-------------------------------------------------------------------- Z - F I D S N E W S L E T T E R No. 47 19 Oct 2020 Editor: Andy Smith (email andy@zfids.org.uk) Website: www.zfids.org.uk -------------------------------------------------------------------- News about Halley VIa --------------------- David Hunt, the Halley Ops Manager and Station Leader has sent us the following update. Thanks very much to him for taking the time to do that. --------------------------------------------------------------------- Due to the current global pandemic the 20/21 will be vastly reduced to a team of ten to carry out essential maintenance works only. The team will travel from the UK to Rothera on the JCR and then deploy across to Halley by Twin Otter. We expect the team to be on the ground from late December to mid-February. The main focus of the season will be to: * Service and refuel the micro-turbine * Raise and re-align VSAT Dome (link was lost in September - this was expected and data is still being transferred to Cambridge via back up Iridium open port system) * Service Automated Science instruments * Raise and service LOH network (this is a network of automated GPS sites that monitor the stability of the Ice shelf and allow us continuous monitoring to ensure personnel safety) * Receive airdrop of approx. 600 drums of Avtar * Initial investigation of possible relief sites for the 21-22 season The season has been drastically reduced to try and meet BAS's aim of having zero cases of Covid 19 introduced on to the continent. Micro-turbine ------------- The micro-turbine has been running well so far throughout this winter - with only a couple of minor component failures (all with built in redundancies), which will be upgraded during the coming season. Chasm 1 ------- The West Brunt is also amazingly still there. As I reported in the last brief the remaining distance of intact ice between the tip of Chasm 1 and cracks propagating from The Rumples is still approximately 2.0 km and this hasn't really changed significantly over this winter. There is also little change in the propagation of Halloween Crack. Outlook ------- This is obviously quite a tricky one as we don't know what the Covid situation will bring us over the next year or so, but at present: A full ship relief is intended for the 21/22 season, again depending on the situation with the Ice shelf calving - if intact ice remains stable we may well attempt relief from the West Brunt. Overall, considering the circumstances we find ourselves in Halley is in a good place with science continuing to function as normal and planning in motion to try and meet any challenge thrown our way during these challenging times. All the best, David Hunt - Halley Ops Manager & Station Leader --------------------------------------------------------------------- Sadly there are deaths to report. George Hemmen ------------- George died on 10th June 2020 aged 94. He was one of the three people (the others were David Dalgliesh and Ken Powell) who decided, on 6th January 1956, where the Royal Society IGY base would be built (it was not called Halley Bay, after the nearby coastal feature, until later). This was on the RS IGY Expedition Advance Party. Although he never wintered at Halley, having been in charge of all the expedition's logistics, he accompanied the first wintering party on the MV Tottan to the Caird Coast. He told the story in a talk "Halley Bay - Base Z - The background and why it is where it is" at Z50 in 2006, and you can read it on the Z-Fids website (link from 1956 page). Before the IGY he had wintered as a Met man at Admiralty Bay in 1953 and Base Leader at Deception in 1954. He worked for the Royal Society for many years and for a time he was Secretary of SCAR (Scientific Committee for Antarctic Research). For many years he organised annual reunions in Lancashire for the IGYE team and associated Halley Bay Fids, and was one of the last survivors from the Expedition. He was interviewed for the British Antarctic Oral History Project and you can access this interview on the BAS Club website. Again there is a link on the 1956 Z-Fids page. His funeral, on 26th June, was attended only by close family and friends, due to coronavirus restrictions, but was webcast for his many Antarctic and Royal Society friends and colleagues. His wife Margo predeceased him by six months. Peter Pitts ----------- Peter Pitts, a beastie man at Halley in 1968 died on Tuesday 12 May 2020 aged 92 at Penzance. He will probably be remembered for his enthusiasm for amateur radio, with a call sign VP8JP and for owning one of the most expensive cameras on base - a Leica M3, competing with the one Hasselblad owned by Norris Riley. Michael 'Bunny' Houlcroft ------------------------- Michael Houlcroft who was tractor mechanic in 1977 and 1978 died in May 2020. Ken Lax says "Bunny was popular on base. He had a great sense of humour and contributed much to the general welfare and morale on the base." Richard Cuthbertson ------------------- Richard Cuthbertson died on the 15th January 2017 though I have only recently learned this from his widow Peggy. Richard was the wintering diesel mechanic at Halley in 1966. Reunions -------- Due to the pandemic, actual reunions have not been possible but some have been held by Zoom, e.g. a Midwinter one for the 1966 winterers and one in May for the 1977 winterers. The latter also had a Midwinter pub quiz. Reports on the 1966 and 1977 Z-Fids pages. Z-Fids website -------------- This was set up in June 2001 and so is now in its 20th year. Since Halley ceased to be a wintering base, more emphasis has been on past than recent activities. If anyone has any interesting pictures, information, anecdotes etc. which would be suitable for the website and of interest to Halley Fids, please sent them in. Lewis Juckes ------------ Lewis, wintering geologist at Halley in 1964 and 1965, has set up a personal website which may be of interest to some. A link to it is on the Z-Fids 1964 page. Return of the Sun ----------------- Although nobody has been on base to see it since 2016, the Sun should have risen for the first time after winter on or about 9th August. To mark the occasion, Allen Clayton, Surveyor in 1969 and BC in 1970, has painted a scene which includes raising the flag and setting up the sunshine recorder. This is now on the Z-Fids website, along with the considerable number of comments which it generated. Link from the 1969 page. Dave French commented that according to Jim Chalmers the signpost represented in the picture is probably the only item to be moved from Halley II to each subsequent version and be now at Halley VI. If anyone knows different, please