------------------------------------------------------------------ Z - F I D S N E W S L E T T E R No. 4 May 2005 Editor: Andy Smith (email andy@smitha.demon.co.uk) Website: www.zfids.org.uk ------------------------------------------------------------------ Halley 50 Year Celebration weekend, Northampton, 14-15 October 2006 This unique event is now open for bookings. Details of the weekend are on the Z-fids website, though the programme is still provisional. The Second Circular and Booking Form has been published. BAS Club members will receive a copy with their May Newsletters, due out very soon. Non-members may download it from the website. If you want to attend this birthday party, and we hope many will, please complete the booking form and return it with your payment to secure your place. Remember to fill in both sides of the form. People who paid the £10 advance deposit (a list is on the website) should deduct this from their payment. A reminder that, as stated in the last Newsletter, a commemorative DVD is being produced to mark the occasion. If you have any interesting pictures to contribute, please contact Stephen Williams at email stephenwilliams@newbury-18.freeserve.co.uk. A number of people have written regarding the bar currently at Halley-5, but it has still not been established who made the brass inlay of Antarctica. Dale Heaton says it came from Halley-3 and he inlaid it in the Halley-4 bar in 1985. One suggestion was that it was made by Roger Daynes in 1973, but Roger has no recollection of this. Lewis Juckes has contributed an article and pictures to the website about the Halley-1 bar and lounge (look up "bars" in the General Index). This was not the original IGYE one but the one in the 1965 building. There was a scroll on the wall which had come from the old bar and bore the motto "Mon Dieu Rhone feu qui ne pince-nez" (which you did not need to know French to comprehend). I was asked when Halley-1 broke off and floated away. Andy Spearey and Pete Witty told me that part of the base had broken out in 1979, and as the ship sailed past the ice cliffs, they could see parts of it in the face of the cliff (does anyone have a picture of this?). The remainder of Halley-1 broke out in 1980, I was told. The last people to go inside Halley-1 were probably Martin Leeson and Kevin "Smuggler" Gilbert in 1978. This led me to wonder who were the last people to visit each of the other abandoned bases: Halley-2, Halley-3 and Halley-4. Halley-3 was seen sticking out of the ice cliffs in the 1993/94 season (there is a picture on the website) so presumably it broke out earlier that season. The site of Halley-4 is still part of the Brunt I think. Please email and let me know if you have any information. I have been contacted by Paul Robinson who has a painting of the Magga Dan by Max Hofler (quite a well-known artist apparently). He would be interested in selling it. If you want more details, let me know and I will put you in touch with him. The large 1:100 scale model of Halley-5 has been saved from the tip. Dave Brown, who helped to build the real thing, has acquired it and it now resides in the house he has built near Budapest. Any fids who are in the area are very welcome to call in. Dave's contact email address is on the website. There are also some pictures of the model before it left Cambridge (look up "model" in the Picture Index). The most recent addition to the website is a page contributed by Graham Chambers, containing a couple of "streaking" pictures taken in 1984, possible the first time this activity was undertaken at Halley (but tell me if you know differently). Is any one in touch with Mike ('Smet') Durrant (meteorologist who wintered 1967-1968). If so, please ask him to contact me. As usual this newsletter is being sent out by email. If you are on email but have not received it by that route, please register or re-register on the website. All the best, Andy |