logo
#

Latest news with #UKAntarcticHeritageTrust

What It's Like Working At The World's Most Remote Post Office In Antarctica
What It's Like Working At The World's Most Remote Post Office In Antarctica

NDTV

time16-05-2025

  • NDTV

What It's Like Working At The World's Most Remote Post Office In Antarctica

Port Lockroy in the Antarctic is the southernmost post office in the world, affectionately known as the Penguin Post Office. Around 70,000 postcards are sent each year to over 100 countries. Port Lockroy is located on Goudier Island off the Antarctic Peninsula, celebrated for its dramatic mountain views and the resident colony of gentoo penguins. This unique outpost operates as part of the British Antarctic Territory. Port Lockroy comprises three buildings, the largest of which is Bransfield House. This houses a living museum, the remote Penguin Post Office, and a small but very popular gift shop. It is currently the most visited site in Antarctica, drawing thousands of tourists interested in Antarctic travel and wildlife. History Of Port Lockroy In 1944, the site was established as Base A - the first continuously occupied British base in Antarctica - as part of the secret World War II mission, Operation Tabarin. In the years that followed, Port Lockroy became a cornerstone for British Antarctic science, operating as an atmospheric research station until 1962. After a conservation survey in 1994, Base A was recognised for its historical importance and officially designated as Historic Site and Monument No. 61 under the Antarctic Treaty System. The British Antarctic Survey carried out renovations in 1996. Since then, Port Lockroy has been open to visitors during the Antarctic summer season, from November to March. It now welcomes up to 18,000 visitors per season, many of whom are drawn by its unique combination of history, remoteness, and penguin colonies. The Penguin Post Office is currently managed by the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust (UKAHT). On 11 February 2025, it marked its 81st year in operation. How People Work At The Penguin Post Office Each year, the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust assembles a small seasonal team to live and work at Port Lockroy. The conditions are basic - there is no running water, and amenities are limited - but the experience is unlike any other. In 2025, the team included George Clarke as the postmaster, joined by Maggie, Kim, and Matt, as documented on the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust's official Instagram account. View this post on Instagram A post shared by UK Antarctic Heritage Trust (@ukantarcticheritagetrust) Former Port Lockroy team member Sarah Auffret once shared her experience of working at the Penguin Post Office. "As you approach the Penguin Post Office, located on a tiny island off the Antarctic Peninsula, you are greeted by the 'roo roo roo' sound of 600 pairs of nesting gentoo penguins," she told Ends of the Earth. "Early in the season, you may have to climb up a snow staircase, or later in the season find your way up the guano-splattered rocks to access the building. It is certainly not your average trip to the Post Office!" Describing how operations run, she added, "Sending a postcard costs one US dollar, no matter the destination. The team frank the mail by hand - on a busy day, there can be more than 1,000 postcards." Fascinated by this remote outpost in the British Antarctic Territory? Click here to learn about the longest straight road trip in the world, another record-breaking journey for adventurous travellers.

How People Work At Penguin Post Office: The World's Most Remote Post Office In The Antarctic
How People Work At Penguin Post Office: The World's Most Remote Post Office In The Antarctic

NDTV

time14-05-2025

  • NDTV

How People Work At Penguin Post Office: The World's Most Remote Post Office In The Antarctic

