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- title: Redeployment Part Three
- url: https://brr.fyi/posts/redeployment-part-three
- hash_url: e8748af541273328d9aa9f1aeb1087b2
- archive_date: 2024-01-21
- og_image: https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/redeployment-part-three-icon.jpg
- description: Departing Antarctica after 446 days on-ice. Relaxing in Christchurch, then heading home. What an adventure!
- favicon: https://brr.fyi/favicon-32x32.png
-
- <p><em>This is the third and final part of a three-part series. Check out
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/redeployment-part-one">part one</a> and <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/redeployment-part-two">part two</a> if you haven’t already!</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-two">Redeployment Part Two</a>, we got our first flight of the season and handed over
- responsibilities to the summer crew. Then, finally, I departed South Pole for McMurdo.</p>
- <h1 id="back-in-mcmurdo">Back in McMurdo</h1>
- <p>After just over 3 hours in the air, our plane landed at Williams Field in McMurdo and parked for the “night”:</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/lc130-mcmurdo-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/lc130-mcmurdo-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/lc130-mcmurdo-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/lc130-mcmurdo-01-small.jpg" alt="LC-130 McMurdo 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Our LC-130 parked at McMurdo.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>There are no direct flights from Pole to Christchurch – everyone connects through McMurdo.</p>
- <p>Most of the time, people departing Pole have to spend a few hours or even a few days in McMurdo. This is
- based on flight schedules and delays. Efforts to schedule “straight through” flights, where you transfer to
- a Christchurch-bound plane right on the airfield, are usually thwarted by weather or other factors. Sometimes
- it works out, but most of the time it does not.</p>
- <p>In our case, we were scheduled to depart McMurdo the following afternoon, which meant spending the night.</p>
- <p>Our ride from Williams Field into McMurdo was a “Delta”. These are McMurdo’s oldest still-operating passenger
- vehicles. The ride into town was about 40 minutes.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/delta-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/delta-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/delta-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/delta-01-small.jpg" alt="Delta 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Our ride into town for the night -- one of McMurdo's oldest personnel
- transport vehicles, known as a "Delta".</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>When we landed in McMurdo, we started breathing sea-level air for the first time in a very long time.
- After living at <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/pressure-altitude">10,000 feet</a> for a year,
- and then suddenly arriving at sea level, you immediately notice differences. Most importantly –
- you feel like a superhero. The air is so thick and full of oxygen!
- The effect only lasts a few days, but it’s a good time to
- tackle any hikes in McMurdo. It was fun to scramble up Observation Hill with this newfound, sea-level energy.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/mcmurdo-observation-hill-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/mcmurdo-observation-hill-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/mcmurdo-observation-hill-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/mcmurdo-observation-hill-01-small.jpg" alt="Observation Hill 01">
- </picture>
- <em>McMurdo's Observation Hill, on my brief one-day layover.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>It was great being back in McMurdo, if only for a day. I got to catch up with friends from
- my time in McMurdo last summer. Many of us descend on Antarctica from far-flung places,
- and it’s not always guaranteed we’ll see each other again in Real Life. I tried to make the most of my brief
- stop in town.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/mcmurdo-construction-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/mcmurdo-construction-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/mcmurdo-construction-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/mcmurdo-construction-01-small.jpg" alt="McMurdo construction 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Construction in McMurdo! Framing for a new building on the site of the former Dorm 203.
- This wasn't here last summer when I left for Pole!</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>It was surreal <strong>still</strong> being in Antarctica, and meeting up with folks again.
- Most of my friends had left, had time off, and were now
- <em>back for more</em>, here for a second season. I even knew people who had left, come back, and then had already
- <em>left again</em>. Meanwhile, I was still on-continent. I was just now, finally, getting ready
- to leave after my first mega-season.</p>
- <p>There are pros and cons to experiencing Antarctica the way I did.
- I was fortunate that I got to try out much of what
- the program has to offer, all in one single, very long season.
