Ice Coffee: The History Of Human Activity In Antarctica

Informações:

Synopsis

The history of human activity in Antarctica

Episodes

  • 075_Byrd_and_Wilkins_1929

    03/02/2019 Duration: 01h01min

    Wilkins returns to the arena, negating the worth of the winter spent at Little America. Byrd gets his pole flight and drunk.

  • 074_Little_America_mid_winter_toast

    01/01/2019 Duration: 56min

    Sly grogging among a large company of over winterers makes Byrd's winter on The Barrier a very different experience to that of previous expeditions. I set up a paypal account for anyone who wants to support the series.  You can flick me some bucks for books, hosting services and travel expenses at https://www.paypal.me/icecoffeepodcast

  • 073_Little_America_1928_part_two

    09/12/2018 Duration: 01h02min

    Byrd gets on my nerves ninety years ago.

  • 072_1928_part_1

    14/11/2018 Duration: 56min

    The first of the on site recordings for this Austral summer, episode 072 examines the preparations made to finally take aviation south and the echoes of Scott and Amundsen that resonate through the stories of Byrd and Wilkins. 

  • 071_ANARE_Club_part_3

    02/10/2018 Duration: 01h32s

    The final full episode arising from my trip to Hobart.  Ron Hann, Peter Reid and Rob Nash speak about their time in Antarctica and I bloviate about my favourite podcasts. Ah, narrowcasting, you path to digression, you.  I'm hoping the next time you'll hear from me I'll be speaking about November 1928 events at Deception Island at Deception Island in November 2018.

  • 070_ANARE_Club_Part_two

    30/09/2018 Duration: 01h02min

    The second tranche of interviews from my time at the Australian Antarctic Festival in Hobart.  Barry Becker, Denise Alan and Trevor Luff discuss their time with ANARE and I look forward to seeing Dr Brewin in December. 

  • 069_Whaling_update

    30/09/2018 Duration: 01h28min

    A look at practical, political and ecological developments arising as the whaling fleet, largely comprising Norwegian vessels and crews, set about the business of ridding the Southern Ocean of those pesky cetaceans.  I'm none too fond of the booze culture of my home nation, the other nations I've lived, and Antarctic bases, but Nicholas Johnson's legacy warrants light, so I recorded one of the articles missing from the resurrected Big Dead Place website for inclusion in this episode. 

  • 068_ANARE_Club_part_one

    11/09/2018 Duration: 01h17min

    Four of the interviews I recorded at the 2018 Australian Antarctic Festival in Hobart.  Bob Tompkins, Joe Johnson, Ian Toohill and John Gillies share some fo their experiences in the south and Dave Davies rounds the episode out with some Samuel Taylor Coleridge.

  • 067_Arctic_Aviation_Part_Three

    01/09/2018 Duration: 01h02min

    Bringing to a close the trilogy of Arctic aviation episodes, this episode ties up loose ends sufficient to fully set the aviation scene for the first flights in Antarctica.  I've really enjoyed putting these episodes together.  Recent Tasmania adventures get some sizzle but the content won't reflect my time in Hobart until later this month.

  • 066_Polar_aviation_part_two

    01/08/2018 Duration: 01h02min

    Flying in the Arctic posed a dodgy prospect but faint heart never ended up dead on a tundra. 

  • 065_Polar_aviation_part_one

    13/07/2018 Duration: 55min

    With aircraft offering opportunities to keep the feet dry and singalling a possible end to the miseries of sledging in all its forms, key players were keen to get flying. Efforts in the north require some attention as the experiences in the Arctic shaped the approach those key players took when they brought flying machines south.

  • 064_Fingeewulf

    30/06/2018 Duration: 04min
  • 063_Quest

    30/06/2018 Duration: 01h03min

    Sir Ernest makes his final alive foray to South Georgia before making two further Atlantic voyages while dead. 

  • 062_Jeff_Maynard

    20/06/2018 Duration: 40min

    With Sir Hubert Wilkins set to take a prominent role in several episodes I sat down for coffee and a chat with Jeff Maynard, who knows more about Australia's forgotten polar explorer than I know about most of my family.

  • 061_Lester_and_Bagshawe

    04/06/2018 Duration: 53min

    Boom! Two episodes in quick succession. Weren't expecting that, were you? I was too excited about sharing the story of Lester and Bagshawe to wait a month to get this out and so trebled the five buck monthly outlay on the hosting service to service my need to let you know about the two and the dogs.  The most disarmingly charming chapter in Antarctic history.  Enjoy.

  • 060_Antartica_war_and_its_wake

    01/06/2018 Duration: 17min

    Many Antarctic veterans served in the First World War.  This episode I outline the military service of several of those veterans who will make return appearances in the south. The Great War also affected the political landscape of Antarctica and that gets some attention, too. How long's it been since I published a short episode? You'll be halfway through some task or errand and you'll hear me making the house keeping announcements, but don't freak out.  You haven't gone blank or nodded out  I'm just keeping things in their lane as much as I can.  Likely that won't last long as I can see multiple concurrent expeditions looming and with radio keeping them in touch and influencing outcomes where previously everyone operated in isolation it's likely that my discrete expedition/episode strategy is going to come to grief. 

  • 059_ITAE_closer

    04/05/2018 Duration: 57min

    The various parties of the ITAE come in out of the cold and most of them immediately head off to war. 

  • 058_James_Caird_more_than_most

    03/04/2018 Duration: 01h13min

    Frank Worsley knocks it out of the park, navigating across eight hundred nautical miles of open ocean with four sextant shots.  Tom Crean breaks through thin ice for the final time in our saga. Shackleton tries to get back to Elephant Island and the fourth time's the charm.

  • 057_Boat_outta_Weddell

    17/03/2018 Duration: 52min

    The Endurance sinks.  Plans form, change, re-form, change again, get discarded, get reinstated and re-form after changing.  Hoosh is the only constant.

  • 056_Into_the_Weddell_Sea

    20/02/2018 Duration: 50min

    Sir Ernest Shackleton returns to Antarctica, this time in the Weddell Sea, where the two preceding voyages got stuck.  Guess what happens.  Go on, guess.

page 5 from 8