Port Lockroy in the Antarctic is the southernmost post office in the world, affectionately known as the Penguin Post Office. Around 70,000 postcards are sent each year to over 100 countries. Port Lockroy is located on Goudier Island off the Antarctic Peninsula, celebrated for its dramatic mountain views and the resident colony of gentoo penguins. This unique outpost operates as part of the British Antarctic Territory. Port Lockroy comprises three buildings, the largest of which is Bransfield House. This houses a living museum, the remote Penguin Post Office, and a small but very popular gift shop. It is currently the most visited site in Antarctica, drawing thousands of tourists interested in Antarctic travel and wildlife. History Of Port Lockroy In 1944, the site was established as Base A - the first continuously occupied British base in Antarctica - as part of the secret World War II mission, Operation Tabarin. In the years that followed, Port Lockroy became a cornerstone for British Antarctic science, operating as an atmospheric research station until 1962. After a conservation survey in 1994, Base A was recognised for its historical importance and officially designated as Historic Site and Monument No. 61 under the Antarctic Treaty System. The British Antarctic Survey carried out renovations in 1996. Since then, Port Lockroy has been open to visitors during the Antarctic summer season, from November to March. It now welcomes up to 18,000 visitors per season, many of whom are drawn by its unique combination of history, remoteness, and penguin colonies. The Penguin Post Office is currently managed by the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust (UKAHT). On 11 February 2025, it marked its 81st year in operation. How People Work At The Penguin Post Office Each year, the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust assembles a small seasonal team to live and work at Port Lockroy. The conditions are basic - there is no running water, and amenities are limited - but the experience is unlike any other. In 2025, the team included George Clarke as the postmaster, joined by Maggie, Kim, and Matt, as documented on the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust's official Instagram account. View this post on Instagram A post shared by UK Antarctic Heritage Trust (@ukantarcticheritagetrust) Former Port Lockroy team member Sarah Auffret once shared her experience of working at the Penguin Post Office. "As you approach the Penguin Post Office, located on a tiny island off the Antarctic Peninsula, you are greeted by the 'roo roo roo' sound of 600 pairs of nesting gentoo penguins," she told Ends of the Earth. "Early in the season, you may have to climb up a snow staircase, or later in the season find your way up the guano-splattered rocks to access the building. It is certainly not your average trip to the Post Office!" Describing how operations run, she added, "Sending a postcard costs one US dollar, no matter the destination. The team frank the mail by hand - on a busy day, there can be more than 1,000 postcards." Fascinated by this remote outpost in the British Antarctic Territory? Click here to learn about the longest straight road trip in the world, another record-breaking journey for adventurous travellers.

Secrets of an Antarctic garden shed frozen in time
Secrets of an Antarctic garden shed frozen in time

