I’m in the middle of the Southern Ocean surrounded by icebergs, it’s spectacular. It’s so peaceful, especially at night out on the deck, or up on the bridge where the nightwatchmen provide an extra pair of eyes for the captain, the only artificial light comes from the instruments and the glow from the headlights shining out over the misty ocean. We are currently cruising round the ice pack that surrounds Antarctica on our way to Halley, it’s foggy and snowing and cold in the breeze. The nights are a beautiful dusky blue as the sun dips below the horizon for only a few hours.
A very disheartening day yesterday, none of my equipment wanted to work properly, I realised I didn’t bring a few crucial items which of course there’s nothing I can do about now. I worked late into the night, it’s difficult to switch off when you can’t get away from your work so the days are very long, but light entertainment came in the form of G&Ts and Scrabble – the word of the night being farmhands:)
Today has been much more successful, the remaining problems were solved, not in time for breaking through some ice floes with huge swathes of brown diatoms pouring from them as we crashed through, but there’ll be plenty more ice I’m sure! My favourite job is climbing the mast at the front of the ship to change air sampling tubes, Kate Winslet eat your heart out! The ocean is much calmer now we’re in the sea ice zone, but the ship will occasionally jolt if we hit a big floe, one of them sent everything crashing across my room in the middle of the night!
The work of other scientists on board seems to be going well, spirits are high, the focus at the moment is on moorings which are oceanographic instruments deployed from the ship into the ocean – they rest on the sea bed making measurements and are recovered a few years later. CTD (conductivity, temperature, depth) launches will start soon, here bottles are sent down to various depths in the water so the properties of the water can give information on ocean currents, circulation and stratification. Finally, while others tag Weddell seals, I’ll have chance to get out onto the ice and make some cores.