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- title: Redeployment Part Two
- url: https://brr.fyi/posts/redeployment-part-two
- hash_url: 284205d0f99390dd18d3af12ff53227c
- archive_date: 2024-01-21
- og_image: https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/redeployment-part-two-icon.jpg
- description: First flight to the South Pole after a long, isolated winter. Winterover staff handing over their work and preparing to depart.
- favicon: https://brr.fyi/favicon-32x32.png
- language: en_US
-
- <p><em>This is part two of a multi-part series. Check out
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/redeployment-part-one">part one</a> if you haven’t already, then check out
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/redeployment-part-three">part three</a> next!</em></p>
- <hr>
- <p>Hello and welcome back! We’re going to pick up right where we left off.
- In <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/redeployment-part-one">Redeployment Part One</a>, we emerged from polar night, deep-cleaned the station,
- and prepared for the first flight and the arrival of our summer crew.</p>
- <h1 id="first-flight">First Flight</h1>
- <p>The first flight of the season isn’t actually destined for the South Pole. It’s a “mobilization” or “transit”
- flight, and the South Pole is just a convenient stop along their route!</p>
- <p>During the Antarctic summer, <a href="https://borekair.com/">Kenn Borek Air</a> (KBA) flies all over Antarctica, under contract
- with the United States Antarctic Program and several other
- <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Antarctic_Program">national Antarctic programs</a>.
- But these planes don’t stay in Antarctica year-round – they “de-mobilize”
- and fly back to Canada at the end of the Antarctic summer.</p>
- <p>Before these planes and their flight crews can start doing on-continent flights across Antarctica, they have to get to
- Antarctica once again.
- For example, the planes that will fly missions for the United States
- Antarctic Program need to get all the way from Canada to their summer base of operations at McMurdo.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/kba-mcmurdo-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/kba-mcmurdo-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/kba-mcmurdo-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/kba-mcmurdo-01-small.jpg" alt="KBA McMurdo 01">
- </picture>
- <em>KBA Baslers and Twin Otters stationed at McMurdo for the 2022-2023 summer. These small
- planes and their crews have to get to Antarctica at the start of every summer.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>For smaller planes (KBA Baslers and Twin Otters), it’s simply not feasible to fly
- the same route as larger intercontinental planes. The intercontinental route takes these larger planes
- around the non-Antarctic world, through Christchurch, and
- across the South Pacific Ocean
- and <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Ocean">Southern Ocean</a> to McMurdo.
- For smaller planes, the distances involved are just too great. Even with
- <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferry_tank">ferry tanks</a>, it’s too far for these planes to fly safely.
- The distance from Christchurch to McMurdo is about 2,415 miles.</p>
- <p>Instead, these KBA planes depart Canada and travel down through North and South America, making whatever
- stops are necessary along the way. The planes arrive and hold in
- <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punta_Arenas">Punta Arenas, Chile</a>. Punta Arenas is one of the main
- <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antarctic_gateway_cities">Antarctic gateway cities</a> for operations
- on the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antarctic_Peninsula">Antarctic Peninsula</a>.</p>
- <p>Once a good weather window opens up, they fly across the
- <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drake_Passage">Drake Passage</a> to
- <a href="https://www.bas.ac.uk/polar-operations/sites-and-facilities/facility/rothera/">Rothera</a>,
- a British Antarctic Survey (BAS) station on
- the Antarctic Peninsula. Rothera is located about 1,013
- miles from Punta Arenas.</p>
- <p>Here’s a quick timelapse that shows runway operations at Rothera, courtesy of Matt Hughes from BAS
- (<a href="https://www.instagram.com/hughes_matt/">Instagram</a>, <a href="https://twitter.com/hughes_matt">X/Twitter</a>) and
- included here with Matt’s permission:</p>
- <p>
- <video preload="metadata" controls="" playsinline="" poster="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/matt-rothera-runway-01-poster.jpg">
- <source src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/matt-rothera-runway-01.webm" type="video/webm"></source>
- <source src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/matt-rothera-runway-01.mp4" type="video/mp4"></source>
- </video>
- </p>
- <p>Once the planes arrive at Rothera, they need to get all the way to McMurdo, on the opposite coast of
- Antarctica. The shortest route takes them through the South Pole! For this particular transit path,
- Pole is just a glorified pit stop. Pole is located about 1,550 miles from Rothera, and McMurdo
- is located about 845 miles from Pole.</p>
- <p>The planes will depart Rothera when there’s a good weather window.