The Herald Scotland

time11-05-2025

  • The Herald Scotland

Secrets of an Antarctic garden shed frozen in time

Beside a few bunk beds sits a battered clock, its hands stuck at precisely 8.20. Blaiklock Island Refuge has been frozen in time since for decades (Image: UKAHT/Michael Duff) Time froze decades ago at Blaiklock Island Refuge, situated in one of the world's most remote and difficult to reach places, when the pioneers who used it as a shelter while they charted the first maps of the Antarctic Peninsula, moved on. Like many ordinary garden sheds across the land that have served its owners well, it bears scars of past use – old nails hammered into walls where soggy coats and equipment were once hung up to dry, hammers with their wooden handles stained with use, rusty old oil cans and pots of grease and that shed essential, an old torch. Tins of food stashed on a shelf within Blaiklock Island Refuge Hut (Image: UKAHT/Michael Duff) Now, though, it has been given a gentle makeover – so subtle that it's barely noticeable – thanks to the steady hand of a Peebleshire carpenter, some well-travelled roofing felt and a conservation effort that went to the ends of the earth. Graham Gillie, 58, a fifth-generation carpenter, has just returned from Blaiklock Island after working with the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust (UKAHT) to repair the hut that once sheltered explorers, scientists, and their dogs as they ventured into the interior of the continent. Read more by Sandra Dick: Just like an ordinary garden sheds in need of some care and attention, the job involved nothing fancier than some roofing felt, nails and old-fashioned hammering. While the task itself may have been familiar, the logistics were anything but. Getting to Blaiklock involved a 9,000-mile journey via Port Lockroy, established during the Second World War, Port Lockroy was the setting for top secret mission Operation Tabarin, which aimed to reinforce British claims to the Falkland Islands and other locations, as pressure mounted from Argentina and Chile. The newly restored Blaiklock Island Refuge Hut (Image: UKAHT/Michael Duff) From there, Graham, along with a fellow carpenter, an archivist who planned to record the entire contents of the Blaiklock hut and a film-maker to capture their work on film, spent several days travelling through icy and mostly unchartered waters by sailing boat. Once close enough, they faced a daily commute by inflatable boat, all the time keeping a constant eye on the changing weather and the threat that sea ice might restrict their escape route to safety. Having planned their journey, the small team also had to ensure they had the materials they needed in place, from large rolls of roofing felt to the smallest nails. It was shipped separately to Blaiklock Island by British Antarctic Survey polar research vessel, RRS Sir David Attenborough. Carpenter Graham Gillie travelled 9000 miles to carry out repairs to Blaiklock Island refuge (Image: UKAHT/Michael Duff) Work to re-felt both the roof and the sides of the refuge had to be carried out under strict conservation controls, even down to keeping the old rusty nails once used to hang up wet jackets and equipment in place. The Blaiklock structure is the only British Antarctic refuge remaining from the 1950s, when it was used as a satellite base for survey and geological parties from Horseshoe Island, Detaille Island and Stonington Island. In those days, it could be reached by dog-pulled sleds driven over a glacier which attached the island to the mainland. Graham Gillie at work re-felting Blaiklock Island Refuge (Image: UKAHT/Michael Duff) The changing climate, however, has seen the glacier retreat, making the journey even more difficult. When Graham and his team arrived in February, it was the first time a specialist conservation team had been sent to carry out repairs and document the site. They found it almost as if the last occupants had just popped out, with cooking pots still neatly stacked, boxes filled with supplies, tins of food on shelves and rusty nails from the original build still embedded in the timber. Items left behind by researchers who once used the refuge hut at Blaiklock Island (Image: UKAHT/Michael Duff) Graham's key task would be familiar to anyone with a shed of a certain age in the back garden: make sure it doesn't let in water. 'It's just like re-felting the roof of a garden shed, except we were covering whole of the building,' says Graham. 'We had to strip off the old felt and redo it. 'The felt protects the building from the wind and from blowing ice that scars the building and wears it down. 'It's like it's being rubbed with sandpaper all of the time.' The hut at Blaiklock Island had to be stripped and re-felted to protect it from the Antarctic weather (Image: UKAHT/Michael Duff) One of the biggest challenges was working around the fickle Antarctic weather and the risk of becoming trapped by rapidly forming sea ice. 'You have to keep an eye on the weather and be aware in case we needed to escape quickly. 'The sea ice can blow in fast, and if it does, there's a risk the ship can't get back in to pick you up,' says Graham. 'It makes it all the more exciting.' While outside the hut was given a new protective layer, inside work was done to repair part of the roof and to document its contents. Blaiklock Island was a base for pioneers who charted the first maps of the region (Image: UKAHT/Michael Duff) 'The building is like a little bothy,' he adds. 'It's small, there's a workshop area where they stored skis, a room with six bunk beds and a little cooking area with a table. 'It's literally a garden shed without any insulation in it.' Inside was a scene of Antarctic life straight from the 1950s. 'Initially you think it's quite empty but there are boxes stuffed with all kinds of things, a lot has been left,' he says. 'It is as if someone has just been in, cooked dinner, tidied up a bit and then left. Read more by Sandra Dick:​ 'You feel a real connection with the people that were there before,' he adds. Blaiklock Island's refuge hut is one of five bases on the Antarctic Peninsula established in the aftermath of the war to serve British scientists based at Port Lockroy as they carried out mapping, geology and meteorology studies. They, and other sites, are looked after by the UKAHT and kept as frozen-in-time examples of scientific exploration. Items line a shelf inside Blaiklock Island Refuge, a former shelter used by Antarctic scientists (Image: UKAHT/Michael Duff) Graham is no stranger to working in the harsh conditions, often under the watch of troops of penguins and in sub-zero temperatures: he first visited Port Lockroy nearly 20 years ago as a general assistant and museum guide. He later helped build a Nissen hut for team accommodation at Port Lockroy, constructing it in two halves to avoid nesting penguins. Despite running his own carpentry business at home, the father of two returned to Antarctica to carry out urgent repairs to Base W Detaille Island, a science station dating from the 1950s, and then at Port Lockroy's Bransfield House, home to the world's remotest post office. This time around he completed important work at Port Lockroy to repair concrete foundations and replace rotten floor timbers before going traveling to Blaiklock Island Refuge. Peebleshire carpenter Graham Gillie at work restoring an Antarctic hut (Image: UKAHT/Michael Duff) Working in such isolation takes a special temperament: while Graham and the UKAHT team were busy carrying out their repair tasks, concerns were raised for the safety of researchers at South African-run research base in Vesleskarvet, Queen Maud Land, Antarctica, amid "deeply disturbing behaviour" from one researcher. The grind of months away from home in a landscape that while beautiful can also be harsh and monotonous, requires a carefully selected group of people, agrees Graham. A seal basks in front of the shed at Blaiklock Island during repairs (Image: UKAHT/Michael Duff) 'It's all about sending people there who are good at adapting to situations, don't react too badly to anything that's stressful. 'You have got to get on with people,' he adds. 'You've got to be someone who can adapt, talk things through, or just take a step back. I've never had any real issues.' Antarctica, he adds, has an undeniable pull. 'The more remote, the more challenging, the more you get out of it. 'There's something about it that draws you in. It gets under your skin.'

