Sunday, April 29, 2012


Sorry about not posting last week. Things got away from me a bit.

Anyways, it is now full dark, and we’ve been getting auroras pretty regularly.

Aurora over the station. The bright spot is Guy driving the groomer.
Aurora over the cryo building. Photo taken by Carlos Pobes, with
a nicer camera than mine.

It is really amazing to walk outside and see them, along with the night sky in general. There are so many stars out. So far the auroras haven’t been super bright, but I’ve heard from others that they get brighter and more colorful later in the season. There are times that they get bright enough to read by. I can’t wait!

On the cryo front, Guy built a snow ramp up to the main bay door of the building. Now Steffen and I can drive the sled right up to the door, unload the dewar and park the snow mobile inside, rather than leaving it out in the cold or driving it back to the garage while we fill.
Buzz hanging out in Cryo

We also had to switch snow mobiles. Mad Max had a bad seal, so whenever we took it outside, it would start leaking oil. Now we’re using Buzz Bomb, and it seem to be working better. Another change is that I am moving to nights for the next couple of months. Since BICEP follows a sidereal schedule, the LHe fills have to follow the same schedule. So, for the next month and half deliveries will be in the evening, and then move to the middle of the night, then early morning, at which point I’ll probably switch back to days. My plan is to get up early enough in the afternoon that I don’t miss too much of the social stuff, otherwise, the only person I’ll ever talk to is Steffen, and I don’t think I’m okay with that. Tonight is my first night shift. Wish me luck.

For rec., we finally got soccer organized. It was way fun. I’d gotten used to running on the treadmill and biking and doing short stuff in volleyball and kickball, but running up and down the court continuously left all of us sucking wind. I think Jared described it as feeling like he was drowning. I don’t think it was quiet that bad, but it definitely felt like doing had intervals. Still fun.  Also, the South Pole Pool League is starting up soon. The league ends in a tournament. There are four of us, Jared, Shawn, Heather, and myself, who will be completing for last place. We’re all pretty bad, but I think that since we started practicing at the beginning of the week, I’ve gotten worse.

This morning Marcus made strawberry frappucinnos and Travis modeled the Loch Ness pool floatie that was hanging out in the galley for some reason.
Travis, pool-ready
Blog note: If you click on the Picture of the Day to the left, it should link to my photobucket account, where you can take a look at all my photos. Please let me know it it works or not. Thanks!

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Porky Pig


Note: This post has picture of a dead pig, so if that is not you’re thing, you might want to skip this one.

It is definitely getting dark. We saw our first aurora this week. They weren’t hugely impressive, still fairly dim and not much color. They should get better as full dark sets in, and hopefully by then I will have figured out the right settings on my camera. Other than that, it has been another cold week, but it warmed up to about –75F in time for my most recent delivery, and then up to –50F today, which makes it down right balmy right now. This was the first delivery where we really needed to use lights and headlamps, which made for exciting driving.
Trauma team training was a lot of fun this week. Doctor Dale and Heather, our PA, special ordered us a pig out of the berms.

 
Heather and Gus unwrapping our pig
 We used the pig to practice inserting inter-osteous lines. IO’s are like IVs, but instead of inserting the line into a vein, it gets inserted into bone. Usually it is used when there is trouble accessing a vein, so here, where the emergencies we run into are probably going to involve the cold, learning how to do this makes sense.
Finding the bone
Inserting the needle
At the same time, we learned how to spike IV bags.
Jace showing off a successfully spiked IV bag
While part of the trauma team was doing that,  the rest of us practiced doing intubations on a dummy. 

Nasopharyngeal airway


Nasotracheal Intubation


And then, this is a photo of the station that came out with an interesting effect.

Monday, April 9, 2012

Delivery

This last weekend was pretty exciting. We got down to –100F on Saturday afternoon. That is the earliest in the season that the temperature has ever hit that mark, and it looks like we’ll be getting back down there again towards the end of the week. It was actually pretty perfect timing on the part of the weather, since we had a station-wide safety stand-down, which meant we got the afternoon to take a break and think about how to maintain a safe environment. About 15 of us took that to mean we should join the 300 Club. The club has been a tradition since the station has existed with a sauna. The requirements for joining are to take a 200F sauna and then run out to the pole. So we got the sauna heated up (to about 230F actually), then cooked in there for about 20 minutes. Once we were nice and toasty, we stripped down and ran outside in nothing but our boots, and got pictures. The nice thing about taking the sauna is that the cold didn’t really get to you until you were already on your way back in. The second time out, most of just walked, instead of sprinting. 

In the sauna, and on the screen
Other than that, Easter morning came with little baskets of candy in front of each of our doors. Thank you Easter Bunny!

