TALES FROM A PARAMEDIC, PILOT, CAVER, and FIREFIGHTER, WHO MEET IN ANTARCTICA, AND GO ON TO HAVE MANY ADVENTURES IN NEW ZEALAND, TONGA, FIJI, VANUATU, WEST AFRICA, AND UKRAINE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Structural Firefighting/ARFF/Joint Antarctic Search and Rescue Team at McMurdo Station Winfly- Summer- Winterover. Sailing a 37' Tayana sailboat in the South Pacific. Ebola Response. Wildland firefighting. War Medic in Ukraine.
Monday, January 10, 2011
Wanaka Rodeo
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Otago Goldfields
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
Wetas
From All About Wetas by Waitomo Caves Museum Society
The weta is one of NZ’s most infamous creatures. The Maori called them Devils of the Night, or Gods of Ugly Things. An early scientist, Sir Walter Buller, once attempted to collect and kill some wetas for studying. One was held underwater for four days but survived; another was still alive after being dropped into near-boiling water; while yet another ate its way out of his handkerchief. But in spite of their fearsome appearance they are quite harmless, and very rarely aggressive.
Wetas are found in several Southern Hemisphere countries apart from NZ. The largest species found here are the heaviest insects in the world, weighing up to 70g- however there are over 70 species of weta in NZ. Even older than the tuatara, wetas are a very primitive creature. Our wetas have changed very little since NZ was isolated from the rest of the world many years ago. In fact some species are very similar now to when they lived with the dinosaurs.
Wetas can be divided into four major groups - cave wetas, tree wetas, ground wetas, and giant wetas.
Cave Wetas can be identified by their small bodies with relatively long legs. One species in Northland has a body length of about 2.5 cm - but its total length from antennae to hind legs is 35cm. They choose to live in dark places- not just in caves but in crevices and mine tunnels, and under logs and houses. Deep in caves, there is not always a good food supply, so they are seldom found far from entrances.
Because they live in little or no light, they have very small eyes- so their long legs and antennae are needed to help them feel around in the dark. The antennae are also waved around in the air to detect air currents. If disturbed, they can move very quickly and can jump up to 2m.
Cave wetas occasionally eat each other before their shells get hard, but usually they just eat soft plants like algae, as well as fungi and dead animals. On dark moonless nights, they often come outside in large groups to feed.
Tree and Ground Wetas: Tree wetas (or bush wetas) are NZ’s most common weta, found everywhere except in the far south. They are often unearthed hiding in piles of firewood, and are distinguished by their large heads. Like grasshoppers they have ears on their front legs, while the back legs are rubbed against their stomach to produce mating and fighting noises. Fighting is common amongst males competing for a group of females- the winner is usually the weta with the biggest jaws.
Tree wetas eat the leaves of many different plants, but prefer the softer leaves of some species such as mahoe or karamu. The females will sometimes eat their own discarded skins or other dead insects, to get extra energy for egg laying.
Ground wetas are much smaller than tree wetas and don’t have such big heads. As the name suggests they live in the ground, often in holes left by other insects, such as grass grubs and cicadas. Ground wetas, like cave wetas, are silent and have no ears.
Giant Wetas are the least common, but most fascinating type of weta found in NZ. Ten species have been discovered so far, in a variety of habitats - some live in burrows, some in the tops of trees, and some on alpine rock slopes. Most species are found in only very small areas, such as the Mahoenui giant weta - found only in a 300 hectare area of gorse in the King Country.
They are too large to jump (some are up to 8cm long), and are quite slow moving. This makes them readily preyed upon by rats, more so because the burrows of some species are large enough for a rat to enter. Because of this, and their limited distribution, most species are in danger of becoming extinct. Many of the largest species are now found only on offshore islands where rats have been eliminated. All our species of giant weta are protected by law.
The various types of wetas lay their eggs in various ways, because of their diverse habitats. Female cave wetas use their ovipositor (an egg laying organ extending form the rear end) to find soft cave mud of the right texture and depth, then lay just one or two eggs per hole. Tree wetas lay roughly 250 eggs in the soil (about 15mm down) near the base of their tree- the only time in their life that they descend to the ground.
Ground wetas lay their eggs in the burrow walls, where the young wetas end up spending much of their early life; giant wetas lay up to 400 eggs when they reach their maximum size (just before dying), usually in soil near their natural habitat.
