When we think about Antarctica we tend to think about vast
tracts of frozen wastes, of desperate men whipping dogs
toward lonely deaths or international glory, of Kurt
Russell taking a flamethrower to shape-shifting aliens. What we don't
think about are bacchanalian orgies and non-stop drinking.
Which proves how badly we've been misled, because that's
precisely what's going on. Not only is there plenty to
drink, there's plenty of reason to drink, as
the following interview with a resident of the southernmost
point of the world reveals.
(Editor's Note: To ward off possible retaliation by
the Federal Government, the interviewee will be addressed
by the pseudonym F. Scott Robert.)
Modern Drunkard
Magazine: How long have you been stationed
in what you refer to as The Big Dead Place?
F. Scott Robert: Since
1998 I’ve spent a little
over three years total in Antarctica, but this is my
first winter at the Pole itself, where I’m
going on month nine.
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FSR: Our main purpose is as caretakers of an expensive
American facility, just like Jack Nicholson in
The Shining, but with more geopolitical significance
and fewer axe murders. Our sub-purposes split off
from there: some are building a new station, some
are doing science, and almost everyone else keeps
the place running.
MDM: Naturally under such circumstances,
you’re
expected to get loaded on a regular basis, true?
FSR: Verily.
MDM: Do you throw a lot of parties?
FSR: There are lots of parties in the summer, fewer
in the winter.
MDM: And what, pray tell, can be expected at these parties?
FSR: A few weeks ago we had a party where someone took
a big block of ice and carved little “ski trails” in
it down which kamikazes were poured into the
eager mouths of those wearing ski goggles and
holding ski poles. This was called Liquor Mountain.
Women gave prizes to any man who showed up
in a dress, so there was much cross-dressing.
Myself, I wore a nasty leopard-print number
with the nipples cut out, drank one too many
kamikazes and barfed up corn dogs in the snow.
MDM: Great God! Is that a typical soiree?
FSR: Not really. Your basic Antarctic party
either includes meat and beer and standing
around, or meat and beer and dancing to the
Greatest Hits of the ‘80s while
wearing disco clothes. For some reason, people can’t
get enough of disco clothes here. They are a
source of infinite delight.
MDM: I assumed it would be decadent, but this goes quite
beyond the pale.
FSR: Sometimes the Air National Guard guys have a
keg-tossing contest outside the bar at McMurdo Station.
One time some folks held an exorcism for one of the
machines that kept breaking down, where they drank
whiskey and played songs for the machine. And this
one guy came up with the idea to have a bunch of
Depends adult diapers sent down so that everyone
could stand around drinking beer and pissing themselves.
I didn’t make it
to that party, but a friend of mine did. He hooked
up with this amazing woman after the party. He picked
up a chick while wearing a diaper!
MDM: So there are women about. I imagined it was a manner
of never-ending stag party with little hope of relief.
FSR: It changes each
season, but there are always more men than women. This
leads to lots of the aforementioned “Disco
Nights” and dubious “theme” parties
that find men in drag more frequently as the season
lumbers on. There are usually enough women around
so that in the darkest of winters one can soak up
the elusive mysteries of the female through conversations
and such, but the odds are against he who simultaneously
demands sex and employment. On the other hand, since
few women expect long-term integrity from any of
us wandering hooligans, the stations during the short
summer seasons can be like Roman rabbit hutches.
MDM: I should imagine. Is there a bar of sorts on hand?
FSR: Certainly. The
present bar has been around since about 1975. It has
a decent wooden top with brass foot rail, an electric
cooler for chilling cases of beer, and a much smaller
cubby on the perimeter wall that (because it’s usually colder than –80F
outside) will chill a beer or a bottle in no time flat.
There’s a poker table and an entertainment center,
which includes a Beta video player. A sign on the wall
says, “Hippies Use Side Door,” and there
is a poster of Arnold Schwarzenegger as the Terminator.
It’s also one of the few, if only, places
on the station that has a proper wood floor.
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The bar is atypical in that drinks are not
sold there. The bartender is whoever feels
like tending bar at the moment, and if no one
does, you go behind the bar and help yourself.
All the stock is BYOB and, in a fashion, communal,
though those who don’t
bring their fair share to restock the bar are
mocked and humiliated.
MDM: I should hope. Does anyone ever pass out in the
snow?