- Once a plane arrives at the South Pole, if it’s a <a href="https://borekair.com/fleet/dc3t/">Basler</a>,
- the crew will usually want fuel and a quick stretch, then they’re on their way.
- If it’s a smaller / slower plane such as a
- <a href="https://borekair.com/fleet/dhc6/">Twin Otter</a>, they may stay overnight. This depends on how long they’ve been
- flying and where they are heading.</p>
- <p>This means that, for Baslers transiting through Pole to McMurdo,
- a “good weather window” means good weather at Rothera <strong>and</strong> Pole <strong>and</strong> McMurdo,
- all on the same day. This is necessary to minimize the likelihood of the crew having to stay
- the night at Pole.</p>
- <p>Rothera is much better equipped for overnight guests than Pole, for both the crew and
- the plane itself. Although, when necessary, Pole does have the infrastructure to support planes
- on the ground for extended periods of time.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/outlets-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/outlets-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/outlets-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/outlets-01-small.jpg" alt="Outlets 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Electrical outlets near the aircraft parking area, for connecting ground support
- equipment, including electric heaters.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>Our first flight was a Basler, mobilizing through Pole en route to its final destination. It arrived from
- Rothera on the morning of October 24, 2023. This was the first outside human contact for winterover Polies since
- February 2023!</p>
- <p>Photo is again courtesy of fellow winterover Jeff Capps (<a href="https://www.instagram.com/thejeffcapps/">Instagram</a>):</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/jeff-plane-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/jeff-plane-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/jeff-plane-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/jeff-plane-01-small.jpg" alt="Jeff Plane 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Our first KBA Basler, on its transit / mobilization flight through Pole! Photo credit: Jeff Capps</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>The plane didn’t stay on the ground long. Just long enough to say hello, fill up on fuel, and drop off some
- unofficial but <strong>MUCH</strong>-appreciated cargo: <em>Freshies</em>.</p>
- <p>This wasn’t an official USAP resupply flight to Pole, but the flight crew was kind enough to carry a small
- amount of fresh foods for the overwintering crew at Pole. We hadn’t seen fresh food in several months, so even
- a small amount (we’re talking one piece of fruit per Polie) was a fantastic gift.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/first-apple-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/first-apple-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/first-apple-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/first-apple-01-small.jpg" alt="First Apple 01">
- </picture>
- <em>My first fresh food in months! An apple, courtesy of a KBA crew mobilizing through Pole.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <h1 id="station-opening">Station Opening</h1>
- <p>After the first mobilization flight, it was only a few more days until the next major milestone: Station Opening!</p>
- <p>It began to feel “real” once we put the flight slide back up on our slideshow. We turn this one off over the
- winter – with no flights for 8.5 months, it’s not necessary. There’s no sense in teasing us all winter with
- abstract concepts such as “departing South Pole”. Turning it back on, a week before station opened,
- served as a reminder that things were about to feel much different vs. this isolated winter we had grown used to.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/departure-slide-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/departure-slide-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/departure-slide-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/departure-slide-01-small.jpg" alt="Departure Slide 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Departure message back on our station slideshow!</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>On Saturday, October 28, 2023, we welcomed our first official USAP inbound/outbound passenger flight between McMurdo
- and South Pole. This was on one of the Baslers that had mobilized through Pole just a few days prior.</p>
- <p>The first flight always brings in the “adults” – the fulltime staff who work on the Antarctic program
- year-round. Most of them deploy for the summer, then leave for the winter, leaving the station under the
- care of seasonal contractors (like me!).</p>
- <p>This rotation (summer at Pole, winter remote) allows the fulltimers to oversee
- summer station projects, but it also gives them enough time offsite during the Antarctic winter.
