Antarctica

Antarctic News

Scott's Hut at Cape Evans Since my trip to Antarctica in 2004-2005 as part of the United States Antarctic Program  (a National Science Foundation Artist and Writer’s award) I eagerly follow the happenings in Antarctica every Austral summer. I await posts from my ice friends on Facebook, and I track articles on the web. Every year, something exciting happens:  a ship sinks (people are rescued!), someone skis to the south pole, icebergs the size of Vermont break off and send fears of tsunamis north. This year has the usual range of news (including “Will Antarctic Worms Warm to Changing Climate?”). There are a lot of heroic events happening on the southern continent. British skier Felicity Aston has skied solo to the south pole, and will continue on across the continent. If she makes it, she’ll be the first person to solo traverse the continent under her own power alone.

At age 15, Jordan Romero has just climbed Mount Vinson, making him the youngest person to summit the highest peaks on 7 continents.  At 10 he completed three of these summits.

Then there is the usual disaster: a Russian fishing ship is sinking after tearing a hole in its hull.

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Tasman Peninsula

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Tasmania was settled by convicts. In 1824 there were 12,556 Europeans in Tasmania of whom 6,261 were convicts. Living on the island was to be punishment enough, but convicts who re-offended were sent out to the Tasman Peninsula, a jut of land south and east of Hobart, which is the state capital and the island’s largest city. At Port Arthur, the penitentiary still stands, though with no roof, and tourists wander the beautiful British styled gardens, or at night tour the sight to feel the ghosts that haunt these hills. To be imprisoned in such a beautiful place would be a particular agony.

 

I was not sent to Tasmania as a convict. I was on holiday. There were lots of reasons I chose Tasmania, some of which I knew and some I had yet to discover. The main reason was that my childhood friend, Sonia, had written inviting me to join her family for the holidays in a house they had rented outside of Port Arthur. It did not take me long to say yes. In the months that led up to my departure, it occurred to me that I was embarking on a long trip to visit someone I did not really know. That is, the most time Sonia and I had spent together was between the ages of five and ten when we roamed the hills and valleys of Central Pennsylvania under the care and enthusiasm of her mother.  In 1971 her family moved to Australia. Since then we had seen each other twice, the last time in 1983. A lot had happened in the intervening years. On her side she had married and had two children, Nina, 14 and Frankie, 12. On my side—well, too much to tell on my side.

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Antarctica wins Silver Medal

Antarctica: Life on the Ice has won the Silver medal from the Society of American Travel Writers! This is part of their Lowell Thomas awards in journalism. Thank you writers for  making this book such a success!

I know I have been dormant here. But the return of friends to the ice will get me going. For now, my friend Holly (who I met in 2004--she was working with a science team digging for nematodes in the Dry Valleys) is down there working with helicopters. Read her blog to hear some stories of big weather and to see some great pictures.

And I'll be back soon to describe the 2008 Gunks Reunion.

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