Most wetas live for around two years, during which they evolve form an egg to a series of immature forms known as nymphs, in instars, and finally to full adult maturity. However, the details of the life cycle are poorly known for many species. Cave wetas lay their eggs in late autumn. The eggs take about 8 months to incubate, after which the nymph goes through three moults (each moult is an instar) before reaching maturity. A typical ground or tree weta goes through 10 instars. Each stage is only slightly different from that before it, so that by the time the weta reaches the sixth or seventh instar it is almost mature. Giant wetas also go through about ten instars. The often break their antennae while shedding skin between instars, but can easily regenerate them.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Manapouri Power Station Road
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
The Clifden Caves
And there are several deaths - one very experienced team member is an insulin-dependent diabetic. Alone in the rebreather beyond the last sump, he suffers a hypoglycemic episode and tragically drowns in a big chamber, not far from land. In a separate cave, a renowned older diver fails to resurface after attempting to set a record by diving to 1000’ feet in a cenote. His body pops to the surface days later, its tissues and the encapsulating wetsuit ruptured by expanding gases. Another friend dies in a silt-out in a Florda cave (divers on open-circuit systems have only about 20-80 min air, depending on their depth. They depend on waterproof electric lights, and even when following best practice by taking 2 backups, total failures do happen. Many underwater cave tunnels are coated in fine, flour-like silt that is easily stirred up, reducing visibility to nothing. Divers tend to reel out a thin line behind them as they go, but if they lose this line or pull on it too hard so that its cut by a sharp rock edge, odds of getting out in time in a silt-out are low.)
In the end, the initially large team is so disheartened by the work, conditions, and these tragedies, that only Bill, his girlfriend Barbara, and one dedicated doctor friend remain deep in the cave. If anything goes wrong, it will be very serious. With the flooding of the wet season imminent, Bill and Barbara dive the long sump which had blocked further progress until Bill designed his own rebreathers. They then spend a week following various dry abandoned under ground river beds, and renew the cave’s status as the deepest in the Americas. They also tie it in to other parts of the Huatla system. They are finally defeated by ‘the mother of all sumps’. I believe the cave has still not been bottomed. All this really makes me want to go into more caves!
So anyway, off to the Clifden caves. All there was to mark them was a sign on the side of the highway and a small gravel parking area. I opened a page of a book I was reading and wrote a note to leave in my windshield ‘entered caves at 1230pm’. Haha, hopefully if I didn’t come out someone would eventually notice. The DOC warns (and I do tend to take their warnings very seriously, tempting as it is to try going against them) not to go into the cave if there is any water at all flowing in to it. It’s subject to flash flooding. Inside, I found grass deposited along the walls up to 4’ high from floodwaters- yikes! I grabbed my 3 lights (flashlight, keychain light, and camera flash- what? I'm poor and have to carry all my stuff when I travel…) and wandered down to the mouth. It was very dark and the thought of going alone was creepy (and recommended against by DOC).
Fortunately just as I was forcing my self in alone, a couple Frenchies rolled up and joined me. The girl chickened out and left at the first squeeze. The cave was really great. In Te Anua I took an $80 cruise to see glowworms, but there were tons more of them here. I could take pictures and look up close at the animals and their array of threads. We'd been told in Te Anau that they were super-sensitive to light, but these ones kept on glowing merrily after the flash went off. It was incredibly beautiful, and we took 2.5 hrs to get through, stopping often with lights off to look at the unexpectedly brilliant green-blue dots of light. I wondered if they would actually cast enough light to navigate by, once one’s eyes had adjusted for a long time. There were signatures on the cave walls dating back to the 1880’s. Near the end of the cave were some fun bits that required chimneying and careful balance on a narrow ledge with awkward rock projections around a deep, cold pool.
cave was every bit as cool as Cave Stream, in its own special way.
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Monday, October 11, 2010
Castle Rock Loop Manhaul
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Adventures with Antarctic ARFF trucks
Catch 22: AFD has something like $200,000 for an ARFF truck that can be driven onto a C-130 and flown to the South Pole.
No ARFF truck that costs $200,000 and fits on a C-130 will work in Antarctica.
(Also, we later discover that ARFF trucks that cost $200,000 and fit on a C-130 and don't work in Antarctica - which is, by necessity, what we bought- ONLY fit on a C-130 if driven in- not back in. This lesson costs about $1mil and results in a C-130 sitting on the ramp at Pole with a 'For Sale' sign pasted on it. Fortunately, it was the loadmaster's fault, not ours.
The Renegades:
It's an F-550 with a 300gal CAFS/ 500 lb dry chem fire package on back. The trimax fire package is a pretty nifty patented system in which big high pressure nitrogen cylinders pressurize dry chem and foam tanks, enabling agent flow, and simulaneously injects air into the foam stream to create CAFS. Because the nitro cools when it expands, the agent comes out almost at freezing temperature. The trucks have about 90 secs worth of agent out the turret, and up to 8 mins out the handline. The forest service, loggers, etc buy a lot of these systems, and they work quite well. Everywhere but Antarctica.