FSR: A
while ago this guy got so loaded he was trying to just “lie down for a little while” in
the snow on the way back from some boozefest. It was
about –80F out and he would surely have died
were it not for his irritated fellows who dragged
him the quarter mile or so back to the station. This
is nothing new, however: such incidents have been
happening since the 1950s. We live in a tight, caring
community of polar fellowship which understands that
an irresponsible co-worker who can occasionally carry
his own weight is preferable to a frozen corpse that
can't.
MDM: Very sporting of you. Have you any signature cocktails
of your own making?
FSR: The earliest
record I’ve found of a native
Antarctic cocktail is from the Antarctica Lonely Planet
Guide, where they claim A U.S. Navy man in the ‘50s
or ‘60s infused a pack of multi-colored Lifesavers
in a bottle of bourbon. In more recent days, I’ve
discovered that hoarded red wine frozen for over a year
in a utility tunnel is some of the most delicious I’ve
ever tasted, though one must watch the sediment.
Also, in the bar recently some gentlemen were cleaning
house and concocted a drink made of all the liquor
they wanted to get rid of. It was a mixture of root
beer schnapps, peppermint schnapps, Kahlua, tequila,
port wine, egg nog, and a splash of lime juice to make
it curdle. They named this drink “The
Ten Dollar Whore.”
MDM: Naturally. Do you ever run out of liquor?
FSR: I have yet to
hear of a winter when alcohol ran out altogether. But
since it's too cold for planes to deliver spirits from
February to October, each year is a harrowing fight
for survival in regards to booze-hoarding. One winter
they ran out of beer, so people were drinking shots
of whiskey with red-wine chasers. Another winter all
the wine was kept in a shack that somehow had the power
cut, so all the wine froze and management let people
have it for free. This winter so far we have run out
of Maker’s
Mark, Bushmills, Crown Royal, Wild Turkey, tequila,
rum, and all bottled beer. The horror!
MDM: Indeed. Do you find the occasion to go on drinking
sprees in New Zealand or Argentina?
FSR: There is one
bar in Christchurch, N.Z. called Bailey’s
that is the central hub for ice people to congregate.
The owners of this bar have been very good to us, and
occasionally even send down kegs of beer in the summer
for special parties. There is a plaque on the wall with
the names of those who’ve drank one hundred
pints of Guinness and the time it took them to do
it. I think the record was set by some huge Samoan
guy from McMurdo who did it in three days.
MDM: I should like to
have a crack at that title. You sent me a photo of a
clown at the South Pole. Is there an active clown population
at the Pole?
FSR: That’s Boozy the Clown, one of the most notorious
personalities on this frozen rock. The worker who invented
Boozy is very mild-mannered and pleasant, but when he
dons the face paint and wig and rainbow clown shirt,
he is displaced by a cruel and malicious drunken clown
who knows no honor. When people see Boozy they become
frightened. He drinks their booze, steals their women,
and ruthlessly humiliates the shy and timid. In typical
Antarctic fashion, where one can never escape in work
or play a familiarity with one’s fellows, people
don’t confuse the actions of Boozy with those
of the mild-mannered worker, and may comment the
next day that Boozy, not the worker, was a vicious
hellion the previous night.
MDM: I think most people’s ideas
about life at the South Pole comes from watching The
Thing starring the inimitable Kurt Russell. Homicidal
aliens aside, how does the movie compare to real life
in Antarctica?
FSR: It’s almost entirely accurate except for
five things:
1.) There are no aliens here.
2.) We are not issued flamethrowers.
3.) There are no guns or dogs.
4.) We don’t store explosives in the main building.
5.) There are fewer cowboy-hat wearing helo pilots
than there are syrupy Human Resources Representatives
and Administrative Coordinators.
Other than that, it’s kind of like an impressionistic
documentary. The station manager is usually a nincompoop,
the doctor is usually nuts, and if our station burned
down there would be nothing for it but to get drunk
and die.
MDM: Do staff members try to make up for the lack of
rampaging aliens by occasionally running amok themselves?
FSR: Of course. Two winters ago in
McMurdo this guy we'll call "D" crept into another guy’s room
and began punching him in the head while he was sleeping.
They had an issue over some woman. The recipient of the
blows awoke promptly, and after escaping further punishment,
talked D down and gave him some more beer. Though sent
out on the first flight, D was told by Raytheon, our
savvy employer, that he could return to his indispensable
position upon taking an “anger management” class.
MDM: I’ve heard tales of a gentleman
running amok with a hammer.