- These are more “career” positions, vs. the “seasonal contractor”
- positions that make up the majority of the support staff. The expectation is that this is a stable, sustainable
- pace of work that allows the fulltimers to remain in their positions year-after-year. Summer at Pole for
- these folks is usually between 3 and 3.5 months.</p>
- <p>Of course, the first flight also brought our first official resupply of freshies!</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/freshies-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/freshies-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/freshies-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/freshies-01-small.jpg" alt="Freshies 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Our first official (although small) resupply of freshies.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>This first resupply also included eggs! Our first in almost 5 months, since we consumed
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/the-last-egg">The Last Egg</a> of the winter on June 6, 2023.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/eggs-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/eggs-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/eggs-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/eggs-01-small.jpg" alt="Eggs 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Our first eggs in almost 5 months!</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>The freshies were, of course, rationed carefully. This ensured that us crusty winterovers had our fill.
- This is mostly a playful thing on station, but there’s truth to the sentiment.</p>
- <p>If you’ve <em>just</em> arrived
- on station, that means you’ve come from Real Life™, where you recently had access to all the fresh food
- you can eat. By contrast, us winterovers are at the tail end of 8.5 months of isolation. We haven’t tasted
- fresh food in a long time. Please – leave the eggs for us. We need them.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/eggs-sign-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/eggs-sign-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/eggs-sign-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/eggs-sign-01-small.jpg" alt="Eggs Sign 01">
- </picture>
- <em>"Fresh eggs only for winterovers at this time."</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>With the first flight, we also begin saying goodbye to our first round of winterover colleagues. Many of us
- met for the first time at Pole, and we spent 8.5+ months isolated together.</p>
- <p>Pole quickly became our entire lives,
- for better or worse. It was a static and fixed population, and after <em>months</em> of immersion, it began
- to feel eternal and unchanging. The outside world feels less… real when you’re at Pole. You’re separated
- by physical and information barriers. You can’t go anywhere, and your access to the world is exclusively through
- slow and unreliable Internet connectivity.</p>
- <p>When we said goodbye to some of our colleagues, it was the first real milestone that surfaced long-repressed
- feelings about “real life”, the transient nature of contract work, and the prospect of reintegrating into
- society. Our colleagues were <em>leaving</em>. They were going to <em>get out of Antarctica</em>.
- There is a real world beyond this place, and in just a few short days, they would be <em>back in it</em>.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/coats-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/coats-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/coats-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/coats-01-small.jpg" alt="Coats 01">
- </picture>
- <em>New coats in the coat room, and our departed winterovers' coats no longer hanging in their normal spots.
- Big changes here at South Pole Station!</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>The flight out of Pole
- can’t carry as many people as the flight into Pole. When the plane departs McMurdo, it’s taking off from
- sea level. When the plane departs Pole, it’s taking off from almost 10,000 feet above sea level.
