I’m back home in Fairbanks now and I’ve finished my first day back at West Valley High School. I had a great trip but I never saw a polar bear but it seems like everyone else did. Holly saw one when she looked out her window just as she woke up. She said it drifted by as if she were still dreaming. I thought about questioning her state of alertness at 5:30 in the morning but the Captain saw it from the bridge as well. I didn’t wake up until 5:45. Later in the day at Barrow, Harper got a truck ride up around Point Barrow itself and saw a whale just twenty feet off shore, a snowy owl sitting patiently along the beach and a polar bear drift by on the ice. I was taking a nap in the Barrow gym. These two lost opportunities just give credence to the old saying, “If you snooze, you loose”.
Shortly after I did wake up I had to start cleaning up the room as the Coast Guard does not provide maid service. I ran my sheets down to the laundry room to hopefully beat the rush as I heard there would be almost thirty people leaving the ship. I was just in time as there was still one washing machine left. The experienced Coast Guard people had gotten there plenty early. Many had been on the ship for much longer than I and they didn’t want to take any chance at not getting to shore. I got the sheets into the dryer before breakfast and shortly after breakfast I folded them stuffed my duffle bag.
I felt a warm glow of content inside as I stuffed my bag because I never had to wear my long johns or wool pants. The weather was relatively wonderful the whole week.
After our room passed inspection I carried my bags to the hanger where all the outgoing personnel were briefed on the upcoming ride back to shore. I felt confidence in the civilian pilot as I over heard him talk to one of the ship’s officers about the polar bear surveys he was recently flying out of Prudhoe Bay. I felt that if he’s good enough to chase polar bears all over the ice pack he could safely get me the few miles to shore.
The civilian Jet Ranger helicopter provided a much quieter ride with a better view than did the Coast Guard copter on the way out. I guess the difference is that the Coast Guard aircraft was all business and no effort was made to provide the padded seats the civilian version did.
Once safely off loaded in Barrow we made our way to the Barrow gym where we were provided with cots to either nap or for overnight for those with Alaska Airlines reservations for Thursday. Almost as soon as we dropped our bags off at the gym we took off walking to the Inupiat Heritage center.
After going through the center again looking for tidbits of information might have missed on the first pass Rob Palomares and I went to Browers restaurant for a sandwich. The restaurant is in the building that was built in 1883. Over it’s life time it served as staging area for early Arctic exploration, a home for stranded whalers and a trading post. I had read about it as a kid in Charles Brower’s book, “Fifty years Below Zero.” Now that I’ve seen Barrow I’ll have to reread the book.
When we made our way through the chilling wind back to the warm gym I plopped down on a cot with my full belly and fell into a long slumber and missed seeing the polar bear mentioned before.
When I finally managed to come out of my coma I slowly put on some running clothes and did a quick jog around Barrow for my last chance to see a polar bear and the highlights of the town. A nice long shower afterwards put me in a good mood to get to the Alaska Airlines terminal and head for warm and sunny Fairbanks.
~John


Another CTD was placed below the limits of the MMP and then again 500 to 1000 meters below that.
We’re about 30 miles North of Prudhoe Bay and I haven’t seen drift ice all day long. Drift ice tends to dampen out the waves on the ocean so now the ship has a slight rocking motion that wasn’t noticeable when in the ice.Harper will be deploying his first mooring tomorrow morning at 8:00 a.m. and he is very nervous. He’s been preparing for this over the past several years but I’m sure that with the attention he’s been paying to all the little details, everything will work out fine. I talked with John Kemp, the lead mooring technician, before heading up to my room. He seems relaxed and confident but he also knows tomorrow will be a long day for everyone.
The stairs on the ship are called ladders because that is just about what they are. I have to use the hand rails for fear of falling back down as I climb up. My room is on 04 deck and the science lab is on the main deck (00) which means I have to climb four flights of ladders if I want to get something from my room to take down to the science lab. I try to run or bike almost every day so I am in very good shape. However, going up and down these ladders can really poop me out. Hopefully by the end of my week on board I’ll be able to keep pace with the young sailors as they scamper up and down like squirrels.

This has been another day in the paradise of the Arctic. Before settling in for sleep I made another trip up to the bridge to try to spot a polar bear or a walrus. The sea is mirror flat calm with pans of beautiful white and blue ice. In the distance I can see a pink mist coming from the orange light of a setting sun reflecting off a light fog. Tonight, the colors and tranquility of the Arctic Ocean match any alpine scenery for splendor.
After a long day in the science lab I dressed up in my running clothes to try out the treadmills in the ship’s exercise room. After I jogged at an easy pace for about twenty minutes I started dialing up the speed. When I got up to 8 mph the treadmill stopped and would not restart. I moved over to the next treadmill and that machine also stopped at 8 mph. I felt bummed that maybe I had burned out the ship’s treadmills by running too fast so I nervously walked up to the bridge to report the problem. The Master Chief on watch replied, without blinking, that they will not allow anyone to go faster than the boat. After I stared at him for few minutes in stunned disbelief, a young woman, also on duty, told me that there is a bug in the program that causes them to freeze right at 8 mph and that if I cycle through a power down/up the error would clear itself. The treadmills worked fine after the reboot.
After unpacking the gear we needed, Matthew Alford from the University of Washington took me under his wing and showed me the details of preparing the CTD probes for deployment. The CTD probes measure conductivity, temperature and depth every few minutes and store the data over the year. While I worked on the CTDs, Holly prepped the ADCP (Acoustic Doppler Current Profiling) probes and Matthew set up the programming for all them all. Harper stayed busy answering technical questions and laying out the work to come for us.