write in. Other information about the signpost is at www.zfids.org.uk/2003/signpost.htm Visits to Z-2 and Z-3 --------------------- Dale Heaton, who was the wintering builder in 1985 and 1986, has sent in some interesting pictures of visits he and others made to the abandoned Halley-II ("Grillage Village") and Halley-III (Armco) bases. Links on the 1985 and 1986 Z-Fids pages or look in the Picture index. VP8 radio licences ------------------ In August people who held VP8 ‘lifetime’ amateur radio licences for British Antarctic Territory, for use while hamming at the BAS bases including Halley, were disappointed when these were suddenly cancelled by the licencing authority in the Falkland Islands. After a campaign, these were reinstated in September. For more information see www.openfalklands.com Master Plumber -------------- Congratulations to Jimmy Hendry, plumber at Halley in 2013, on being awarded Master Plumber status by the Lord Mayor of London at the Mansion House. There's a picture on the Z-Fids website, link from the 2013 page. Winterers database ------------------ This is publically available on the BAS Club website under Resources. An analysis shows that for the 2610 people who wintered at BAS, FIDS and Operation Tabarin bases between 1944 and 2020, more winters were spend at Halley (Base Z) than any other base. Out of 4554 Fid-winters, 1106 were spent at Halley. This does not count the years of the IGY: 1956, 57 and 58. The large number reflects the fact that Halley has operated continuously as a wintering base longer than any other, and has tended to have comparatively large wintering complements. The next highest number was 806 at Rothera (Base R). British Antarctic Oral History Project -------------------------------------- Of the 286 Oral History interviews held in BAS Archives, 266 have now been transcribed by our team of volunteers. 147 of the interviews have been published on the BAS Club website (link on the zfids home page) and more are expected to be published soon. You don't need to be a BAS Club member to see them. There are links on the Z-Fids website to the interviews featuring Halley people (See the General Index under Oral history recordings). Here are a couple of extracts from the interviews: Paul Coslett (Glaciologist, 1967-68): Last days of living in Halley I ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Shortly after getting there, and the ships had sailed, we had one of the generators on the old base fail, and so as opposed to having three generators, two of which were running at any time, we had one running and one on standby. It meant that the power available for heating and things like that had to be drastically reduced. So heating was switched off in all but the Office Block, and the scientific programmes were put on hold a bit, when all available labour was used to carry on getting the new base habitable, so that everybody could move up there as quickly as possible. That was probably achieved April/ May time, such that we were all up there, apart from the static scientific crew, by Midwinter. There were about 12 of them stayed in the old base, in the old Office Block. The original IGY hut was about 50 feet down, and that had been abandoned apart from storage. There was a walkway from that, a Dexion ladder that had been built at a staircase type angle. You went up that to get into the Main Living and Dormitory Block, and then a few years after that, the new Office Block had been built further up. When I arrived, we had got full heating in the Dormitory and Living Block, and those huts had been crushed under the weight of ice and any waterproofing had deteriorated. There was enough water dripping down through the roofs such that in each bunkroom we had to provide a bit of polythene across the roof which discharged into a gutter that was made out of old cans to run alongside the bed, and we had to empty that, a five gallon drum twice a day. So that was the amount that was dropping, dripping down. The whole thing was moving. One day somebody went and put a Dexion ladder to get up into the loft space and left it there and when he came to take it down, something had settled onto the top of it and it was trapped. He did not like to cut it out or take it apart, just in case something came down, and it had become structural." NERC copyright, reproduced courtesy of BAS Archives Service. Archives ref AD6/24/1/122. Denis Wilkins (Doctor, 1969): Radio pill lost in loo pit ---------------------------------------------------------------------- "We used radio pills to measure the temperature and there were various experiments I did on base, lesser things just to get baselines, that sort of thing. Therein lay a bit of a problem one time because I only had four of these things. They were precious and Norris Riley I remember (lovely guy), he was a Geordie as I recall, Norris came to me one morning and said ‘You know I have got a radio pill, Doc.’ I said ‘Yes, Norris.’ He said ‘Well you know we are supposed to use the bucket to retrieve the radio pill.’ We wrapped it in a little rubber fingerstall, tied it up, and then you went through the poo and cleaned it off, slipped the rubber stall and out popped the pill, reasonably clean. Cleaned it off, put it in an oven and reused it you see. It doesn’t sound very savoury but it’s the sort of thing that Fids do all the time. He came to me and I remember it. I was sitting in the surgery doing something and he said to me ‘Doc, I have just been to the pit.’ which is the bog which had just been used by 25-30 people for two years and started off 45 feet deep and was now about the order of about 15-20 I guess. So you can imagine it was well-used. So I said to Norris ‘Well that’s very unfortunate. I really really must get this pill back. I will go and get the ladder for you.’ The rope ladder was suspended from a hook over the pit. He seemed to take the attitude that it was my radio pill and if I wanted it I would jolly well go and get it, which I thought it was a bit un-Christian. I did go down and look for it. I never found it." NERC copyright, reproduced courtesy of BAS Archives Service. Archives ref AD6/24/1/167. Many thanks to all contributors to this Newsletter. Registrations and email updates ------------------------------- As usual this newsletter is being sent out by email only, to 457 people. If you are on email but have not received it by that route, please register or re-register on the website (links on the home page). 435 people have now registered on Z-fids. If you have, your name will be shown as a link on the appropriate year page(s). If you wish to be removed from the mailing list, again let me know by email. Andy |