- The allowable cargo load is lower for this takeoff from elevation. A
- Basler can typically carry 11-14 people to Pole and 6-8 people out of Pole, depending on passenger
- weight and cargo requirements.</p>
- <h1 id="turnover-and-eternal-waiting">Turnover and Eternal Waiting</h1>
- <p>Station opening marked the beginning of the <em>turnover</em> phase of Antarctic life. Newcomers arrived on
- every subsequent flight, and winterovers began trickling out. Choosing who flies in and who flies out
- is a delicate balance, and it changes day-to-day.</p>
- <p>Some teams need more time to hand off their work, from the outgoing winterovers to
- the incoming summer staff. Some teams need less. Some teams have a lot of work that happens all at once, and the
- winterovers have to stay longer to help.</p>
- <p>Some teams can’t even <em>begin</em> turnover until critical support roles
- are filled and summer teams are up and running. Summer replacements for those teams typically won’t make it down
- until the required support staff are in place. This means those winterovers are stuck at Pole the longest,
- long after their fellow winterover colleagues have departed.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/baggage-box-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/baggage-box-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/baggage-box-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/baggage-box-01-small.jpg" alt="Baggage Box 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Delivering a baggage box to station from one of the Baslers that landed at Pole on November 11, 2023.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>In addition, we’re limited by flight capacity. For the first
- several weeks of the summer season, we only have Baslers. The LC-130s need more support infrastructure
- (for example, firefighting teams) on the ground at Pole. The infrastructure to support LC-130s
- can only be built out once the first critical summer staff have arrived on Baslers.</p>
- <p>Baslers can hold only a handful of people,
- and the weather is always dicey this time of year. This means <strong>lots</strong> of canceled flights!
- In the 18 days between when the first flight arrived
- and when I finally flew out, we only managed to get five total flights to Pole, despite trying nearly every
- single day. Weather, equipment, and personnel issues contributed to a series of delays. These delays are typical,
- but they’re still frustrating for antsy winterovers who want to <em>get out</em> at the end of a long winter.</p>
- <p>The majority of winterovers
- do <em>not</em> stay the upcoming summer. Some folks do summer and then winter, but very few do winter and then summer.
- It’s easy to go from fast-paced, bustling summer into relaxing, slow winter. It’s much harder to go the other
- direction, from winter into summer.
- By the end of winter, most of us, however well-adjusted, however strong our coping mechanisms,
- were ready to <em>get out of there</em>.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/winterovers-waiting-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/winterovers-waiting-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/winterovers-waiting-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/winterovers-waiting-01-small.jpg" alt="Winterovers Waiting 01">
- </picture>
- <em>"Winter-Overs waiting for planes to fly to South Pole."</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>Everyone has their own superstition or ritual for cutting through the delays and summoning a plane.
- It’s a silly notion, but it’s something to do. It provides a much-needed distraction from the stress of waiting,
- and it lets us dream that we’re somehow in control of the weather.</p>
- <p>For some, it’s a special meal. “If galley makes Chicken and Dumplings, the plane will come.”</p>
- <p>For others, it’s drinking alcohol. “If I am hungover and don’t want to move, the plane will come and I’ll have
- to drag myself onto it.”</p>
- <p>For others, it’s a movie. We chose Shrek. If we watch Shrek, the plane will come. We watched Shrek
- <em>SEVERAL</em> times. Nobody said the ritual was guaranteed to succeed.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/flight-ritual-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/flight-ritual-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/flight-ritual-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/flight-ritual-01-small.jpg" alt="Flight Ritual 01">
- </picture>
- <em>One of many rituals for summoning a flight: watching Shrek.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>Eternal waiting also meant going over and over in your head, trying to figure out what else you should see
- while you’re still at Pole. Most of us had been here about a year, and we’ve seen everything.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/winterover-photo-wall-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/winterover-photo-wall-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/winterover-photo-wall-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/winterover-photo-wall-01-small.jpg" alt="Winterover Photo Wall 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Taking time to really look up and down the hallways.
- This wall displays annual winterover crew photos going back several decades.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>We all lived, for an entire winter, just a few hundred feet from the <em>actual, geographic South Pole</em>.
- <strong>Literally</strong> any time I wanted to, I could go outside and touch it.
- It was easy! It was right there! Only ~1,700 people, in the history of forever,
- have ever had the experience of wintering over at the South Pole.
