Today I stayed home from work with a cold. There’s not a whole lot you can do here while you are sick, besides watch TV and try and get better. I never watch TV here, except the occasional movie on one of the movie channels, but I ended up watching the news this morning, which was interesting. We have the armed forces television channel here, so I got to see the nightly news (morning here is last night in the states). It finally hit me how much of reality I have been missing. Like, for example, the Chilean mining crisis. Life here sometimes doesn’t feel that different then life in America, in a very small secluded community somewhere very cold with beautiful views, but we are so very far away from everything, and really don’t come into too much touch with reality (for example, me knowing nothing about this Chilean miner thing until today).
Watching the Armed Forces Network was interesting as well. All of the commercials are aimed at deployed forces. Some were about how to deal with the stress of being deployed. Lots were messages from people in the states to soldiers thanking them for their service. I admit you feel a little odd watching this stuff down here, because even though we are technically “deployed” (and get a newspaper called “Stars and Stripes” for deployed troops) its not like we are actually in similar situations to troops in Iraq or Afghanistan, or anywhere else. Antarctica is a truly unique place.
Things are pretty much the same around here. I went to a science lecture on climate change, which was really hard to grasp, but somehow the ozone hole is playing a small role in protecting Antarctica from suffering the disastrous effects that climate change is having in the Arctic- how’s that for ironic? And that the sea levels are rising not just because of melting ice but primarily because water takes up more space when its warmer. Pretty interesting stuff, overall. Its always nice to go to these science lectures and learn about what is going on in the scientific work on the base…or the work of the entire continent even. I found this lecture really neat because it talked primarily about the peninsula of Antarctica, which I visited on the cruise last December. It even cited scientific work done with ice cores that was done at Verdansky, a Ukrainian station where we got to stop at while on the cruise.
Lastly, the Skua are here. But they deserve their own blog post, once I can take some proper pictures of them.

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