FSR: The gentleman in question was
known to drink a bottle of Crown Royal just to get
primed for further drinking. One day, so inspired,
he walked into the galley and smashed his boss in the
head with a hammer while he was eating. His task complete,
he wandered the halls singing “Mary
Had a Little Lamb” until he was tackled by
a group of firefighters and detained in one of the
local apartments, for which the carpenters were instructed
to make wooden bars for the windows. Eventually the
FBI came down to snap some penguin photos and hero
shots before escorting the assailant back to Hawaii,
where he was eventually imprisoned.
MDM: Does everyone drink at the Pole?
FSR: No. I’ve heard from credible sources that
some people knit or listen to Christian music. I can’t
confirm these elusive reports.
MDM: What is the preferred libation of Antarticans?
FSR: We tend to prefer anything that
becomes scarce. Presently, Crown Royal is revered as
some sacred ambrosia tapped from the center of the
earth, and he who brings a bottle into public at this
late point in the winter will meet with the dual receptions
of hearty backslaps in that there is probably enough
for everyone to get a shot, yet secret ruminations
of pushing the gentleman down the stairs once the bottle
has been procured, with the justification that the
fiend has been hoarding such a commodity against the
greater good of the station.
At the beginning of the winter, the station manager
made known to us that a limited supply of Sierra
Nevada and Corona bottled beers was available, and
that we could purchase one case of each. Despite that Corona is one of
the most unremarkable beers on this planet, we descended
on them like a pack of rabid rats on a lost toddler.
One alcohol that I rarely see in the States but which
is certainly a staple here is Bailey’s Irish Cream. If there’s one drink that typifies
the Antarctic experience, it’s Bailey’s and coffee. People drink
it at the stations, people drink it at the field camps, people drink it in
dorm rooms, people drink it in laboratories. When you see those live-from-Antarctica
type feeds at museums, the scientists are usually at some field camp, and they
usually have some time off because otherwise they wouldn’t be wasting
it on a bunch of North-lubbers stumbling around a museum. I’ll give you
ten to one that any scientist you’re talking to under such circumstances
is by 9 a.m. ripped on Bailey’s and has coffee tremors. I make of Bailey’s
popularity here that it is both a cold-weather drink and that, because it is
not really seen as a “hard liquor”, on their days off folks
can drink it in the morning more respectably than if they attacked a bottle
of Cuervo Gold.
A recent fad sweeping the stations the last couple
seasons is the horrifying practice of snorting gin
or vodka up one’s nose. I have no idea what
to make of this.
MDM: Possibly it's a means of bypassing
the liver and thus protecting it from injury. I’ve read that hangovers are especially brutal down
there.
FSR: Just so. Barometrically, we are
at an altitude of approximately 10,000 feet and temperately
Antarctica is classified as a desert. It’s very
high and very dry, so while one’s terrible thirst drives one to the conclusion
that half of each beer is being lost to evaporation before it can be consumed,
this is not really the case, thus two beers are conscripted where one might
suffice. In addition, after one drinks two times as much as necessary to feel
pleasant and warm in one’s otherwise empty bed, the dry air suddenly
attacks in the night and robs one of all moisture whatsoever. The victim, now
with a nose full of dangerous and dagger-like boogers, wakes the next morning
to suspect that the room has been humidified by one’s own saliva.
MDM: Do you possess the secret of an especially effective
hangover cure?
FSR: Though it takes time to work,
I have always found suffering to be a sure remedy.
MDM: Is there a police presence in Antarctica? Has a
DUI ever been issued?
FSR: There are no police officers
here, so every rascal with a bit of authority attempts
to fill that void with petty power plays and snooping
Hoovery. In any given season, the Safety Coordinator
is one of the first to start meddling in our affairs,
and is also the one who would be called to task should
we all start driving around loaded. As far as I know,
there has never been the equivalent of a DUI. The
worst punishment for almost any unpopular action
here is to be fired and thus exiled from Antarctica.
MDM: One of the main benefits of living
there, as far as I can see, is you’ll never run out of ice for
your cocktails. Do you find the thousands-of-years-old
ice superior to the “new ice” we Notherners
have to make do with?
FSR: During the summer there are scientists
at the Clean Air Observatory who host “slushy parties”.
The snow upwind of the laboratory is quantifiably the
cleanest in the world, and thus suitable for a variety
of margarita-like cocktails. The drawback of course is
that once one has had a few, one needs to walk a good
distance outside to have a cigarette, as it is quite
unfashionable to light up in the Clean Air Sector. That
said, I’m convinced that any difference in
taste between the superior Antarctic ice and rancid
varieties of common ice is a discernment furthered
purely for the entertainment of the locals.
