Monday 22 December 2008

Magic Mountain

Outside the hut it is -29 deg C and blowing 40mph, with blowing snow and only a few metres visibility. That puts the wind chill around -65 deg C. Finally after great weather since we arrived we can take a rest day. Erebus is a beautiful place when it's nice and very unforgiving when it's not.

It's not that often that I get to work on an active volcano, let or lone the only one in Antarctica and one of the highest mountains this side of the continent. Mt Erebus - 3794m and straight up from the sea to form Ross Island. Pretty amazing. A bubbling lava lake, fumaroles, ice caves and rock crystals that are completely unique to this place in the world. And cold. All the time.

After two nights at an acclimatisation camp on Fang Glacier (above) we moved up to the main camp at 3270m. We've been extremely busy since. Firstly installing 80 seismic stations around the Volcano by skidoo, then drilling 15m ice cores all over the place, filling them with explosives and now we're blasting them all.

The surreal view into an ice core hole

Life "upstairs" is as varied as ever - one day drilling holes, another circumnavigating the volcano on skidoo installing seismic stations. Visiting the ice caves on an evening, dealing with helicopters during the day, flying around to recce sites, organising camp. Variety is the spice of life as they say, and this year I have a more varied job than ever. Busy busy with loads going on all the time.

This is me hitching a sling load whilst the 212 Helicopter hovers over my head - an exhilarating experince to say the least!!

There were 14 of us until yesterday and, weather permitting, we'll be down to ten by tomorrow evening for Christmas, just like a big family! Seismic stations out, drilling finished and only another 4 holes to blow. Then the task is to fetch everything in again by the start of January.

Another hard day at the office.


These last four images are of the famous Erebus Ice Caves. The rock is hot but the outside temperature is a max of -20 C. Snow falls and accumulates as ice, but the warm rock beneath hollows out caves from below. The colours inside range from black to blue to white and every shade inbetween. Amazing. We can walk into some, but others require a 20m abseil and a climb back out again. The Fumaroles are ice towers created as the warm moist air hits the cold dry outside and the moisture condenses immediately making a hollow tower that gets bigger until it collapses. The volcano is covered in these towers and caves and I'm on a mission to get into as many as I have time and energy for!

So that's it for the moment. Christmas is around the corner and I'm sending this out at last to wish you all a very Happy Christmas and hopefully I'll have the time to post another blog before the new year. Love to all my family on the big day - I'll be thinking of you on this, my 10th Christmas away from home. Thanks for all the love and support over the years and see you at the end of January!

Tim

Tuesday 2 December 2008

Antarctic Arrival

Well, after a long long journey down through LA and Auckland, I arrived safe and well in Christchurch and flew to Antarctica a few days later. Good to be back as always - amazing place and some wicked people here at McMurdo station - run by the United States Antarctic Program.

At around 1200 people, it's the biggest research station on the continent. A bit of a eyesore mining town in beautiful surroundings. Captain Scott built a hut here in 1902 and it still stands in good shape, looking out over the monstrosity of the station alongside.

Captain RF Scott's hut built more than 100 years ago looks out over station.

The station has a series of sculptures as you walk around...

I spend a LOT of time on this motorway and thought this was a suitable symbol...


I'm working with a team of people aiming to put out a grid of seismic monitors across the summit region of Mt Erebus (3794m), an active volcano with a bubbling lava lake at 78 Degrees South, drill a series of holes around Ross island and the volcano itself, fill them with explosives and blow them up. Sounds pretty exciting and hopefully it will be!

Mt Erebus from the sea ice

The idea is that the high resolution seismic array will be able to use the information gathered from the blasts to create a 3D image of the insides of the volcano and the magma chamber leading to it. Phew.

First we have a few days on station - people have to do training courses and other bits and bobs including skidoo school - a school to train people in the use of skidoos on difficult terrain (side traverses, steep slopes etc)

Practicing skidoo control on blue ice

The volcano just goes straight up from sea level to 3794m in one go.


We've also got this man on board - he spent ten seasons here from 1978-88 and hasn't been back since. He's now a middle school teacher and is sending stuff back to his school every few days as part of an outreach project run in association with the National Science Foundation. He's Mr Enthusiasm and will be lots of fun!

Tomorrow we're scheduled to head up to Fang, an acclimatisation camp, for a couple of days before hitting the high hut and starting on the seismometers. Busy season ahead as always....

Saturday 15 November 2008

Morocco Madness


My Mum and Brother's birthdays fall the day after each other and this year was a notable birthday for my Mum (it's not my place to say which but the photo above isn't for my brother!!) so she planned to celebrate in style. The Burton family headed to Morocco for a very long weekend (6 days!) - the first family holiday since I was a teenager. Amazing mountains with peaceful plains, a bustling city with markets and a spectacular array of colours. Here's a few pictures from the week...

An old lady walks down a backstreet in Marrakesh

I tried to persuade my Mum to go for a birthday ride but she was having none of it!

My parents at the Kasbah

Relaxing by the pool...

There are very few dogs in Morocco but lots of cats - this is a kitten in a Berber House we visited on a tour up the Ourika Valley.

My Brother and Sister overdoing it...

Happy Birthday again Mum (and Bruv) and thanks for a wonderful week.

Wednesday 5 November 2008

Black Mountain Madness


A few days in the Black Mountains working with a group of Gold Duke of Edinburgh Award on their Qualifiying expedition gave me the chance to shoot a few pictures of some rolling hills that remind me of my Welsh University days (albeit a long time ago now!) Autumn colours, peacocks, sheeps and a scary cloud...

This next one reminds me of those psychological tests when you're asked to look at an image and say what you see...

Anyone else see a huge dog with massive nose and ears about to eat a tree!? Perhaps it's just me. I really should get away more.

Monday 20 October 2008

Autumn in the Peaks

Autumn is my favourite time of year. Wildlife preparing for the long winter ahead, leaves turning, the air becoming cooler and crisper and the autum colours seeping across the landscape like spilt paint. Add to that the anticipation of my annual escape of the worst of the British winter to the southern hemisphere (Antarctica from November for the sixth year on the trot!) and you can see why.

I'm back in the peaks for a few weeks and try to get out and about and make the most before my departure. Wandering along the Eastern Gritstone Edges, climbing, mountain biking and walking about taking it all in. I even had a little visit from a hedgehog today fattening up ready for its own way of escaping the winter...

The neighbours cat felt a little inquisitive and didn't manage to follow the "look don't touch" philosophy and had a nasty shock in the process.

Lastly, as he was wandering around he got quite excited for a moment as he though he'd met a gorgeous hedgehog to cuddle up to this winter. He looked very disappointed as he wandered off!

Tuesday 23 September 2008

Skyline London to Paris Charity Bike

Don't you just love it when people put themselves out to raise money for charity! On the 10-14th September 200 people on two different routes cycled from London to the Eiffel Tower raising thousands of pounds for loads of charities. I was crew and photographer and am also raising money for the Parkinsons Disease Society through sales of images from the event.