Showing posts with label Antarctic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Antarctic. Show all posts

Sunday, 24 May 2009

Long-Distance Lettuce


In a recent interview discussing his 2008 documentary Encounters at the End of the World, Werner Herzog reveals that his bid for film funding from the National Science Foundation triumphed over a rival proposal by director James Cameron. Cameron had planned to take a crew of 36 to Antarctica, while Herzog suggested a team of two, himself included. Herzog estimates that the cost of maintaining a working person in such a remote location is approximately $10,000 per day, since even "one leaf of salad has to be flown eight hours from New Zealand." One wonders whether Cameron's team might have played up the eco credentials of the resulting film, despite this basis in resource-hungry production. Herzog's film, built on sounder environmental principles, in fact eschews the opportunity to be another penguin-absorbed nature documentary or campaign piece. Neither does it rely too heavily on famous expedition narratives. Instead it tells the story of those who choose to live and work in this extreme environment, focusing upon the human histories and senses of purpose that lead individuals to the ice. It's primarily a story of sacrifice in the name of science, which also hints at the ghosts of lives past which participants inevitably drag with them into what others mistake for a tabula rasa. It's a film which contrasts with a tradition of polar stories that focus on empty expanses, and man's confrontation with himself when faced with the great white beyond. Antarctica could easily be considered the ultimate wilderness location, but Herzog's film allows it to demonstrate more than ever that there really is no "getting away from it all." Wherever there's a human there's a story unfolding, a series of personal ghosts and, in many cases, a serious lettuce bill.

Friday, 22 May 2009

The Coldest Tourist Hotspot

Parties to the Antarctic Treaty have now provisionally agreed restrictions on cruise ship size and tourist numbers in Antarctica (BBC report here; thanks Ewan Laurie). These limits will not become binding until ratified by all 28 nations of the Treaty. Over 45,000 tourists visited Antarctica last season. The Antarctic and Southern Ocean Coalition called for such restrictions as early as 2005 (Observer article here), when the latest set of data (from 2004) gave the number of visitors as 28,000. iexplore offer an "Explore Antarctica 2009" cruise promising "Immense wilderness in a fabulous and virtually pristine paradise" (details here). How long before Trading Standards have a few things to say about that description?