- The only primary USAP Antarctic sites I haven’t seen yet are
- <a href="https://www.nsf.gov/geo/opp/support/palmerst.jsp">Palmer Station</a>
- and the <a href="https://www.nsf.gov/geo/opp/support/ships.jsp">research vessels</a>, currently the
- R/V Laurence M. Gould and the R/V Nathaniel B. Palmer.</p>
- <p>I arrived in Antarctica at <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/mcmurdo-arrival">Winfly</a>, and I got to experience McMurdo winter.
- Winter transitioned into summer,
- and I got to witness the majestic splendor of the warm, sunny, and <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/mud-murdo">muddy</a> peak season at McMurdo.
- I <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/south-pole-arrival">flew to the South Pole</a> at the peak of summer, and I experienced the
- bustling chaos as the station frantically prepared for the upcoming winter. When the
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/last-flight-out">last flight</a> departed, the station slowed down for winter.
- After <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/sunset">sunset</a>, Pole entered a long <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/polar-night">polar night</a>.
- I saw <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/redeployment-part-one">sunrise</a> at Pole
- and I saw the station <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/redeployment-part-two">reopen</a> for summer.
- Now I was back in McMurdo, finally ready to depart.</p>
- <p>Most people… do not do all of this at once. I was fortunate that the opportunity arose for me to do this.
- I was fortunate that
- my life circumstances happened to line up in a way that I was able to accept.
- 14 months on ice is a long time. It’s a long time to be away from friends, family,
- and “real life”. It’s a long time to commit to a single, strange place. I do not regret taking the opportunity.
- But, for anyone considering something similar, please do not make this decision lightly.</p>
- <h1 id="phoenix-airfield">Phoenix Airfield</h1>
- <p>On the evening of November 17, 2023, I departed McMurdo.
- I was headed out to Phoenix Airfield, where I would catch my flight out of Antarctica.</p>
- <p>Our ride to the airport was something much different – we rode out in the Kress. The
- Kress is a gigantic transport vehicle, one of McMurdo’s newest.
- It’s designed for moving dozens of people between far-flung McMurdo sites. These sites include airfields,
- as well as other infrastructure out on the ice such as the
- <a href="https://www.nasa.gov/missions/scientific-balloons/nasa-scientific-balloons-ready-for-flights-over-antarctica/">Long Duration Balloon (LDB)</a>
- site.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/kress-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/kress-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/kress-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/kress-01-small.jpg" alt="Kress 01">
- </picture>
- <em>The Kress, our gigantic transport vehicle to Phoenix Airfield. 6'2" brr.fyi author for scale.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/kress-02.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/kress-02-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/kress-02-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/kress-02-small.jpg" alt="Kress 02">
- </picture>
- <em>Another view of the Kress, showing its gigantic passenger transport compartment.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>This was my first time seeing Phoenix Airfield in the “daytime”. Recall that when I <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/mcmurdo-arrival">arrived</a>
- in McMurdo from Christchurch in August 2022, it was dark out.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/phoenix-passenger-terminal-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/phoenix-passenger-terminal-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/phoenix-passenger-terminal-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/phoenix-passenger-terminal-01-small.jpg" alt="Phoenix Passenger Terminal 01">
- </picture>
- <em>The passenger terminal at Phoenix Airfield.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <h1 id="departing-antarctica">Departing Antarctica</h1>
- <p>Our ride back to Christchurch was an Italian Air Force C-130J. There are a number of national Antarctic programs in
- this region, besides just the United States Antarctic Program.
