Anyone out there to chat?


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  • #121
    Anonymous
    Member

     I was wondering what it is like there.  I do not get to travel and due to accident and illnesses I am now in a wheel chair even so it be cool to hear from some one

    #1531
    thepooles98
    Keymaster

    What’s it like down here? Wow that’s a hard one to answer because everything is so diverse. Right now we are in the coldest part of winter. The temperature the other day was approaching 50 below zero farenheight a couple of days ago and the windchills regularly are in the -70 degree range. Temperatures like that make -20 feel warm. For the most part we learn to deal with the cold pretty quick. To spend the winter you have to go to a survival school where we learn about hypothermia and frostbite and then have to build a snow shelter or pitch a tent and spend 24 hours out on the ice shelf. See camper school in the photo albums. We all watch out for each other. If we are going away from the confines of the base we generally go in pairs and carry radios. No one minds if you have to jump in a vehicle or building to warm up. It’s a tight community in the winter. With 200 some odd people stuck here for eight months we get to know each other pretty well and everyone watches out for the safety of the group.
    Summer is pretty different. Instead of it being night for 24 hours a day, the sun is up all the time. It goes around in a big circle all day and all night lone. I find the constant daylight harder to get used to than the darkness of the winter. There is just something odd about having to wear sunglasses at 1 in the morning. On the other hand Antarctica and the ice shelf are nothing short of awesome in the sunlight. My favorite thing in summer is when fog forms. It freezes into an ice fog of microscopic crystals. When the sun hits it the fog sparkles like someone has dropped pixie dust. We call it diamond dust.
    Summer also brings the wildlife. Usually there are plenty of penguins walking around along with lot’s of seals. When the icebreaker opens a channel into McMurdo often times whales will swim  in. That’s pretty awesome too. I’ve been here three years and coming back for a fourth and I’m still not tired of it.
    Hope this gives you some idea of things.
    mike

    #1532
    Anonymous
    Member

    Thanks for the response Mike.  Our winters get bad here too but not that bad So why R U there? 
     


    Original Message


    From: Antarctic memories
    Sent: Monday, August 12, 2002 1:40 AM
    To: Antarctic memories
    Subject: Re: Anyone out there to chat?
     

    [font=Arial, size=4:2qbizn1n]New Message on Antarctic memories[/font:2qbizn1n]

    [font=Arial, Helvetica, Sans Serif:2qbizn1n]Anyone out there to chat?[/font:2qbizn1n]

    Antarcticmemories@groups.msn.com?subject=Re%3A%20Anyone%20out%20there%20to%20chat%3F
      [font=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,Sans Serif:2qbizn1n]Recommend[/font:2qbizn1n] Message 2 in Discussion
    [font=Arial, Helvetica, Sans Serif:2qbizn1n]From: [/font:2qbizn1n][font=Arial, Helvetica, Sans Serif:2qbizn1n]mike+lorie[/font:2qbizn1n]
    What’s it like down here? Wow that’s a hard one to answer because everything is so diverse. Right now we are in the coldest part of winter. The temperature the other day was approaching 50 below zero farenheight a couple of days ago and the windchills regularly are in the -70 degree range. Temperatures like that make -20 feel warm. For the most part we learn to deal with the cold pretty quick. To spend the winter you have to go to a survival school where we learn about hypothermia and frostbite and then have to build a snow shelter or pitch a tent and spend 24 hours out on the ice shelf. See camper school in the photo albums. We all watch out for each other. If we are going away from the confines of the base we generally go in pairs and carry radios. No one minds if you have to jump in a vehicle or building to warm up. It’s a tight community in the winter. With 200 some odd people stuck here for eight months we get to know each other pretty well and everyone watches out for the safety of the group.
    Summer is pretty different. Instead of it being night for 24 hours a day, the sun is up all the time. It goes around in a big circle all day and all night lone. I find the constant daylight harder to get used to than the darkness of the winter. There is just something odd about having to wear sunglasses at 1 in the morning. On the other hand Antarctica and the ice shelf are nothing short of awesome in the sunlight. My favorite thing in summer is when fog forms. It freezes into an ice fog of microscopic crystals. When the sun hits it the fog sparkles like someone has dropped pixie dust. We call it diamond dust.
    Summer also brings the wildlife. Usually there are plenty of penguins walking around along with lot’s of seals. When the icebreaker opens a channel into McMurdo often times whales will swim  in. That’s pretty awesome too. I’ve been here three years and coming back for a fourth and I’m still not tired of it.
    Hope this gives you some idea of things.
    mike

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    #1533
    Night1389
    Member

    i want chat with u if u agree


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    #1534
    thepooles98
    Keymaster

    To Lonelyone 
    I guess I come down here because I love it. I know that the day Lorie and I decide not to come back will be a bittersweet day. It’s a tough existance for sure, but it’s something that only a handful of people will ever experience. Antarctica is still a place of wild beauty even if we are in the largest Antarctic base on the continent.
    To Night
     I’d love to chat with everyone but the timezones down here don’t allow for it. when I get off of work and have the time to sit and relax, it’s the middle of the night in most of the rest of the world except australia and New Zealand. Maybe someone else will chat.
    mike

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