Tuesday, September 5, 2023

Arctic Traverse: Ittoqqortoormiit

On the morning of September 12th, 2022, the Endurance anchored off the town of Ittoqqortoormiit, Greenland. (Click on the image to enlarge.) It is frequently described as the most remote settlement on earth, and sits at 70ยบ 29' north.
We went ashore by zodiacs in a light drizzle; Joan and I stopped first where the sled dogs were kept. These are working dogs, not pets, and we were instructed to avoid getting close.
Joan and I then began moseying through the town site. A company there offers various nature tours by prior arrangement.
Many of the buildings are private residences, of course. A centerpiece for us wanderers was the church.
Inside the church, the curved roof beams reminded me of whale ribs.
We watched a demonstration of spinning musk-ox wool, a valuable terrestrial resource.
Ittoqqortoormiit has an airport. Like for many small villages (Ittoqqortoormiit has a population of 324, as of 2020), service is strictly by helicopter.
There is a memorial to the explorer Jean-Baptiste Charcot, who explored Antarctica at the beginning of the 20th Century and explored eastern Greenland and Iceland from 1925 to 1936, when he and his ship perished in a storm off Iceland.
Next, Joan and I began walking up the road to the weather station, where we were told a balloon would be launched for measurement-taking. Looking back, we beheld a panoramic view of Ittoqqortoormiit.
At the top of the hill sat a radar dome.
A cluster of us waited for the balloon launch at the appointed time. We anticipated a brief description of it would accomplish, how far it would go, etc. Instead, it just suddenly leaped into the air from behind a building. I grabbed a snapshot as it rapidly disappeared.
Kathy Sullivan, the ex-astronaut, explained that the instrument box would be about the size of a one-pint carton, measuring temperature, humidity, and perhaps location (thus describing the wind speed and direction) until the balloon burst at about 120,000 feet.
 
Returning by a different route, we found this monument. Ejnar Mikkelsen founded Ittoqqortoormiit in 1925.
Next, we stopped at the local museum, hosting artifacts and historical documents and images--labeled in Danish--no photography was allowed. The last zodiac back to the ship was at noon. Joan and I hopped aboard.
 
By that afternoon, two more COVID cases had been confirmed; we hoped that would be the last. The naturalist Serguei gave a presentation, "How to read the Arctic landscape," as icebergs floated by.
Another iceberg, before the seas began to grow rough, and we saw arctic skuas heading south.
Overnight the sum of the headwinds and ship's progress totaled 50 knots. Joan and I could feel the ship's pitch and roll, but it was much milder on Endurance than on earlier Lindblad ships. We slept just fine.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Comments may not appear immediately as they are moderated by the author to eliminate spam.