- Most of them use Christchurch as their gateway city and Phoenix Airfield as their
- intercontinental Antarctic runway. It’s common for programs to share infrastructure. Sometimes USAP will fly
- personnel for other national Antarctic programs on our flights, and sometimes other programs will fly USAP personnel.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/italian-c130j-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/italian-c130j-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/italian-c130j-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/italian-c130j-01-small.jpg" alt="Italian C-130J 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Boarding our aircraft from McMurdo to Christchurch -- an Italian Air Force C-130J.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>And with that, we were off! We departed Antarctica at 9:22pm on November 17, 2023. This marked 446 days since
- I arrived on-continent on August 28, 2022.</p>
- <p>What an adventure!</p>
- <h1 id="christchurch">Christchurch</h1>
- <p>At just after 4:00am, on the morning of November 18, 2023, our C-130J arrived at Christchurch International
- Airport. Taxiing to an unloading area was short, but it felt like an eternity. We were tired from a long flight,
- but we were also giddy with excitement about finally being back in the Real World.</p>
- <p>It was dark, but it was warm. And most importantly it was <em>humid</em>. When we stepped off the plane,
- we could smell rain, dirt, and living things, for the first time in over a year.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-bus-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-bus-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-bus-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-bus-01-small.jpg" alt="Christchurch Bus 01">
- </picture>
- <em>First thing we saw upon arrival in Christchurch -- a bus, to take us to the airport.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>When you arrive in Christchurch from Antarctica, you are required to clear customs and immigration. The exact nuance of
- New Zealand immigration law, as it applies to US Antarctic personnel, is <strong><em>far</em></strong> outside the scope of this post.
- Suffice to say, the first order of business was to get us all processed.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-customs-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-customs-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-customs-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-customs-01-small.jpg" alt="Christchurch Customs 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Christchurch airport, heading toward customs at 4:30am. Our first Real-Life Building.
- Truly a surreal re-introduction into modern society.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>There was a section on the traveler form that asked <em>“Overseas Port where you boarded THIS aircraft/ship”</em>.
- In the absence of any clarifying instruction, I just wrote “Antarctica”. It’s a moot point, because we had
- a special customs agent show up just for us (customs isn’t normally open at this time). They were
- well aware that we had all come from Antarctica.</p>
- <p>Still, it’s amusing when I think about this form being filed
- in a drawer somewhere at NZ Immigration. We did, indeed, arrive from “overseas”. Far, far overseas,
- from a world that, already, had started fading from our minds.
- <em>Did we</em> <strong><em>really</em></strong> <em>just come from</em> <strong><em>Antarctica</em></strong><em>?</em></p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/traveler-declaration-form-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/traveler-declaration-form-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/traveler-declaration-form-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/traveler-declaration-form-01-small.jpg" alt="Traveler Declaration Form 01">
- </picture>
- <em>New Zealand Traveler Declaration form.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>Once we were through customs, we proceeded to the United States Antarctic Program’s
- Clothing Distribution Center (CDC). We were all <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/flight-perhaps">issued</a> Extreme Cold Weather gear before we
- departed for Antarctica, and we returned it all now that we were done.
- This clothing is property of the program, and it gets cleaned and re-issued to new staff.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/clothing-pile-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/clothing-pile-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/clothing-pile-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/clothing-pile-01-small.jpg" alt="Clothing Pile 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Returning our issued Extreme Cold Weather (ECW) gear at the USAP CDC in Christchurch.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>Finally, we were issued our complimentary hotel reservation information. Most of us were taking personal
- travel in New Zealand. This travel, of course, isn’t paid for by the program. The program covers one night
- in a hotel, for us to have a soft landing and get our bearings. This is the same thing that they
- offer to people who are flying straight home, known as “First Available Air”, or “FAA”.</p>
- <p>Luckily for us, because we arrived so late, we got the rest of our current night (by this time it was 5:30am),
- and the following night. It was good to be able to sleep in.</p>
- <p>And with that? They turned us loose. We were done.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/usap-complex-christchurch-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/usap-complex-christchurch-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/usap-complex-christchurch-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/usap-complex-christchurch-01-small.jpg" alt="USAP Complex Christchurch 01">
- </picture>
- <em>The United States Antarctic Program complex in Christchurch. Home of the CDC as well as other
- support and administrative buildings. Pictured here, early morning on November 18, 2023, after we had
- all just completed returning our ECW clothing.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>We all groggily stood in line to check into our hotel at 5:30am.
