31°F (but it got up to 40°F this afternoon)
I haven't written in a while because lab work and the holidays have been talking up much of my time. I promised that I would elaborate on my snow school training, aka Happy Camper, so I shall start with that. Happy Camper is two days of snow camping and survival training. I participated in it from December 21-22. We had a great group of people that ranged from early 20s to late 50s. Our group was also very small, which was nice for the dynamics of the camp.
Solstice Happy Camper Group! |
Looking roughly in the direction of McMurdo, this was our camp, but minus the kitchen. The ice/snow wall around the tents was to protect us from the wind. |
After setting up the tents and the wind wall, which was three large snow bricks high, we built a kitchen. The kitchen was dug down a bit into the ground, especially the counter area for stoves. Our kitchen also had lovely bench seating, which I shared a photo of in my last post.
Stove on the counter in the kitchen melting snow for drinking water. The counter is at ground level. |
Happy campers in the kitchen! |
Joel and me constructing the trench. We don't have it as deep as we want it here and haven't started our alcoves yet. |
Inside our trench from Joel's perspective looking over at me in my alcove. The "door" is a fleece blanket. |
It took us about five hours to finish our trench, so we didn't get to bed until a bit after midnight. Then in the morning we had to fill in the trench so that no one wandering around the area in the future might get injured by falling into our trench. After constructing snow bricks and digging out or trench for hours the day before, shoveling snow into our deep trench was tiring and Joel and I were plenty sore.
The next day in Happy Camper we made breakfast, took down camp, and transported everything back to the nearby cabin or into storage. This second day of training consisted of learning to use various radios/comms and practicing our survival skills and knowledge by acting out survival scenarios. The first scenario was a plan crash where we had an injured person and we had to tend to him and set up camp. The second scenario was that there was a white out and we'd lost someone a few hours ago that had gone out to the outhouse. This scenario involved putting buckets on anyone's head that was tasked to head outside and search for our lost person. Joel and I volunteered for that and we looked pretty silly walking around outside with buckets on our heads trying to make it to the outhouse while tied to each other and tethered to the cabin so that we didn't get lost.
Learning to use an old military radio |
Happy Camper was a blast, but it was also a great learning experience. I have no experience camping in the snow and I have very little survival training beyond basic first aid and CPR training. It was the highlight of last week.
We had some interesting weather the day after I got back from Happy Camper. The wind was really strong through McMurdo and visibility was poor. All travel in and out of town was postponed and the weather was deemed Condition 2, which I had not experienced yet.
The view from our lab building on December 23. Usually it's clear and you can see the dorms to the left and the hills behind McMurdo perfectly clearly. |
The Christmas holiday weekend here was very well celebrated. I went to several concerts and parties that showcased the close and talented community that inhabits McMurdo. The holiday meal was served on December 24th and consisted of numerous tasty entrees, side dishes, and desserts, like lobster tail, stuffed pork, pot roast, beef Wellington, duck, sweet potatoes and squash, mashed potatoes, stuffing, cake, pie, and cookies. It was a great meal.
I haven't made it out to the field yet. The weather on December 23rd prevented our proposed day trip to Taylor Valley to collect water samples. I have been helping organize for another trip to Taylor Valley, which we'll hopefully do tomorrow and stay overnight and get back the 29th. Thus far the researcher from Ohio State that I am working with, Kathy, and I have gotten and instrument working/running that measures DOC (dissolved inorganic carbon) and can measure TN ) total nitrogen in water samples. We are both unfamiliar with the instrument and it has new software relative to how it was run/used last year, so we are taking everything step by step.
I should get to bed as I hopefully have my first stint in the field tomorrow. I will try to be better about posting more frequently. Hopefully Taylor Valley provides excellent photographs!