MDM: Would you say your stay at the South Pole has reinforced
your drinking habits?
FSR: I would prefer to say, “When in Rome…”
MDM: Right you are. Do you happen to
subscribe to John Cleves Symmes’ theory that
the earth has holes at the poles that lead to a secret
interior world quite possibly populated by dinosaurs/Atlanteans/Nazi
flying saucers?
FSR: It’s a little known fact that Symmes was the
initial motivating force behind the United States Exploring
Expedition led by Charles Wilkes, namesake of the massive
geographic area called “Wilkes Land” on the
frozen continent. I don’t ascribe to Symmes’ theories,
but I find him much more interesting than Charles
Wilkes: creative insanity vs. regimented insanity.
MDM: I've read that Wilkes was something
of a brute. During his three-year expedition to the
Pole they only packed 800 gallons of rum for 48 men,
which is roughly 2 oz per man per day providing there
weren't any teetotalers in the bunch. Isn’t it a wonder they didn’t
all go mad?
FSR: They were all mad to begin
with.
MDM: Ah. And what of the seminal 1820
book entitled "Symzonia:
A Voyage of Discovery," written by the remarkable
Captain Adam Seaborn? He swore he actually visited
the hollow earth and, seeing how he was a sailor,
undoubtedly got fantastically legless there.
FSR: The only hole at the South
Pole is the cavern we drilled in the ice in which
to deposit our yearly tons of feces that shall remain
there until the day Antarctica melts.
MDM: But shouldn’t we mount an
expedition to be certain? Please take a moment to consider
all the strange and magnificent Atlantean cocktails
we might discover.
FSR: I for one want nothing to do
with any cocktail from said subterranean region,
nor any voyage of discovery within.
MDM: Pity. As you may well know, wild monkeys and elephants
have been known to raid breweries and bars in Borneo
and Africa. Is there a similar problem with the penguins
there?
FSR: Good god, man, I’ve never heard of such a
thing as the lower beasts having booze riots. Don’t
frighten me so in the middle of winter.
MDM: Be on guard, sir! Only a matter of time before
the beasts realize what they've been missing and take
action. My research tells me that some stations ration
the booze, allowing only one bottle of liquor, two bottles
of wine or one case of beer per person per week.
FSR: What you’ve read is an obsolete practice
from the days when the Navy ran the Antarctic stations.
In these days of the profitable Company Store that
practice has been abandoned. To keep up appearances,
rations are as you stated, but only per visit to
the store rather than per week.
MDM: Do you ever drink with the Norwegians, Kiwis, Russians
and the other chaps stationed up there?
FSR: Local authorities threaten to
punish such mingling, but I’ve had drinks with an Englishwoman who skied
to the Pole from the coast. I know others who’ve
drunk with the Russians as they’ve come through
McMurdo Station, and I’ve heard their manners are
as lively as their appearance is rugged. With their wild
hair and beards, their crazy spaceboots and their willingness
to barter for whatever they can get their hands on, one
can tell the Russians immediately because they don’t
look like they have a single data-entry clerk amongst
them. One time there was a “M*A*S*H” theme-night
in Gallagher’s pub in McMurdo, and one of the Russians
attacked someone who’d dressed up as Klinger.
MDM: Can hardly blame the chap. By the end of the fourth
season I was prepared to assault the entire cast. Don't
celebrities and politicians sometimes ring you chaps
up with words of encouragement?
FSR: In his book “90° South: The Story of the
American South Pole Conquest,” Paul Siple reported
that during the first year at the Pole they received
a phone patch from Art Linkletter, the TV emcee: “The
men learned from him which movie actors and actresses
were still married and which had divorced. There was
also a contact with a somewhat gay Dean Martin, the singer
who was in Las Vegas. The men related that he sang a
line from a song, then said he wished he could talk longer
but ‘I have to go back to the bar.’”
MDM: Dean Martin gay? Surely Siple meant that in the
jolly sense of the word.
FSR: Surely.
MDM: Tell us about your forthcoming book “Big
Dead Place.”
FSR: It's all about the sex, drugs,
madness, violence, and endless bureaucracy on the
Antarctic frontier. The book will be published in
2005 by Feral House Publishing (www.feralhouse.com)
Until then, you can read of further Antarctic hijinx
at www.bigdeadplace.com.
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