Monday, November 28, 2011

A few time lapse videos from work

This is a video from the dashboard of a Delta truck leaving the cargo yard going out to the Ice Runway and returning to the cargo yard.

This is a video of a download of cargo from a 5-Ton truck at the cargo yard.

A view from inside our cargo bay with a loader picking a pallet and me struggling getting some cargo out of storage.

Happy Thanksgiving

Hello all.

When I first thought about taking this job one of my biggest concerns and reasons why I dragged my feet to accept the job offer was knowing I was going to be away from my family for the holidays. I knew with modern technology in place that keeping in touch wouldn't be a problem but just missing out of the festivities of Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years with my family I wasn't sure how I was going to handle it. As I travelled down here I made lots of new friends from both orientation, the flights and sight seeing around Christchurch along with the friends I have made here at McMurdo I knew that it was going to be easier than thought. I can say after enjoying Thanksgiving here last night it was a lot better than I had expected it to be. I have realized that most of us down here are away from our families and friends so we all rely on each other to fill that hole. The one thing that I wish I could have seen would have been my nieces Andy and Orly and nephew Breandan enjoy the food and fun that comes with Thanksgiving, but leave it to my family to come through and send me a photo of Andy and Breandan enjoying a little painting session together to let me seen them having fun. Thank you Tim for the photo, that made my day. Since we rely on our friends it is always nice to have a reason to celebrate a birthday, a party or just having a reason to get together with friends. On Friday night I had planned a little surprise birthday party for one of my teammates, originally I had planned on having it on her actual birthday, after looking at our work schedules I realized it was going to be harder to make it work. I can say that we were able to succeed in surprising Alysa and have a great time with all the night shift cargo crew that showed up to the gym to help out celebrate, set up for Freezing Man and get checked out on the climbing wall. This made my weekend even better knowing that everyone was willing to help out and spend time together. Many laughs were had in the end. This same family came together for dinner Saturday night, many stories were told just the same as it would have been back home, laughs always make a tough situation better. I can say that my McMurdo family enjoys laughing. I don't think there is a meal, break or work situation were someone is not laughing. I have added some pictures of my McMurdo family hope you all enjoy them.

Our first night out in McMurdo after arriving, these are just some of my new family members who I flew in with.

Outside with the same family.

Myself, Natalie and Chris

Myself, Kristin and Alysa

My McMurdo family before my first dinner of the night.


This is the cargo team I work with.
Myself, Alysa, Gift, Karl, Marty and Matt on the bottom with Lisa standing on top of the cargo.

My week this past week didn't go as bad as thought. We were able to stay busy all week even though some bad weather came in and shut down all the air operations. I think it snowed on every shift we worked last week. It reminded of Colorado a lot with the way the weather was. I would show up to work and the sun would be out all nice and sunny and as the work day progressed the weather would change and we would be working outside in the snow. I can say this is probably one of the few places that snow will melt even though the air temp is below freezing, but it did feel warmer with the snow falling than with clear skies. The 4 days straight went quick, and the past 3 days off have been well earned and deserved by our team. We will be back to the airfield next week but at Pegasus which is a 14 mile drive from McMurdo. So my schedule will change since shifts are staggered with the long ride out. I am looking forward to that so that I can see some more of the area. I hope that soon more wildlife will be showing up as the weather warms up and the sea ice breaks up.

Till next time, Tim
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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Comments

I think I have figured out the comments problem. So hopefully now it is easier and so far it looks like it is working. Glad to hear from everyone again and that you all like what I am writing and the pictures I have put up.

Tim

Monday, November 21, 2011

What I do down here.

