don't really have an excuse (plus an ex used to tell me that you shouldn't apologize and give excuses at the same time). I've just been lazy.
Lots of cool things have happened since my last blog. We found a can of bug spray in the lost and found bin (there's not any bugs here). We can see the icebreaker ship off in the distance. Numerous penguin sightings have occured on and around campus. I met a guy that drives a tour bus across America for a living. I played euchre for the first time in months. I watched a hitchhiking documentry about a guy that works here (70,000 miles, 42 countries, 6 continents). My lead was hired to janitor over-winter. There was a travelogue on Pakistan. I was convinced the entire world has pretty mountains. I went to a bluegrass concernt and danced and danced. I wrote letters, received packages and worked on my Spanish lessons.
I was asked which day I wanted to leave Antarctica (February 21st). The first janitors start leaving on February 11. That's less than 5 weeks away. Folks are starting to talk much about their post-Antarctica travel plans. Folks are mentioning that they are ready to go home. There's a mandatory meeting this week that's all about leaving Antarctica. It's an odd feeling, the beginning of the end. I feel like I've just arrived and like I've been here forever.
All is well, I'll do better keeping up with the blog.
Lots of cool things have happened since my last blog. We found a can of bug spray in the lost and found bin (there's not any bugs here). We can see the icebreaker ship off in the distance. Numerous penguin sightings have occured on and around campus. I met a guy that drives a tour bus across America for a living. I played euchre for the first time in months. I watched a hitchhiking documentry about a guy that works here (70,000 miles, 42 countries, 6 continents). My lead was hired to janitor over-winter. There was a travelogue on Pakistan. I was convinced the entire world has pretty mountains. I went to a bluegrass concernt and danced and danced. I wrote letters, received packages and worked on my Spanish lessons.
I was asked which day I wanted to leave Antarctica (February 21st). The first janitors start leaving on February 11. That's less than 5 weeks away. Folks are starting to talk much about their post-Antarctica travel plans. Folks are mentioning that they are ready to go home. There's a mandatory meeting this week that's all about leaving Antarctica. It's an odd feeling, the beginning of the end. I feel like I've just arrived and like I've been here forever.
All is well, I'll do better keeping up with the blog.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)