foobarbecue 8 hours ago

The version of this that we had when I worked on Erebus (2009-2017) was more fun.

It had a section about crossing crevasses with combinations of sleds and snomobiles and tracked vehicles, crevasse rescue etc. In the middle of otherwise serious text it said "to recover from this situation, you might elect to [something], or possibly [something else]. Either way, a change of underwear is recommended."

If people want I can try to dig it up.

EDIT: found it. p244. https://www.eol.ucar.edu/sites/default/files/files_live/priv... It's really interesting to compare these and see how USAP's risk posture has changed. No more adventures allowed.

  • mmooss 6 hours ago

    Essential reading for field operations is §3.2f Field-Camp Liquor Rations.

    Also, fwiw, it's the 6th edition dated February 2001 (per Acknowledgments).

smlavine 12 hours ago

Related: a cool blog from a year or two ago from a participant in this program: https://brr.fyi

  • netsharc 44 minutes ago

    Reading the post about how a lot of tech breaks because of the slow internet https://brr.fyi/posts/engineering-for-slow-internet makes me think "Kids these days" (stupid kid coders who can't take into consideration slow or latency-filled connections) and want to take a bat into the "open space" where these dumb devs are siting around...

  • ProllyInfamous 10 hours ago

    I read every word on this site, last time it was posted.

    The footage of the Rodriguez well (and TNT explosions), in 320x480 glory, are a time capsule of human ingenuity.

mackman 9 hours ago

I was down there recently on a helicopter-based expedition and they set up a forward base of operations with a few days of emergency rations in case of unexpected weather that prevents you from returning to ship. I asked them what happens if the blizzard lasts more than a couple of days. Someone somewhere has a recipe book for penguins.

  • booi 9 hours ago

    I assume it tastes like… chicken?

    • deadbabe 8 hours ago

      No, penguins are pretty disgusting.

optimalsolver 10 hours ago

Do NOT let strange dogs into the base.

  • wombatpm 10 hours ago

    Especially if Norwegians are shooting at it from a helicopter.

darknavi 10 hours ago

I find it neat that even in a climate as hostile as the Antarctic humans still make an effort to recycle.

> Field Camp Hut Etiquette

> Sort and pack all trash and recycled materials and take them back to McMurdo Station for proper disposal.

  • foobarbecue 8 hours ago

    Oh man if you had any idea how much work goes into waste sorting & disposal there. In McMurdo every trash station has trash cans for ~10 different categories. I was always calling up the waste department to ask about classification. We would get bored and argue about the classification of juice boxes for "fun". I worked on Erebus and all of our pee & poop got helicoptered out in buckets. Food waste was shipped all the way back to CA and had to be kept frozen the whole way.

    • dotancohen 2 hours ago

      I bet that helicopter pilot was some ex-Navy F-14 pilot who liked to buzz the tower and risked his taxpayer-owned jet to save his wingman after an encounter with MiG 28s.

    • netsharc 42 minutes ago

      Juice boxes are cardboard, plastic and alumunium glued together and a hassle to recylce. But heck, their inventors (Tetrapak) are billionaires!

baden1927 4 hours ago

For waste management, x-org server/windows tiling, either for USAP risk aversion or wing aircraft GIS systems that are programmed in UNIX, are the long-leverage hold of -CTU static-build boundaries.

teppic 11 hours ago

That “orange” bag has seen better days.