- We had just spent 7 hours on a military plane. We had departed a strange land, full of 24x7 sunlight,
- people in puffy coats, and US Antarctic Program logos everywhere. This had been our reality for over a year.</p>
- <p>Suddenly, we found ourselves listening to smooth jazz, in the sleek lobby of an airport hotel, as the hotel
- receptionist talked about continental breakfast, check-out times, the hotel wifi password, public transit, and
- points of interest around town.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/hotel-hallway-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/hotel-hallway-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/hotel-hallway-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/hotel-hallway-01-small.jpg" alt="Hotel Hallway 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Hallway at my hotel. Is this real life? Did I really just spend 14 months in Antarctica?</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>We were back in civilization, back in the real world. For ASC support staff, our contracts
- ended the day we landed in Christchurch after departing the ice. We immediately stopped receiving a salary.
- Our health insurance was paid through the end of the month. I went from living and working
- in Antarctica, into my Christchurch hotel, and then… <em>that was it</em>.
- I was suddenly on my own, on vacation, in Christchurch.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-passenger-terminal-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-passenger-terminal-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-passenger-terminal-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-passenger-terminal-01-small.jpg" alt="Christchurch Passenger Terminal 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Back the next day, for some quick photos of the Antarctic Passenger Terminal during the daylight.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-warehouse-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-warehouse-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-warehouse-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-warehouse-01-small.jpg" alt="Christchurch Warehouse 01">
- </picture>
- <em>The USAP warehouse in Christchurch.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <h1 id="personal-travel">Personal Travel</h1>
- <p>I spent my leisure time in New Zealand eating fresh fruit and vegetables nonstop.
- I averaged about three flat whites per day, made from fresh coffee and real milk.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/new-zealand-latte-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/new-zealand-latte-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/new-zealand-latte-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/new-zealand-latte-01-small.jpg" alt="New Zealand Latte 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Real life, real coffee. Fresh beans, fresh New Zealand milk.
- Pure bliss, after 14 months of expired beans and powdered milk.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-fresh-food-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-fresh-food-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-fresh-food-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-fresh-food-01-small.jpg" alt="Christchurch Fresh Food 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Delicious and abundant fresh food in Christchurch, after a long period without in Antarctica.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>My translucent Antarctican skin, fresh off an entire season of darkness, and normally covered by 30 lbs of
- clothing regardless, did not survive first contact with the New Zealand sun. I almost immediately got a sunburn.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-sun-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-sun-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-sun-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/christchurch-sun-01-small.jpg" alt="Christchurch Sun 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Sun, warmth, blue sky, trees, and birds. Strolling casually around Christchurch.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>Christchurch, and Real Life, very quickly began to feel <em>normal</em>, even after being away for so long.
- A group of us met up for dinner. We ate in a restaurant, went to
- a bar, called a taxi, and navigated through day-to-day city life. We rode trains. We hiked through mountains
- and forests. We relaxed on beaches.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/arthurs-pass-stream-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/arthurs-pass-stream-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/arthurs-pass-stream-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/arthurs-pass-stream-01-small.jpg" alt="Arthur's Pass Stream 01">
- </picture>
- <em>A stream, at Arthur's Pass, New Zealand.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/sunset-punakaiki-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/sunset-punakaiki-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/sunset-punakaiki-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/sunset-punakaiki-01-small.jpg" alt="Sunset Punakaiki 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Sunset in Punakaiki, New Zealand.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/greymouth-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/greymouth-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/greymouth-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/greymouth-01-small.jpg" alt="Greymouth 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Ocean view in Greymouth, New Zealand.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <h1 id="san-francisco">San Francisco</h1>
- <p>After two weeks of much-needed rest and relaxation in New Zealand, I flew back home to San Francisco.
