It's a Thanksgiving miracle -- the internet doesn't totally suck! And so I can finally show you some photos. The gorgeous curling uplift of the pressure ridges with a back-drop of volcano Mt. Erebus:
And here's town with a fresh coat of powder from atop Observation Hill last week:
This stark little homestead is a dive shack on the ice at Turtle Rock, reportedly one of the most beautiful dive spots in the world according to those in the know:
The seals like it there, and so do I. We listened to 70s rock while the divers strapped on their tanks and gear, then one by one they slipped beneath the slush and down into the cold quiet deep. Eventually, air bubbles stopped escaping through the hole and a stillness took hold. Other than fifty or so lazy seals, I was the only being on the surface of the ice for miles in every direction. Thirty minutes passed like a single slow breath, and the small circle of open water roiled again to announce the divers' return. It's always fun to get out of town and science.
Sunday, November 27, 2016
Monday, November 21, 2016
This Week in Music
Greetings from the
McMurdo band room, where your heart and voice will soar, break, and soar
again. Overall, I’m pretty
drama-averse. When my pals brought in a
new guitarist, I tried to be welcoming,
open to his suggestions, and not roll my eyes too openly when he couldn’t
consistently alternate between the three chords in a blues…but when he
incorrectly identified a song’s progression as Rhythm changes, he had to be put
in his place. I swear, it wasn’t just
me; apparently he got the vibe and bowed out, and we’ve returned to a tighter,
funner little group. Likewise, with the
jazz group, we were finally all there – guitar, drums, bass, me – and sailing
along; then, at a performance, the tune I most looked forward to went
completely off the rails. At least we
didn’t stop; I kept smiling dopily, and eventually we stuttered back to the
head for one last time through. Luckily,
that was the first tune, so I hope everyone forgot about that by the end. And then comes the moment you pick just the
right song where everybody clicks in and it seems to play itself. Anyway, all this jazz stuff is leading up to
a week from now, at the Crary Lab Science Social, where beakers (scientists) will
swirl glasses of wine and regale each other with witty anecdotes as we noodle
in the background.
A perfectly clear
understanding of the parameters of my job remains elusive, but at least I make
fewer data entry errors. Mystified
people ring me several times a day, and I take a stab at answering their
questions, often thickening the fog. My
boss is like an all-knowing oracle, but with sass: he purses his lips, sharply
inhales, and says, “Let me speak with them, please,” and sets us all straight.
It finally snowed a
good few inches, and we took advantage of the relative humidity to have a
snowball fight. My aim is terrible, but
a sort of drive-by shooting technique helps me score direct hits at close
range. I hope it sticks around long
enough to ski on Thanksgiving, which we’ll celebrate on Saturday in order to
have a two-day weekend. Now, I want
everyone to go out and eat a nice pastry for me, and eat lots of butter, as
it’s difficult to come by down here.
Friday, November 11, 2016
Orange but Not Evil
Oh office job, how you warp a human being… I broke a
personal vow to never create a PowerPoint presentation today. All I did
was copy some cat images from the internet and make a slideshow (well, I didn’t
actually use the slideshow function, I just put the pictures onto subsequent
slides) for my upcoming safety lecture on sunburn prevention. (In the
interest of “safety first,” every work center conducts a weekly safety meeting
in which very important topics are discussed. I thought some
visual aids in the form of a kitten wearing a sombrero would energize the
otherwise blandly informative content.
We all kept an eye on election results throughout our
Wednesday afternoon. Things were not looking good when I took a break for
dinner and band practice. I was at the Coffee House when the blow struck;
I kept looking beseechingly at the messenger for ten minutes, waiting for
the “Just kidding!” And then the thought that all this life, work,
and play here might shudder to a halt due to lack of interest and funding
threatened to swamp us all in grief, which we fought back with more wine.
It still feels far off, but the distance back home shrank quite a bit.
Tonight is the long-awaited, one-time-only performance by
Cold As Ice - Antarctica’s Premier Foreigner Cover Band. Things are
shaping up for a rager of a Saturday night, but as I have a pressure ridge tour
to lead tomorrow morning, I’m shooting for 2am bedtime. As always, safety
first, and remember to cover up in the sun.
Sunday, November 6, 2016
SKIIIIII
Something fairly magical happened: after two years of
meaning to cross country ski the ice shelf in Antarctica, I finally DID.
A six-mile chunk of it, at least. Everything was just right, from the
perfect weather to the energetic pal that skis up to 20 miles a day. When
we stopped, just a few minutes short of catching a ride home on a shuttle van,
we barely waited until a delta (big ol’ industrial truck) came trundling up at
8mph and gave us a lift. Being out in the sun was refreshing, and I
felt better about the slab of melted brie I had eaten at brunch.
So, work – that’s right, I work here. The data entry
is rote but not so bad; it’s the tiny bullshit like accidentally sending the
Northbound Priority List instead of the Northbound Packing List that gets me
flustered. (Such incredibly different things, maybe we should
differentiate their names a bit?) I get an odd satisfaction from printing
labels and stickers (always been a sticker fan), and while filing itself is a
blah activity, I like the facility of referencing a physical record. And
then there’s afternoon hot dog break. One of my coworkers gets pretty
snacky near the end of the day, and has developed a rotating menu of hot
pockets, empanadas, chicken nuggets (microwaved), and hot dogs on the Foreman
grill. It’s pretty entertaining to see it sizzling away in front of our
window framing remote snowy mountains across the sea.
The near-eternal South Pole winter finally came to an end,
and a few pale friends stopped over in town for a day or two before being
released back into the greater world. I thought a year of two-minute
showers, spotty 3am internet access, and nowhere near enough marshmallows would
have them looking hollow-eyed and shell-shocked, but relief at leaving put huge
smiles on their faces. I hope they continue to come back to life in New
Zealand, back home, and beyond.
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