Fatal Flaws of the Renegades:
Fire Package - Foam must be used as a concentrate and is therefore very corrosive. All brass fittings and certain areas of inappropriate soft hose replaced after they blew apart when charged at a fire.
- the fire package is surrounded by a metal box. The undiluted foam will freeze below -40F, so the truck has to be heated. Current heaters are inadequate and there isn't capacity at the air field right now for high-voltage plug ins.
- 5 psi check valves between the nitro and foam system are inadequate and allow foam to back up and render the electrical actuating system inoperable. One of my favorite AFD catches: while the foam can be cleaned out by breaking down the entire system and taking apart the solenoids, the system must then be tested, which puts more foam into the system.
- THE SYSTEM HAS NO MANUAL OVERRIDE. In order to manually activate the system, a 5' nitro cylinder would have to be moved to the side, air hoses disconnected from the foam line valve, and the valve manually pulled and held open. System failed at a truck fire due to lack of manual activation capability.
- Hoseline is a 100' rubber hose reel that hardens in cold temps. This means that the truck will have to back up right to the door of a C-130 or C-17 for good reach inside the plane.
The truck - F550 is not a tough enough platform for this system.
- back overloaded - suspension system has pretty much zero spring left.
- transmission is not heavy enough for the tracks. Much time at VMF.
- trucks can go about 6 miles at 20mph before their coolant boils. Spills are a no-no here.
- trucks were nearly impossible to steer in close quarters/ low speeds due to track friction. This resulted in excessive wear and tear and a few really good years for the Ford steering pump division, until VMF rigged up a hydraulic enhancement.
- Although the trucks are used very little, the Mattracks are not very durable and end up with rips fairly frequently
Fires
- Smurf hut, winter (2007?) - warming hut at Pegasus catches fire. Glow is seen from town, a Renegade responds over the ice road. On arrival, handline is pulled, system is charged, and the corroded brass fittings in the package blow apart. Package fills with foam, hut burns while crew waits for a second truck to drive out. Total loss.
- Van fire - Pegasus, summer 2010 - Renegade works beautifully. Van total loss.
- Truck fire - Ice Runway, winter 2010 -Solenoids on foam side of system fail, system unchargeable, fire eventually put out with PKP and shovelfulls of snow. Total loss.
Testing - After the failure of Red 4 at the winter 2010 truck fire, AFD was mandated to test all ARFF apparatus. Testing of the 4 Renegades was informative, fun, and resulted in the following unique photo ops:
Foam explosion #1: Foam system switch was wired backwards -> 'off'='on'. Unfortunately handline was open in the back, so when the ignition key was turned, the package got filled with foam. Fortunately for, I left that evening for the Castle Rock manhaul and missed the cleanup.
Foam Explosion #3 - A similar event causes a similar spill the next day - picture a slightly smaller bubbly puddle and a few less smiles.
Eventually all 6 ARFF trucks were returned to serviceable condition, for now. Plans are being worked on for fixing the unintended foam-air system interface, and adding manual overrides. Two new units will be ordered for Pole, and these will be dragged on sleds to reduce the strain on the F550s. Their packages will feature compressor-generated CAFS and full manual overrides.
Testing the Chieftons: 25 years old and still going strong
Red 1 - separate pump and generator in back package. Passes flow test without a hitch. Package was completely rewired in back last month after being plugged into the wrong phase power source.
Red 2 - PTO pump and separate generator in package. Everything is nice and solid, heavy and old. It doesnt break easy. It isnt simple. Steps to use this truck during our test:
1) Pre-startup truck check... outer 30" of water intake pipe is frozen solid. Two hours of thawing necessary.
2) Unplug 2 power cords from under engine.
3) Climb up on tread and turn on front battery switch.
4) Start engine by turning ignition and holding ignition cutoff switch for at least 30 seconds.
5) Turn off outside breaker for package power
6) unplug cannon plug from truck
7) climb into package and start generator by turning on fuel, turning off circuit breaker, pulling out choke, and turning key for electric start. Use pull start when electric start fails to work.
8) Unplug and re-plug 3 cords to transfer all package heater to generator power.
9) Open main valve and recirculate valve to get pump wet.
10) Return to cab and follow normal steps to engage PTO: place air brake on, truck in neutral, engage PTO, put truck in drive, switch on high idle.
11) Truck stalls. Experiment until you figure out this is the order needed: Truck in neutral, parking brake, high idle, PTO, drive.
12) Climb back into package and open the valve to the turret if you havent already.
13) Climb back into the front and use turret controls. For handline, pull handline, then charge with valve at back of package. Remember that you only have 1000 or 1100 of the 1200 gals that could fit in the tank , since the agent sloshes out the top vent if the tank is filled all the way.