06 April 2007

First real day of work - 1 April

Got up at 06:00 and tried to start a first real day of work. Jackie and Bruce had surveyed the first line of the thickness transects and I was put in charge with Robert of completing the survey. It was blowing hard that day with temperatures around -15F and steady winds of ~20mph (a sharp cold wind). Robert and I spent the first half of the morning working with Jackie to modify the sled gear based on what they had learned the day before. We had to pre-open garbage bags (our markers) in the warm hut so we didn’t have to deal with them in the cold and blowing wind. We loaded up stakes, drills, a stapler, shovel, extra clothes, survey tape, compass, and other gear into an Akio sled. Jackie and Bruce completed the north leg (Line #1) the day before (March 31) the hard way by hand dragging the sled the full 1 km, using a manual drill, and other difficult tasks. It took about 3 hours of really hard work with the manual drill, cold blowing winds, and in many cases very little snow on the ice. It was by far the hardest line to survey out.

Robert and I headed out about 10:00 and while we had a huge upgrade in gear thanks to Jackie and Bruce’s experience, we didn’t have the one key thing they did – experience. Robert and I set off to work on Line #4 which was in the opposite direction of where Jackie and Bruce had set out so we didn’t have to set the bearing, just work on the distance. We are pretty green horns at this stuff so with the cold blowing wind and little experience in handling all this new equipment the first 500 m was long and slow. We had to contend with strong winds that would blow the tape out of our hands and send the little whip-it (whippie) flags skidding across the hard packed snow and ice (sometimes crawling hands and knees to chase after them). We had to drill holes with a hand drill into the ice to get the whippie flags to sit still and then grab a shovel full of snow to make a little mound to hold them in place. We reached the 500m mark just before lunch and put in the first big pole with hi-fives at the completion. Robert’s jaw dropped when I told him the lines were each 1000m long (twice what we just did) at the realization that at this pace it could take all week to just set up the array. We decided it was time to take a break, head back to camp, get some lunch and rethink again.

After lunch, Jackie was able to join us for the second half of Line #4. In about an hour we had the whole thing surveyed at about twice the pace of the first half mostly because we had three people instead of two. Jackie and Robert held the tape measure at each end (25m length) while I followed along to deal with the flags, making the snow piles, and drilling the holes. The big lesson that Robert and I learned that day was how to break down the process into single repetitive tasks that could be handled in cold, windy conditions. When we finished that line, we headed back to the center pole (middle of the array) and spent the rest of the afternoon getting the bearing line and first 100m out for each of the remaining 4 lines. At about 17:00 we finished that and headed in to call it a day. Robert had to catch up on his journaling and I had to go through gear, store the auger in the generator hut to keep it warm overnight, and other duties. The evening was full of meetings and by 23:00 I realized that I had better get to bed as I had a very hard day ahead of me.

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