Well I figured that today I would talk about what I have been doing exactly down here. Hopefully I can explain it so everyone can understand. I work in ATO which stands for Antarctic Terminal Operations, in the Cargo Department. I work on 1 of 6 cargo teams, 3 on day shift and 3 on night shift. I am currently on the night shift and have been more responsible for setting up for the days flights at the airfield and building pallets for flights out in town. I like being in town a lot more than at the airfield. At the airfield there is a lot more down time than in town thus the 12 hour shifts take a lot longer. Every shift we show up and are given tasks for the night, if tasked to build pallets we are given what is called a "Pri List" or "Priority List" this list tells us what we need to gather to start building the pallet. On the list there is the "TCN Number" which is the items identifier number which tells us where the item is intended to go, how much it weighs, what might be in a box and how big it is "Cube" the list also tells us what priority the item is 1,2,3…. so on. 1 is more important than 2. We are also told how many pallets we have for that build, total weight, if it is a ramp pallet, overall priority at the same time. Once we have the list the hunt usually begins. In most cases what we need is in one of two main areas, either inside our cargo bay or outside in the cargo yard. This is were the hunt begins, sometimes you get lucky and find everything nice and easy other times no such luck. As you find what you need you start to plan how the pallet will be built, easiest way to think of this process as playing a game of "Tetris". Once you have located what you need to gather the building process can begin. This can either be a quick process or a slow problem filled process. At best it takes about 2 hours from start to finish and even longer for the problematic builds. I find it rewarding to get the hard builds but it can wear on you if you are not successful. As you build the pallet there are certain adjustments that need to be made from shoring (wood to prevent metal on metal contact), dun age (lifting items for clearance), is the pallet drift able (able to come out of the LC-130 with out equipment) and is the pallet a ramp pallet. Depending on the information given certain pallets can not exceed certain heights or weight limitations. That is where the problems usually begin, with the weather in constant flux and needs constantly changing pallets are changed all the time. After the pallet is built we need to restrain the goods on the pallet, this is done with either ratchet straps, nets, chains or a combination of two or three restraint items. When done with restraining the pallet we than weigh the pallet so that we can give the load planners all in the information needed to make sure the pallet is good to fly. Once that is done a "PID" (Pallet Identification Card) is created and put on the pallet. Once this is done it is onto the airfield with the pallet and others just like it. I have realized that the weights on the TCN labels are not always correct, goods are not where they should be, its either bigger or smaller than listed, the priority isn't what it is said to be and so on. That is where pallet building drags on. I have added photo's of the process to help explain certain parts to the job. Hope this helps everyone understand my job better.


Tim



Inside the Cargo Bay



Finding and staging of cargo from the bay



One of the many loaders we use



A Tucker Snow Cat, an easy load it is driven into the airplane



A big build (it is called a T-2 cause it uses 2 pallets)



A Cat D-4 dozer restrained on a T-2


You can see the shoring under the tracks and the dun age for support in front



A PID on the D-4, it weight 17,795 pounds with everything on the T-2, pallet, chains, shoring, dun age and the D-4


A Delta truck which is used to take pallets to and from the airfields


Downloading a 5-ton truck in the Cargo Yard


A trip to the airfield from the dashboard of a Delta truck


Theses next 3 pictures were from what is currently called the monster pallet cause of all the problems it caused to build it on Saturday night. It took 4 hours to build it and we still are not done with it. I get to work on it again tonight.


The Aft view


Left side view


Forward view

Posting Comments

I am not sure if everyone who is reading this blog has had problems posting comments or not. I have adjusted the setup so that hopefully it is easier for everyone to do so. You can register with Google if you want to leave a comment or you can select either anonymus or URL/Name as a way to leave a comment without having to sign up for an account. Hopefully this makes it easier for everyone. I will post more about my week later today.

Tim

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Beautiful days and beautiful scenery!

Well the past week the weather has gotten warmer, the clouds have gone away, work has been great and I have the day off what more could you ask for. The temperatures are warming up nicely during the day 32+ and at night it is cool but not uncomfortable to be working in. We had a busy night last night at work so I am glad to have tonight off to relax. We had to build 10 pallets for flights and only had 2 1/2 by lunch. We were able to regroup and get 9 of the 10 done in time. The 10th one was a low priority pallet, but we worked hard to get everything else done in time. Everyone came together as a team to make it happen.