After that I had a helium delivery to make. BICEP2, the telescope, needs a delivery of about 250L of LHe every 6-7 days. We usually plan for every 6 days, so that if the weather is bad (stormy, or cold, like it was Saturday) we can push it off for a day. The BICEP guy, Steffen, heads out to the telescope to get the dewar prepped for pick up, then gives me a call, and I go get Mad Max and the sled. 
Mad Max, the science machine
 Then it is out to the telescope to pick up the dewar, and back to cryo. Once the dewar is inside, Steffen takes Max back to the heavy shop, since it is way too cold to leave it idling outside. Meanwhile, I get things prepped inside, and take some initial measurements, like the weights for Fatman and whichever of the Chipmunks we’re filling from this time.
Weighing Fatman
    Once Steffen gets back, we get the transfer lines hooked up to one of the big dewars and then run it over to Fatman. 
Transfer line to Fatman. If you look close, you can see a small plume of
helium coming out of the end of the stinger.
    After that, it is mainly a matter of waiting and watching, adjusting some of the valves to throttle the flow to the Bouncy Castle and to the compressor. 
The Bouncy Castle, full of helium. It takes about 5 hours
for the compressor to pump it out and into the half-racks in
the background.
    Once Fatman is full, Steffen gets Max again, while I take final measurements and get things ready for the trip back to BICEP.

Riding back to the telescope (straight ahead).

Bringing the dewar alongside BICEP
Bringing the dewar up to the third floor via crane
The past week also saw our first moonrise in the dark. The sun is mostly set at this point; so watching the moon come up was pretty spectacular. By the time it sets again, in about two weeks, it should be full dark. 
Moon rise near the telesopes. The outline of SPT/BICEP2 is
just visible to the left of the moon.
  


Sunday, April 1, 2012

Odd Jobs


As you might have gathered, we are a pretty small community down here at the South Pole. So, in addition to the job we each got hired to do, everybody is expected to help out with other jobs around the station. For example, everybody rotates through the dish pit about once a month. On house-mouse Mondays we get together with our team and tackle the cleaning for some portion of the station, whether it is cleaning the bathrooms, moping a hall, or organizing the arts & crafts room.  My team, Lynette, John O, and myself, is pretty awesome. We do a good job. Six of us have volunteered to be peer-counselors for the season, so we’ll be starting training for that soon.
Probably the most important of our extra jobs is the emergency response team. There are four teams on station and everyone is on one of them. The teams are the fire brigade, the hasty team (first ones on site to evaluate), the transport team, and the trauma team (my team). In order to be ready to go if there is an emergency situation, we’ve got training once a week, plus an emergency response drill every month.
Last week we had our March drill, and the first drill of the season. It was fun, if a bit stressful. The trauma and transport teams were actually already together, getting training on using backboards and stretchers. When the alarm went off, most of us started running for our ECW gear and then headed to the muster point. For trauma, that is Medical. Then we waited around to hear what our emergency was. In this case, there was a fire out in summer camp, at the cargo head quarters, one casualty. So four of us grabbed first-aid bags, a backboard and oxygen and head out to the waiting LMC to get a ride out.
Our ride. Sorry, some of these pictures are a little blurry.
On the ride over, we figured out that I was, somehow, the person with the most medical training (other than our PA, who was there as an observer), so I ended up taking over for the first responders in evaluating the patient. Our patient, a 90lb dummy with a welding mask for a face, was found unconscious in a building where the electric heater has caught fire. His breathing and pulse were normal, but he was unresponsive. We administered oxygen and got him onto a backboard, only to realize that the Dr. Down (a sleeping bag type thing that is easy to put on over a backboard) hadn’t made it out to the site. The nearest cache was over at cryo, and I was the only person who knew were that was, since it was the one cache we hadn’t visited on our medical tour the previous week. So, I left Katie in charge of the patient and went sprinting off. When I got back, between the hill climb on the way back, the cold air and running in big boots, I was pretty winded. Anyways, we got our guy into the bag and loaded onto a sled behind a snowmobile. After that, those of us who hadn’t stayed with the patient weren’t entirely sure what to do, since the LMC was gone. So, we started walking back, with the LMC picking us up part way. Back on station, we rushed over to meet the wheely stretcher and bring it to Medical.
Rolling down to medical.
Once there we got him onto the table. Doc had Gus run an IV and Travis start bagging him.
L to R: Jace, Gus, and Travis with our patient in Medical

After a while, it turned out our guy was just napping, so we let him sleep.
There are definitely things we need to work on as a team, but all in all it went pretty smoothly.
Next up, Doc is thawing out a pig for us to practice suturing, among other things, on.

Oh yeah, and we did finally get some color for sun set.