Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Snow School, Stormy Weather, Christmas, Lab Work!

8:05pm Tuesday, 12/27/2011
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!
After we were bused to the middle of nowhere on the sea ice (Ross Ice Shelf near McMurdo), we had lunch, practiced using backpacking stoves, and then had to set up camp under the tutelage of an instructor. Camp consisted of ice walls constructed from snow blocks/bricks, tents, a kitchen, and trenches, which were optional sleeping quarters. Snow bricks or blocks are cut out of the snow in what we dub a "quarry" using a saw and shovels. We transported them on sleds, as we did our gear from a shed that hosts all the Happy Camper tools and gear to construct a camp.

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. 

While most of the tents in the above photo are dome
tents, this is a Scott tent and it has a two foot wide
skirt around it that gets buried in the snow, which is
why the tent was temporarily surrounded by shovels.

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!
After we'd mostly set up camp our instructor suggested we decide on a camp leader/manager and then he left us to our own devices at ~6:30pm to make dinner and sleep out on the ice shelf on our own. He was about half a mile away the whole time in a large cabin. We made lovely freeze dried backpacking meals for dinner, tidied up camp, warmed water for hot water bottles and hot beverages, and then headed to bed. Well, some of us headed to bed. Joel, another Ohio State student down here, and I constructed a trench in the ground to sleep in. We dug a deep, narrow trench, cut out two alcoves for each of us to sleep in, and then cut long, think bricks to cover the top of the trench. It was an amazing success! We had plenty of space, as the trench was about as deep as I am tall (so ~5ft 6in), and it was plenty warm. 


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

Joel (right) and me (left) searching for our fictitious lost
coworker in a "white out." I am at the end of the rope and
have a broom in my hand, which is not in this photo, that
I am using as a white cane. 


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.

It's hard to capture the wind in a photo, but
these flags kind of represent the force the
wind that day. The flags were quite noisy. Also,
we can usually see the landscapes across the
ice sheet that are beyond the flags.

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!

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Snow School (short)

11:55pm Wednesday, 12/21/2011
30°F


I survived and thrived in Happy Camper (snow/survival school)! It was two days of snow camping, safety and survival training, and just plain awesomeness. We learned a lot and had fun in wonderful sunny and calm weather. I shall elaborate more later. This evening I went to the grand holiday show put on by the supply folks of McMurdo, hence my late post, and I don't have time to write for long. I need to go to bed and get a good night's sleep because I am in the field tomorrow for a day trip. I'm heading to Taylor Valley to collect water samples along Priscu Stream. Tomorrow a little after 10am I get to ride in a helicopter for the first time in my life... For now, here are a couple photos from Happy Camper:


This is how we got from McMurdo to the sea ice. It's
called a Delta and it's tires are as tall as I am.

A view of our lovely kitchen and dining room during happy camper. My
group and I constructed it from scratch with shovels, saws and sleds!  

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Evening hike

8am Monday, 12/19/2011
27°F


On Friday I got some training and orientations out of the way in the morning and then started doing lab work in the late morning and afternoon. In the evening, after dinner, I went on a walk with a few people to Hut Point (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hut_Point). The view from Hut Point back on McMurdo Station was quite nice...


A Weddell seal up close
I also got to see my first non-human mammals of Antarctica. 


Three Weddell seals and cracks in
the sea ice when they get in/out












On our walk back from Hut Point we encountered three Air Force folks going to take a short self guided tour of Scott's Hut (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discovery_Hut). They invited us to join them and as another member of our walking party and I hadn't been inside we accepted their kind offer. 
Entrance to the structure
We were instructed not to touch anything and we had to brush off our boots very thoroughly before going into the hut. There were lots of wooden crates labeled "dog biscuits" throughout the building that were a constant reminder of how different transportation around Antarctica was more than 100 years ago.


The kitchen (note the stack of
dog biscuit boxes to the left)

Friday, December 16, 2011

Settling in (dining and the lab)

8am Saturday, 12/17/2011

23°F


I have now been at McMurdo for a bit over 24 hours. I am pretty impressed with the food. It is a lot better than I expected. McMurdo has a cafeteria setup for dining and the "dining hall" or galley holds about 150 people max by my estimation. Meals happen at the same time every day for windows of 2-2.5 hours. Breakfast is from 5:00-7:30am, lunch is from 11:00am-1:00pm, and dinner is from 5:00-7:30pm. There is also a midnight meal for those on the graveyard shift. On Sundays, however, breakfast isn't served, brunch is from 10:00am-1:00pm, and dinner is from 5:00-7:00pm. Breakfast seems to be a variation of the same thing every day: scrambled eggs, meat, potatoes, omelet station, pastries and baked goods, and continental breakfast goodies (like cereal, oatmeal, yogurt, cottage cheese, and toast). Lunch and dinner vary and so far are tasty and creative. For my first lunch the menu included beef stew, turkey pot pie, vegetarian chili, mashed potatoes. Last night's dinner was pistachio crusted chicken, scallops in pesto, and manicotti. Both of those meals were delicious. Future menus are posted online:


Saturday, December 17  
LUNCH 11:00 AM-1:00 PM
Sesame Braised Beef
Chicken Teriyaki
Lunch today!
Cashew Tempeh

DINNER 5:00 PM-7:30 PM
Safety Dinner!