- It was 100°F below zero! It was pitch black! We were doing
- world-changing science! We were thousands of miles from civilization!</p>
- <p>Most of us were very much over it. We were desensitized
- to the sheer mind-boggling novelty of where we were. We went about our daily routines, and the
- unique context faded into the background. We sat around in our pajamas, sipping tea, playing board games.
- The most interesting topic of conversation is whether there would be tater tots at breakfast tomorrow.</p>
- <p>But in these last few days, I did my best to recapture the magic of where I was. I walked around station,
- inside and out. I paid attention to the little details and the unique things I could only do here.</p>
- <p>For example, here’s a quick walk around the geographic South Pole, in which I hit every longitudinal value
- over the course of 37 seconds.
- Anyone could do this! At any time! For a brief few minutes,
- I was the World’s Southernmost Human. I did this once when I arrived, once or twice throughout the year, and now,
- just days before I departed, I was doing it for the last time.</p>
- <p>
- <video preload="metadata" controls="" playsinline="" poster="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/walk-around-the-world-01-poster.jpg">
- <source src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/walk-around-the-world-01.webm" type="video/webm"></source>
- <source src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/walk-around-the-world-01.mp4" type="video/mp4"></source>
- </video>
- </p>
- <p>Side note: My walk around the world was only 37 seconds, because I was so close to the convergence point.
- Polar sailing events in the Southern Ocean also have to contend with this same issue. The tighter your
- route, i.e. the further South you are, the faster you can complete the circumnavigation. Here’s a fascinating
- <a href="https://www.theoceanrace.com/en/news/13635_Managing-the-ice-limit">article</a>
- explaining how the organizers of a polar sailing event established an Ice Exclusion Zone.
- Obviously sailors would have an incentive to
- go as far South as possible to shorten the course, but that increases the risk of hazardous encounters with
- icebergs. Hence, a southern limit for the event.</p>
- <p>Speaking of the geographic South Pole – here’s my attempt from last Summer
- to get as close to the geographic South Pole as my phone’s GPS would register.</p>
- <p>This was shortly after I <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/south-pole-arrival">arrived</a> at Pole, during Summer 2022/2023. I remember being
- thrilled and geeking out about the sheer novelty of standing at the bottom of the world.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/gps-01.png">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/gps-01.png" type="image/png"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/gps-01.png" alt="GPS 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Getting as close to the geographic South Pole as I could.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>I was able to get to 89°59.9990’S latitude! I’m not sure if this is
- a limitation of the Android GPS infrastructure, a limitation in this particular GPS app,
- or if I simply wasn’t persistent enough to find exactly 90°00.0000’S.</p>
- <p>If I had been able to find 90°00.0000’S exactly,
- the displayed compass would have been inaccurate. There is no South, East, or West from exactly 90°S, only North in
- every direction! A fun edge case for compass design. You can see what this would look like in this stylized
- representation from the 2014 pole marker. This photo is from
- <a href="https://www.southpolestation.com/trivia/2013marker.html">SouthPoleStation.com</a>.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/all-points-north-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/all-points-north-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/all-points-north-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/all-points-north-01-small.jpg" alt="All Points North 01">
- </picture>
- <em>The 2014 pole marker, with a compass that shows North in all directions.
- Photo credit: SouthPoleStation.com</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <h1 id="south-pole-departure">South Pole Departure</h1>
- <p>My scheduled flight out of Pole was the first LC-130. After four Baslers, we finally had the ground crew on
- hand, and the LC-130s had made it “on-continent” from Christchurch. My flight would be the first
- passenger/cargo LC-130 between McMurdo and Pole.</p>
- <p>On the morning of November 16, 2023, Comms greeted us with the radio call we were all hoping for:</p>
- <p><em>Attention South Pole, attention South Pole: Skiier <number> has departed Williams field, and is
- estimating South Pole at 1430. This is an inbound / outbound passenger flight. Thank you.</em></p>
- <p>The plane was heading our way! Now the final remaining risk was a “boomerang”. A boomerang is when
- the plane turns around mid-flight due to weather or mechanical issues.</p>
- <p>A boomerang is emotional whiplash for the affected
- Antarcticans, coming or going. If you were bright-eyed, full of energy, and excited to get to Pole? Sorry.