On Saturday night I got to go to Discovery Hut and look inside. It is hard to believe that it was built in 1902 by Robert Falcon Scott for his Discovery Expedition. The original plan was to use the hut for living for 3 years, his expedition soon found out that the hut was a bad design so they were not able to keep it warm enough to live in so they made it into storage and lived in their ship they sailed in on. It is hard to believe having been inside the hut and having seen the expected living conditions, food and clothing that they expected to live from the hut for 3 years. I am glad to have the modern clothing, cooking utensils and food that we do or else this would be a lot harder than expected.

On Tuesday I was able to go to Scott Base again in the morning to do a little shopping in the Kiwi's canteen. I had heard stories about the nicer shirts and options available there than here at McMurdo. I was kind of surprised by the difference that a station of 65 people gave better options than the station of 1027. I hoped to hike Ob hill today but I don't think I will make it since it is getting later than I had hoped as I finish this post up. I am hoping that Sunday I will be able to since it will be a long week and a half for me. I am looking forward to Thanksgiving weekend as I have 3 days off in a row.

Hope all is well.

Tim

Some food supplies inside Discovery Hut

The cooking stove

Inside and more food

Baking powder anyone?

100 year old Cocoa

Kippered Herring

100 year old oatmeal

Dog bisquits

More Cocoa

A few windows

These marks are on the wood floor from where they chopped up seals

A little information placard

A view from outside

The Sea Ice Runway and Ice Town

Outside Discovery Hut

A little more information

Discovery Hut again

Discovery Hut and McMurdo Station in the background

Vince's Cross
A little view from Scott Base and the sea ice/ice shelf change

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Wednesday, November 9, 2011

A Fun Week!

Well it has been about a week since I last posted here. Everything is going well. I have finally gotten used to working at night with a few good nights straight working. The weather here has been great which has allowed operations to get under way, with this work has become busier. I have gotten to drive our Delta trucks a few times from town to the airfield and back again with cargo on board. I will get pictures of these large trucks up later when I get a chance to take some photos of them. I have also gotten chance to run the loaders quite a bit and help out my fellow teammates with the loaders and Deltas as well. Our last teammate finally joined our team yesterday, so now our team consists of Gift (Team Senior), Karl, Lisa, Alysa, Marty, Matt and myself. I feel real good that we have a great team and will have a great year together. The different personalities, experiences and overall knowledge of what goes on here, I feel real lucky to be working on this team. The past week working together has been great. I have gotten the opportunity to upload cargo onto a LC-130 for the first time, build pallets for transport, deliver cargo to the airfield, dig out our cargo sleds from the storm last week and all the mean while laughing and having a great time working.

I got the opportunity to got to the Observation Tube on Sunday morning. What the Ob-Tube is, it is a steel chamber that is put into the water outside McMurdo on the ice sheet where you can climb down into it and are able to look around at the sea life from inside this chamber. While I was in the Ob-tube I was able to see a seal go swimming by and I was also able to hear them as well. From other accounts it sounds like this seal has been one of the closest yet. I was also able to see some other smaller fish and several different kinds of jelly fish as well. Since the sun light a low, I wasn't able to get any good pictures from my phone to put up. I hope some others may have so I can barrow from them. It sounds like the Ob-tube will only be in place for a about a week more before it is removed because of thin ice conditions.

Tonight I was able to walk out to Hut Point to see the views of the Ross Sea and Discovery Hut. We can take tours of this hut that has been here for over 100 years. Here because of how dry and cold it is, wood doesn't rot or break down very quickly. The views I saw tonight were unbelievable.

The C-17 before takeoff

A view of the Royal Society Mountains from McMurdo

A panoramic shot of McMurdo with the Royal Society Mountains in the background

Black Island from the Airfield

A LC-130 returning.

Mt. Erebus

Behind a LC-130 for a loose luggage offload

Me from inside the cab of the loader

Offload in progress

Mt. Erebus again

This is for my fellow South Suburban coworkers, look what works down here!

Alysa waiting to load cargo into the Do Not Freeze Bin

Still waiting!

McMurdo from the Airfield

The flags out infront of the Chalet (Administration offices)

A seal hole

Mt. Erebus hidden by clouds

The obligatory shot

A panoramic shot from Hut point

Hut Point

Discovery Hut

C-17 Takeoff

LC-130 Landing