Virtual reality experience brings immersive Antarctic tour exploration to Scotland
Virtual reality experience brings immersive Antarctic tour exploration to Scotland

Daily Record

time08-05-2025

  • Science
  • Daily Record

Virtual reality experience brings immersive Antarctic tour exploration to Scotland

The experience lets visitors explore historic Antarctic huts, meet penguins, ride a hydrogen balloon, feed huskies, and hear stories of survival and discovery Scots are being given a unique opportunity to explore Antarctica's rich history through cutting edge virtual reality. Starting today, Thursday, May 8, the programme is available at Discovery Point Museum in Dundee until Sunday, May 11. This special event is part of a tour by two key heritage charities, the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust (UKAHT) and New Zealand Antarctic Heritage Trust (NZAHT). For the first time, UKAHT and NZAHT are collaborating on a public tour across England and Scotland, using immersive VR to share the fascinating story of Antarctic science and exploration. ‌ British expeditions played a significant role in shaping the continent's history, and this technology allows visitors to experience it firsthand. By simply putting on a VR headset, the public can take a remarkable step back in time, instantly transported to Antarctica. ‌ The experience allows them to virtually enter and explore historic huts, come face to face with penguins, ride in a hydrogen balloon, feed huskies, encounter early explorers and scientists, and hear compelling stories of survival and innovation in one of the world's most extreme environments. The tour features two distinct virtual reality experiences: Immersive Antarctica: A Frozen Night This 30 minute VR experience from the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust offers a detailed reconstruction of a historic scientific base. Participants step into the lives of overwintering Antarctic scientists, navigating the challenges of their amazing surroundings. UKAHT works to conserve Britain's legacy in Antarctica, including six heritage sites like Base A, Port Lockroy, and legendary explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton's shipwreck Endurance. These sites were home to pioneering scientists and represent the dawn of Antarctica's scientific age. Camilla Nichol, CEO of UKAHT, explained the experience brings heritage to life: 'A Frozen Night is UKAHT's first virtual reality experience based on a true story from the archives and narrated by those who lived and worked in our southernmost base, Stonington Island. ‌ "One of the earliest British sites, established in 1948 and a key dog sledging base, Stonington Island enabled teams to travel far inland into the Antarctic Peninsula. Now, for the first time, A Frozen Night allows people to virtually travel into Stonington's past to experience the wonders and risks of Antarctic field work.' UKAHT began digitising heritage sites with laser scanning and photogrammetry in 2019/20, creating vital records for conservation planning, especially for remote sites like Stonington Island. This data also enables innovative ways of sharing stories through VR. Scott's Discovery Hut The New Zealand Antarctic Heritage Trust presents their new VR experience of Captain Robert Falcon Scott's Discovery Hut. Built in 1902 on Ross Island, it is over 122 years old and was the first expedition base in the area. NZAHT is a not for profit organisation dedicated to preserving the bases and artefacts of explorers like Scott and Shackleton. ‌ Working with New Zealand based tech company StaplesVR, NZAHT used LiDar and photogrammetry data to create the experience. Having raised significant funds in the UK for the initial conservation of Scott's bases, NZAHT is pleased to share their work saving Discovery Hut, including over 500 artefacts inside, with those who supported them. NZAHT Executive Director Francesca Eathorne commented on the accessibility: 'We're excited to bring the hut to people virtually, making it accessible to those who may not have the opportunity to visit these historic sites in person. ‌ "It gives great insight into the everyday items the explorers had with them and how they used the hut to support the important science and exploration they undertook." She added that sharing through VR helps "educate people around the importance of saving this cultural heritage for future generations.' Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. ‌ This VR tour, generously funded by The Charles Hayward Foundation and donors to NZAHT's Inspiring Explorers™ Fund, allows both charities to make the remote cultural heritage sites they care for more accessible to the public. The opportunity to experience these immersive journeys into Antarctic history at Discovery Point Museum in Dundee runs from today, May 8, through to Sunday, May 11. Tickets for the VR experiences at Discovery Point Museum can be booked now. A Frozen Night Discovery Hut

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store