- If you were crusty, worn out after a long winter, and ready to get back to civilization? Sorry.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/boomerang-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/boomerang-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/boomerang-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/boomerang-01-small.jpg" alt="Boomerang 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Are you ready to boomerang?</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>Once the flight passed “Pole 3”, an in-flight landmark most of the way to Pole,
- the fear of a boomerang faded. The plane was almost guaranteed to make it all the way.
- This was when it became real: we were actually, truly leaving!</p>
- <p>In the last few minutes before the plane landed, we did a final walkthrough of our rooms, making sure they
- were clean and ready for the next crew. I had lived here for 11 months, and now it was cleaned out and ready
- for a new arrival:</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/pole-berthing-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/pole-berthing-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/pole-berthing-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/pole-berthing-01-small.jpg" alt="Pole Berthing 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Berthing room, cleaned out and ready for the next Polie.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>When the plane landed, the new arrivals shuffled into the station. There were quite a few of them! LC-130s are <em>large</em>,
- and they can carry a lot of passengers and cargo. These are our workhorse planes. Pole will get several
- LC-130s per week throughout the summer.</p>
- <p>Cargo staff began unloading pallets of cargo for Pole, and loading pallets of cargo destined for McMurdo.</p>
- <p>The last order of business for departing passengers inside the station was to drop off our radios,
- so they could be reprogrammed for the new summer staff.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/radio-dropoff-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/radio-dropoff-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/radio-dropoff-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/radio-dropoff-01-small.jpg" alt="Radio Dropoff 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Turning in our radios on the way out the door!</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>Finally, our little group of departing winterovers, myself included, left South Pole Station for the season.</p>
- <p>As we walked to the plane, we all stopped to take a final round of photos and videos. It was an exciting moment!
- We were thrilled that we were finally leaving, but we were also aware that many of us would choose not to return
- for a subsequent season. Our last few minutes at the South Pole!</p>
- <p>
- <video preload="metadata" controls="" playsinline="" poster="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/walk-to-plane-01-poster.jpg">
- <source src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/walk-to-plane-01.webm" type="video/webm"></source>
- <source src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/walk-to-plane-01.mp4" type="video/mp4"></source>
- </video>
- </p>
- <p>And then, suddenly, we were on the plane and departing Pole. It’s the same type of plane I flew
- in on – see <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/south-pole-arrival">South Pole Arrival</a> for more photos.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/lc130-cargo-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/lc130-cargo-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/lc130-cargo-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/lc130-cargo-01-small.jpg" alt="LC-130 Cargo 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Cargo on our LC-130 flight out of Pole, including all our winterover postal mail.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>Once we were in the air, we alternated between relaxing and staring out the windows. Once we got closer to
- the coast, we began to see <em>mountains</em> for the first time since arriving at Pole. Pole is completely
- featureless – no mountains, no rocks, no dirt whatsoever. Just flat, miles-thick ice as far as the eye
- can see. Seeing mountains out the window was a treat.</p>
- <p>
- <video preload="metadata" controls="" playsinline="" poster="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/in-flight-01-poster.jpg">
- <source src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/in-flight-01.webm" type="video/webm"></source>
- <source src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/in-flight-01.mp4" type="video/mp4"></source>
- </video>
- </p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/lc130-window-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/lc130-window-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/lc130-window-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-two/lc130-window-01-small.jpg" alt="LC-130 Window 01">
- </picture>
- <em>View out the window of our LC-130, seeing actual rocks for the first time in 11 months!</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p><em>This is part two of a multi-part series. Check out
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/redeployment-part-one">part one</a> if you haven’t already, then check out
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/redeployment-part-three">part three</a> next!</em></p>
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