Friday, 3 January 2014

Students On Ice 2012

Early in 2012 i applied for a trip i herd about that takes place in the canadian arctic and ends in greenland. The description  of the trip seemed like a trip of a lifetime. Going on a ship, seeing so many arctic animas and other things it seemed very surreal so i applied and hoped that maybe id be lucky enough to go! 

One of the massive glaciers that stretched into the Arctic Ocean (Greenland)


Sure enough many months later i got a phone call from an unknown number on my cell phone as i was out with some friends, turns out it was clare glasco a lady whom works with SOI and organizes the whole trip. The rest is history.  
A few months later i was all packed up and on my flight to ottawa to meet the team. After a short couple days in ottawa we flew to Iqualit and stayed at the "Haunted" college while we waited for the dense pac ice to blow off shore so we could get to our ship. After 5 days the Canadian Coastguard came and loaded all 124 of us onto barges and we bobbed our way through the ice to their ship where we then sailed out forbisher bay with our ship following behind. Finally in the hours of the night we loaded into zodiacs and were able to get aboard our ship. 





The Deg Groseilliers Coast Guard that helped us to our ship the Acidemic Yoffe    



These Barges were used to get us from land to the Coast Guard ship





Our ship was massive and extremely luxourious, complete with presentation rooms, IMac computers, a library and a dining hall that had 3 course meals ranging from duck to fresh cod caught that day off the ship. All in all it was amazing.  

One thing i did notice is that the birds had already finished breeding and had moved out of the arctic. the only species that were "common" were ravens, gulliemonts, common eider, lapland longspurs and Northern Fulmar. I was very surprised by this and somewhat disappointed as i had imagined something out of a BBC movie of an arctic landscape teeming with breeding shorebirds. 





A Northern Fulmar flying along side our ship was a very common sight







A large river just outside of Iqualit 



The arctic truly is an amazing place with MASSIVE landscapes and extremely friendly and welcoming people. I learned so much on the trip and did so much that it is hard to explain everything without going on and on and on. In the workshops i attended both on and off the ship ranged from glaciers, Inuit culture, sculpting, looking for gems, to even meeting people like the youngest person to reach the summit of everest or the leader of the first all women team to both the south and north pole. 










     Some of the team members board a zodiac as we depart from a land excursion in Greenland






















"This was my first time to the arctic but it wont be my last. Currently i have been looking into helping people put bands and geolocaters on birds in the arctic this summer and i have been putting a lot of thought into the idea of going to Antarctica in 2015!"

 


 Geoff Green the founder of Students on Ice speaks to the group in the town of Apex





 Lady Franklin Island in the Davis Straight, This image does not do justice to the sheer mass of this rock outcrop. It was bigger then any land form ive seen before or after. 

Pink flowers surround the crosses in a cemetery in the town of Apex 

The "Arctic swim" as they called it was much more enjoyable for me then the crazy people that actually ventured in the harshly cold water! This was north of Iqualit. 

No comments:

Post a Comment