ATTENBOROUGH’S LIFE IN THE FREEZER 6
Life in the Freezer – Footsteps In The Snow
Creepy opening. Feet taking steps, door creeks open, cabin full of wood cartons, camera looks around, gloved hand reaches for canned food and turn to see label and return in place. Ok not that creepy. The camera does a close up on all the stuff around. Supplies, clothing and gear. Ah, it’s the hut in Cape Evans where Captain Scott and his crew spent the winter in 1911. Everything is as it was since. Picture of the crew at a long table on Scott’s birthday. They were waiting for the sun to appear to start their trek to the pole. Picture of someone at a piano? PIANO?! Shot of table with all sorts of chemistry instruments. And a well equipped lab. Well that was their main mission… study as much as they could. Meteorology too. Oh wow… pioneer of polar photography Robert Ponting was there too! While these guys were waiting, there was a Norwegian team racing for the pole too.
November 1st, Robert and team head 800miles to the pole. Wearing wool and cotton clothes, using long wooden skis with single bindings and transporting food and equipment on sledges, which they pulled themselves. While Emenson and crew (Norwegian team) used dogs. So not only did they reach 35 days after the Norwegians, they also died. Died from starvation and freezing conditions. 80 years later conditions are better. Clothes that keep you warm, satellites to communicate and navigate and there’s a daily flight to the pole. (Ever seen a plane on skis?)
Captain Scott marched for 79 days to get to the pole, David boasts that his plane will do the same in 3 hours. David is impressed by the distance and difficult terrain that Scott had to go through. Scott used motor sledge, ponies and dogs but after 409 miles he abandoned them. After that 4 men hauled the sledge… divided they hauled 90 kilos. Shot of them slipping around while walking. The decision of not taking the dogs was their undoing. On reaching the pole they found an empty Norwegian tent, only with a note to the king of Norwegia… I mean Norway, should Emenson fail to return. Upon reaching the pole and seeing the Norwegian flag, Scott wrote “Great God, this is an awful place”. Picture of 5 disappointed gentlemen at the pole.
Over to shot of domes and structures. The entrance tunnel is amazing. Imagine a giant igloo. 100 scientists and support staff will live and work in this dome. In the dome there are more buildings. Supplies are flown in. Engines have to be kept running. (Yawn) The fuel is stored in vast bladders to help the station throughout the year.
The south pole is the best place to study the heavens above. Atmosphere is clear and free of pollution, stars don’t disappear beyond the horizon. Special scientists are needed, as in they have to know how to shovel snow and start a diesel engine. Most stations are built on the edge of the continent or on terrain. Shot of Emperor Penguins. Once the peeps are shut in they wont see a living crew for 6 more months. No morning, no evening, no escape! The cook is one of the most critically watched members. Most places have at least a years reserve of supply in case of emergencies and most also have another building fully stocked with food in case of a fire. Ah just went I was about to fall asleep with this episode… a hardly seen shot of the sun skimming beyond the horizon. Imagine Knightrider’s light. Once it drops there will be no more sunlight for 37 days. Sounds of people clapping at this fact. Oh it’s a party, people in fancy dress. Entertainments practiced in secret are performed in public. Harmonica players, drunk sing-along-ers. Gorgeous shots of the Aurora Australis (Southern lights).
As the sun returns so do the Adele Penguins. The colony gathers near one of the stations. A wired fence counts and weighs them as they cross it. Some are caught in a black butterfly net for closer inspection. Beaks measured and chest graffiti-ed. Don’t worry it’ll disappear in the next moulting and their companions do not lose affection just coz of the new tattoo. Gangsta shot of flatland/ice with dogs, sledge, people and some gangsta ice mountain/cliffs in the background. David says the dogs are ecological aliens so its been decided that they must go. Then he goes on to say they’re great companions and best detectors of major hazards… snow covered crevasses. The team on the screen will be sent to Minnesota, USA. They well be replaced by motorised quaiks? (Quad bikes?) So, what used to take 2 days now takes 3 hours but they’re limited on the fuel they can carry.
Funny shot of penguins being tackled like they were playing American football. Human runs and dives for one… Oh, it slips away… and again… and again. Slippery fellas. They catch it, bag it, spray it and tag it with a transmitter and will be monitored in a station in Tasmania. After this the penguin continues its 100 mile march to open water. To dive up to 450 meters to catch fish! Shot of gliding Greyheaded Albatross with a transmitter too. Revealing where it collected it food and where it’s gonna feed it’s hungry chick. WHICH belongs to a colony that has been studied for the past 15 years by a British team. Before they were weighted using a typical scale but now it’s been camouflaged as a nest. (Latest technology!) The scales transmit a reading every 10 minutes to a nearby hut with a watching scientist. (Freak) But it shows the parent brings 500 grams of seafood to the chick every 3 days. And the adult has travelled several hundred miles to do so. Several? All this equipment and you give me several!?
Now they got ships following the Albatross to see just what they did to catch the seafood. To do this you need camera, lenses and cameramen to deal with these hostile conditions. Note: Hostile conditions means crazy waves and winds. Shot of cameraman swimming in freezing waters with the albatross. The reward is sights never seen. Then you got the remotely controlled cameras attached to inflatable. One of their priorities was to find a swarm of krill. The crew found them and so did a pair of humpback whales. This has been detailed in the first episode. Another smaller ship (they look more like sailboats) was doing its thing elsewhere… could only go on shallow waters coz of the keel, places no other vessel had been before. Some dude and his biologist wife on the ‘ship’ have been exploring every cove, bay and peninsula for 10 seasons. They set up camps and cameras in different places. They even got a camera on a jib arm! So that’s how they got the high angle and moving close ups. Imagine carrying around 120 kilos mostly of a long ass pole. Other guys on steady cams. (This things are mad heavy and you strap on a body harness so the shooting is steady)
They wanna get shots diving under the ice but the weathers frozen the entrance to the gear. Once they do dive under the ice imagine ice tunnels with faded silver linings of light. You only hear the winds roaring above the ice. Then you got this metal shaft with a bubble in the middle where you can observe all this. Record sounds like from seals, movements, etc. The seal has those puppy dog eyes. Others observe Emperor Penguins elsewhere. A cage is dropped into a waterhole so the cameraman is protected. Coz where there are penguins, theres Leopard Seals and Killer Whales. Shots of penguins shooting out of water while a Leopard Seal waits on the ice trying to catch one. Bite, you’re out! Wow, these two cameramen even dared to shoot without a cage. Deadly as those Leopard Seals are. Leopard Seal does try to bite the camera. Nice canines. (RUSH: Shot of cameraman being presented by the Seals catch!)
David talks about advancements and technologies to help scientists and tourists explore the area codes. But much is still not discovered and those that go find it how it’s been for thousands of years. The End.






