Flying the flag for Gosport in Antarctica

Well done to Year 7 student Riley Watts who won the UK Polar Network competition.

Riley’s flag flew with the British Antarctic Survey Team to the Antarctic peninsula and the Rothera Research Station.

Pictured below, Pilot Timothy Below, said: “The picture from inside the aircraft, which is one of the Twin Otters (registration VP-FBB), were taken from in flight in the cockpit.  The aircraft is flying at 10 000 feet above the George VI Sound, on the Antarctic Peninsula, with the George VI glacier below us, with the snow/ice-covered mountains clearly visible through the flight deck windows.

“The pictures with the icebergs in the background were taken at the Rothera Research Station, the central base of the British Antarctic Survey in Antarctica, here on the Antarctic Peninsula.  There are about 150 people based here in the Antarctic summer (the UK winter, now), and about 25 during the Antarctic winter (our UK summer), so the Research Station is occupied all year round.  Rothera is the closest arrival point in Antarctica to the land of the rest of the world, and the British Aircraft, as well as many other nations’ aircraft come through here using the runway here to enter Antarctica after a 4-5-hour flight from Chile in South America.  The icebergs are in North Bay at Rothera, and if you look carefully, the children will be able to make out the Research Station runway reaching into the bay.”

 

 

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  • Bay House School & Sixth Form, Gomer Lane, Gosport, Hampshire PO12 2QP
  • (023) 9258 7931
  • enquiries@bayhouse.gfmat.org

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