MidRat Meal 12:00 AM-1:00 AM
Card Holders only 12:00 AM-12:30 AM
Open 12:30 AM-1:00 AM

Sunday, December 18  
CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST 6:00 AM-7:30AM
BRUNCH 10:00AM -1:00PM
Intranet site we can access here in McMurdo's
network for weather conditions, the week's menu, etc.

DINNER 5:00 PM-7:00 PM
Sliced London Broil
Herb-Roasted Chicken
Tempeh Stroganoff

MidRat Meal 12:00 AM-1:00 AM
Card Holders only 12:00 AM-12:30 AM
Open 12:30 AM-1:00 AM

Monday, December 19  
LUNCH 11:00 AM-1:00 PM
Pub Cod
Blackened Chicken
Blackened Tofu

DINNER 5:00 PM-7:30 PM
Lemon Baked Cod
Beef Bourguignon
Bean Cassoulet

MidRat Meal 12:00 AM-1:00 AM
Card Holders only 12:00 AM-12:30 AM
Open 12:30 AM-1:00 AM

Tuesday, December 20  
LUNCH 11:00 AM-1:00 PM
Fried Chicken
BBQ Brisket
Grilled BBQ Tofu

DINNER 5:00 PM-7:30 PM
Roasted Turkey Breast
Ginger-Beer Ham
Quinoa Toss

MidRat Meal 12:00 AM-1:00 AM
Card Holders only 12:00 AM-12:30 AM
Open 12:30 AM-1:00 AM

I don't know what the "safety dinner" tonight will include. Everything is such an adventure! 

One of our lab rooms
The view outside of the lab window





I have several more orientations and training to before I am set here. I have communications and hiking training today, which are only an hour each. Monday morning I have a lab building orientation and a training course for working in the McMurdo Dry Valleys. Then on Tuesday and Wednesday I have "snow school," which is a day and a half long survival training course.

Our research group has two labs in the Crary building, which is where most of the chemistry, geology, and biology labs are located. I have yet to learn my exact analytical chemistry duties, but I think they will include helping make instrumentation work, processing water samples for chlorophyll measurements, and organizing gear for field work. I am in the analytical group of the McMurdo Dry Valleys Long Term Ecological Research (http://www.mcmlter.org/).

I shall leave you with some photos I took this morning...

I thought this ice on the side of the road was pretty

Mount Discovery (almost 8,800ft stratovolcano across McMurdo Sound)

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Made it to the Ice

I made it to Antarctica safe and sound! I don't have too much to report except that I have my issued clothing and all my baggage made it down here, I have had two good meals so far, I have a nice dorm room that I share with one other girl, and I have internet access. 

Here are some photos I've taken this morning and this afternoon......
Just after I got off of the plane on the ice sheet...
The galley (yay for food)

This is looking out across the ice sheet
Most of the dorms. My room is in the building with the person in the red parka in front of it.


Friday, December 9, 2011

Before deployment (test post!)

Alright. This is a post from Columbus to test out my setup and format. (I'll admit mine isn't as nice as my brother's http://blog.davidfrederickbrown.com/. His is really pretty! I copied his title. I figured simple is best). 

Here are a couple photos that inspired/solidified my choices that led me to my upcoming adventure.



This photo is from my first trip to Castle Lake in early May 2009. It was one of my first inklings that I wanted to do hydrology/geochemistry field work in adverse and cold conditions! The person in the red jacket is my Masters adviser, Simon, carrying an expensive instrument. Thank goodness he has balance. This trip was the first field work that I did for my Masters and it was one of my favorite experiences of my time in Reno. The weather was miserable. It was cold, windy, sleety, and snowy. I had a wonderful time.







I went to Montana in March 2011 to do some field work with colleagues of Simon's at Montana Tech. This trip was really fun. It was fascinating getting to do the field work I'd been doing at Castle Lake in snow and the cold, with the exception of my second to last trip to Castle Lake when there was a minor blizzard. There aren't any photos from that trip. During this trip to Montana I also got to experience St. Patrick's Day in Butte and ride on a snow mobile for the first time. Those were two very memorable experiences!