McMurdo is the largest base on Antarctica, is the SAR (Search and Rescue) center for the continent, and has a full fire department staffed by eleven full-time, professional fire-fighters even in the wintertime. Before I came to Antarctica, I hadn't really considered fire-prevention as a significant element of life here...I thought of cold and snow and no vegetation, so didn't really imagine fire as a real threat. But actually, fire is a HUGE deal here because we are so dependent upon secure, heated infrastructure for our survival.
So a couple weeks ago our company safety meeting was on fire prevention and using extinguishers. And then last week the wind died down enough for us to do an extinguisher practice session. It was odd to see anyone, much less firefighters, purposefully lighting a diesel gas fire for us to practice on, but that's what they did. I think that might actually have been the first time I've ever used a fire extinguisher, which seems odd. It was a fun exercise, though, and some people (who are otherwise prone to being dramatic, ahem) got REALLY into it.
Monday, June 18, 2018
Thursday, June 14, 2018
Weekly snapshot #16
I said I was going to play around with nighttime settings on my camera and try to get a clearer snapshot this week...and I didn't! My excuse is that my brain and will are functioning at less-than-full capacity as we swiftly approach the mid-winter mark. We're all having a harder time than usual coming up with words, understanding each other, and remembering what it was we were just about to do. Best to just embrace the craziness. So here's a super-fuzzy photo for you! By the way, I keep meaning to mention that the bright orb in all these pics (which you've probably figured out, since it always looks the same and is always in the same place) is a streetlight, not the moon...
Monday, June 11, 2018
Science Fair
A few weeks ago we held a science fair at McMurdo, which was probably one of the less geeky science fairs ever conducted. Also, one of the least scientific. First, it was held in the bar. Second, it featured posters less sophisticated than those probably made by current-day third graders, and these were all made by grown adults.
Third, the topics were ridiculous. I was recruited to do a poster, which I initially dismissed as a possibility, until I was told that at the last science fair at McMurdo, one of the projects was called "Why is Ben Affleck Sad?" and consisted of nothing except a poster collage of pictures of Ben Affleck looking sad. Once I heard that, I thought: Okay, I can do this.
I upped that game a little bit and did a faux statistical study of the loitering behavior of McMurdoans and the station store. A topic with which I am very familiar. As I've mentioned in previous posts, I've actively encouraged a loitering culture at the store here, because it makes my job way more interesting and fun. And it's taken on a life of it's own for sure. There's one woman down here who sits in one particular chair near the register for the entirety of nearly every store shift, to the extent that when she's not there people ask me where she is with genuine concern, and other times people will try to beat her to the store and take that chair just to see what she'll do. (Note: What she does is literally drag and throw the interloper out of the chair. It's a sight.) So there was a question on the survey about the owner of that chair. A question about why people loiter, another about whether as loiterers they judge customers' purchases, a question about whether anyone has a crush on a fellow loiterer, and so on. And then I put it all together in a poster that may not have been the most scientific of the fair, but which was definitely the most colorful.
All in all it was such a fun night, a combination of silly and serious. Other projects looked at how many people knew each other on station and whose social circles overlapped the most, what names were most common on station, whether employee retention was greater when dishwashers and janitors were a combined job rather than two separate roles, and so on.
We even had a demo of making sorbet using liquid nitrogen. It was tasty!
I didn't imagine that a Science Fair would end up being such a fun event here, but it truly was.
Thursday, June 7, 2018
Weekly snapshot #15
I'm running a few hours late with this week's snapshot, but let's be honest: it doesn't matter. It's just as cold and dark out as it was at noon today. :) But all is very well over here! I was actually shocked to see that it's -9F out. Feels much warmer. Or my blood is just way thickening....
Monday, June 4, 2018
Castle Rock Loop
McMurdo's Berg Field Center outfits all field camps with the gear they need to survive Antarctic conditions in the summertime. In the winter, just a few hearty BFC'ers stay behind to sort, clean, inventory, and repair all the gear that got used and abused during the rush of the summer season. Plus, this winter team is responsible for maintaining the couple of recreational trails that remain open in wintertime. Knowing this, I asked them if I could go along next time they had to do a maintenance trip around Castle Rock loop, the longest rec trail you can reach by foot from McMurdo town. They kindly scheduled their next trip for that on a Monday (my day off), and I was thrilled to get to go along.
We loaded up a Piston Bully with survival bags, replacement trail flags, and other equipment for fixing old or planting new flags...
...and off we went, in early afternoon, with a full moon rising.
You can still see a faint glow of the sun on that horizon to the left, which is amazing to me. But mostly it was us feeling tough in our red BFC jump suits, walking along the flag line in the mid-winter darkness.
The weather's been so mild the past couple months, there weren't many flags down along the trail, but we did re-set or replace maybe a half-dozen of them, by the headlights of the Piston Bully.
We also opened and inspected the "apples"--the survival pods placed along the trail--and dug out the snow that had managed to blow into them through the imperfect seals on their doors.
I've never been on Castle Rock Loop trail before this (and in the darkness wasn't able to take pictures of Castle Rock itself, with Mount Erebus looming behind it, though we could see the lovely outlines of the scene by eye) and will have to make sure to walk back out there some day toward the end of my time here to see it all in the sunshine. For now, I was really happy for the Piston Bully, as even though I didn't even do much physical work at all, I was DARN cold and tired after three hours out in even these mild-ish winter conditions. Such a fun adventure, though!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)