I was picked to take part in an Antarctica survival course called Happy Camper. Basically you learn how to survive outside in Antarctica in Condition 1 weather and how to make it through the night in white out conditions. You learn how to use everything in our standard survival bags: some crazy manual radio with plugs and antennae, a small portable stove, ice saw and shovel, how to pitch a tent in snow, how to form a quarry and make ice blocks in order to make a wind wall and an ice trench to survive the night. After learning these skills and working your butt off in -15 degree weather all day the instructors leave you and you are on your own until 8:30 the next morning.
I set out to sleep in a ice trench but after working in the freezing cold all day I could not stay warm and was exhausted. I helped others build their trenches for a bit and then wisely picked to sleep in a Scott Tent - the sturdiest of all shelters, it fits up to four. The two other girls on the trip were snug in the tent with me asleep at 10pm while the boys shoveled out their trenches till midnight. Most of them were overambitious and built too big of shelters thinking they would be more comfortable. What they didn't think was the bigger the space the more room your body has to heat. The only time during the entire trip I was warm was for the first two hours I was in the tent.
We luckily had a portable stove and used it to melt snow. I filled up my Nalgene with boiling water and threw it into the bottom of my mummy bag. I slept fine for a few hours and then woke up freezing, counting down the hours until we could go back. I kept thinking the entire experience would have been much better if A: we could have built a fire, but since that would probably break a few international laws I get why it isn't the best idea, and B: we should have had s'mores and steaks and a good camping meal... oh and beer, that would have helped. Instead we got dehydrated "just add water" meals in a bag. I had Beef Stroganoff - WOOF. On the plus side we also got candy bars to keep our blood sugar up and our bodies from getting frostbite/hypothermia.
Overall I am so glad I did it and was proud I made it through. I know in 20 years I will look back and remember it as one of the coolest things I have done, but while it was going on all I could think was this is awful and cold and uncomfortable. Still you need that course in order to do a lot of the cooler boondoggles so I am so glad they were able to get me into the course. It was definitely a thoroughly Antarctic experience and cool to get out and see the land off base.
This is a Delta, the vehicle that drives over the sea ice to get us to the camp site
Me in an ice trench
The scott tent I stayed in
The ice block quarry and the stove site in the background
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