- This flight was paid for by the program, fulfilling their final obligation to return me to my
- Airport of Departure (AOD).
- On December 1, I departed Christchurch at 12:00 noon. Thanks to the magic of time zones, I arrived in
- San Francisco, also on December 1, at 7:00am.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/san-francisco-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/san-francisco-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/san-francisco-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/san-francisco-01-small.jpg" alt="San Francisco 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Descending toward San Francisco International Airport, at 6:48am on December 1, 2023.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>I landed, and I took <a href="https://www.bart.gov/">BART</a> home to my apartment.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/bart-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/bart-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/bart-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/bart-01-small.jpg" alt="BART 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Riding BART home from the airport to my apartment.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>My apartment was just how I left it, back before I started this wild journey, on August 12, 2022, when I
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/travel-begins">departed San Francisco</a> for Christchurch, Antarctica, and the strangest 16 months of my
- life.</p>
- <p>It was surprising to me how… <em>normal</em> it felt to get back to real life. I had just completed <em>14.5 months</em> on the
- ice. For <em>more than a year</em>, I worked, ate, slept, showered, relaxed, laughed, and cried, all at the whim of a
- federal government agency and its designated contractors, almost all under one roof, at the bottom of the world.
- We certainly had personal autonomy, but it was within a defined framework. It was at a small, isolated
- location.</p>
- <p>Sometimes I’d have a realization that I was doing something for the first time since I
- had left home, 16 months earlier.
- First time pumping gas. First time ringing a doorbell. First time going to a grocery store.
- First time swimming. Each of these instances brought with it a small feeling of novelty,
- but it didn’t amount to much. It took conscious effort to remember that I was pumping gas for the first time in 16
- months. It felt normal.</p>
- <p>I was back in my real life,
- and although I put it on hold for Antarctica, it was waiting for me when I got back. Antarctica was a
- a different world, a radical departure from my normal reality. It was so different, in fact, that I simply
- could not merge the two realities into one. I had my real life, and I had my Antarctica life. When my
- Antarctica life finished, I resumed my real life.</p>
- <h1 id="conclusion">Conclusion</h1>
- <p>I hope everyone enjoyed following along on this journey. I certainly enjoyed writing about the experience.</p>
- <p>Truth be told, when I started this blog, I was writing for an audience of about 6 people, friends and family
- back home. At some point in November 2022, this blog took off in popularity.
- I wasn’t expecting this, but it has been a lot of fun writing something that has brought joy to so many people.</p>
- <p>I appreciate everyone who reached out along the way. People wrote to me from other Antarctic stations.
- People recounted their own Antarctic adventures from years or decades in the past. Folks with upcoming
- McMurdo and Pole contracts reached out to ask for advice.</p>
- <p>So, with that, I’ll leave you with my favorite photo I took all season. This is from May 8, 2023, taken off
- the back deck of the A1 berthing pod. It shows our power plant and all the backyard outbuildings. Just
- out of frame to the left is the geographic South Pole marker. It was -70°F. The only light was from
- the moon. If you walked out just a few hundred feet from station, it was pindrop quiet. The closest next
- inhabited station was hundreds of miles away. Truly a different world, and one that I’m lucky to have
- experienced.</p>
- <p>
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/pole-winter-01.jpg">
- <picture>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/pole-winter-01-small.webp" type="image/webp"></source>
- <source srcset="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/pole-winter-01-small.jpg" type="image/jpg"></source>
- <img src="https://brr.fyi/media/redeployment-part-three/pole-winter-01-small.jpg" alt="Pole Winter 01">
- </picture>
- <em>Backyard during Winter 2023 at the South Pole.</em>
- </a>
- </p>
- <p><em>This is the third and final part of a three-part series. Check out
- <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/redeployment-part-one">part one</a> and <a href="https://brr.fyi/posts/redeployment-part-two">part two</a> if you haven’t already.</em></p>
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