Friday, July 3, 2015

To Antarctica and Back

From Broadmoor Friends and Neighbors Magazine, March 2015
To Antarctica and Back
By Reecy Pontiff

If you're having trouble with the cold and dark of Colorado, imagine living in Antarctica, where summer temperatures may reach a balmy 30 degrees and winter nights last for almost six months.

Ice tunnels at Byrd Station. Photo by Sam Gerrish
In 1966 Broadmoor resident Sam Gerrish spent a year on that icy continent working as a geophysicist for the National Science Foundation. 

While his 25 colleagues were hidden together underground in nearby Byrd Station, one of the most remote outposts in the world, Gerrish had his own tiny house, bright yellow for visibility and set on stilts atop 7,000 feet of hard-packed snow and ice. He lived three miles away from the nearest human – closer to the base was “too noisy” for the racks of ionospheric monitoring equipment that kept him company. The house also had a bunk, desk and small kitchen. 

Not surprisingly, most of the rations at Byrd were frozen and preparing a meal meant planning ahead. Want eggs for breakfast from the big frozen can?

“Step one: get a hammer and chisel,” Gerrish said. “You'd chip out the appropriate chunks of frozen egg the night before.”

“I would normally do a case of beer with my laundry to thaw it out,” Gerrish said.

The water Gerrish used for drinking, showering and laundry was from snow he shoveled into a melting device. 

“One of the very, very important things you pass on to the person who's going to replace you is which side of the house you use for water and which side you use for burying waste.” 

Gerrish's house was attached to the station three miles away by two things: an extension cord for power and a handline made from parachute cord and bamboo sticks to guide him should a “whiteout” kick up on his journey to or fro. It's very easy to simply disappear in a place without landmarks, where the snowy topography shifts constantly.

“The guy that I replaced... he's still there,” Gerrish said. “[He] had too much to drink one time and walking back to the house let go of the handline. They looked and looked and looked, but he was gone.”

Though he would follow the handline back to base every Thursday for a “home-cooked meal,” Gerrish only had three visitors during his 13-month stay.

“One day someone knocked on my door – nobody ever knocked on my door.” Gerrish opened it to find one of the bulldozer operators from base. 

“He'd been pushing [snow] out the garage tunnel and decided to go out to Sam's to get a drink,” Gerrish said. “We were told, buy as much booze as you're going to drink for a year. Everyone underestimated. At the end of the season I was the last one who had any booze... I let him in and gave him a drink and he went clunking back in the bulldozer.”

Another visitor was the station's cook, whom Gerrish invited over dinner for as a special treat.

The third visitor was a mystery pilot of the only transportation one could take in or out of Byrd.

“One morning after a summer whiteout I got up and there was a Hurcules [cargo plane] parked right next to my house. I went on board and... jammed a note between the throttles saying, 'This is a notice that your vehicle is illegally parked and if not removed within 24 hours it will be towed,'” Gerrish chuckled. 

“The day after, when the Herc took off it went right over my house and uncalibrated all my instruments.”

To combat loneliness and boredom Gerrish read a lot of books and noodled around on his HAM radio station, King Charlie Four Uncle Sugar Mike. Gerrish brought a guitar along to learn on but “retired” it when he found he could not sing.

Entertainment back at the station was creative – and often soaked in alcohol.

During Gerrish's time at Byrd Station the famed Dr. Clair Patterson conducted research that persuaded Congress to ban leaded gasoline by drilling deep into the Antarctic ice to see if lead levels had risen in the atmosphere.

“Some of the cores [of ice] that Doc Patterson didn't want we would use in drinks,” Gerrish said. “They were fun because they had pressurized air in them and as the ice walls would melt through they would jump around in your glass.” 

As well as living in an alien environment inaccessible to civilization for nine months of the year, Gerrish had to adjust to six months of daylight and six months of night.

“Your body develops its natural rhythm. My sleeping and waking schedule depended on how I felt,” and unless Gerrish had something specific to do with his instruments at a particular time, “you'd sleep when you're sleepy and eat when you're hungry.”

When Gerrish's 13 months were up he made the long haul back from Byrd to Antarctica's port of entry, the “cosmopolitan” McMurdo Station. When he finally reached Christchurch, NZ, Gerrish “got in the bathtub, turned on the overhead shower, plugged up the tub and let the shower run in till the water got up to my chin.” He then drained the tub and started all over again. 

For his efforts Gerrish received a Congressional Medal and had a mountain range in Antarctica named for him. 

Gerrish's physics work took him to other far-flung places like Australia and Taiwan over the course of his career. When it came closer to retirement time he decided to get himself transferred out to Colorado and settled in the Broadmoor neighborhood with his French wife Gabrielle – their two children had already graduated by that time. Gabrielle, a former ballerina, passed in 2001 but Gerrish still regularly spends time with his daughter Chanda and two-year-old granddaughter Sedona, who live in the Colorado Springs area.

The Bartas of Broadmoor


From Broadmoor Friends and Neighbors Magazine, November 2014

The Bartas of Broadmoor
By Reecy Pontiff


Raising a family and starting a business are always labors of love but for Jeanne Barta it was also urged on by love's labor lost.

Jeanne had always been a stay-at-home mom to she and husband Tom's six children Mackenzie, Kaylyn, Colton, Kylie, Kacey and Cade. They were known in the neighborhood for hauling their kids around in a 15-passenger van lovingly nicknamed the “Barta Bus.” Though the Bartas have historically been one big, happy family, life threw a big challenge at them.

When Jeanne found out she was pregnant with their seventh child she was torn.

“It was a very surprising pregnancy,” Jeanne said. “We were done [having children] and as much as we love kids it was really hard because I didn't want to have another baby. By the time I accepted it and got excited I went into pre-term labor.”

Christopher Thomas Barta was born premature on September 28, 2012. He died 11 days later of pneumonia.

“I was thrown... I didn't even necessarily want this pregnancy and then I lost him. It was devastating,” she said.

Depression set in and Jeanne found it difficult to be her usual boisterous self.

As a way of getting “off the couch and get into the community,” Jeanne began hosting jewelry parties in her neighbors' homes.

“The community was immensely supportive,” she said. “They had known what I'd gone through. [The parties] really did get me back into community when I might have just withdrawn.”
Before her pregnancy with Christopher she'd sent in an application to open up a Lillians Boutique franchise but had been turned down because of the proximity to another location in the area. When they finally called to ask if she was still interested in the opportunity, Jeanne gave it careful consideration.

Though she loved the jewelry parties – seeing the new lines as the seasons changed and interacting with people – the process of having to haul her inventory from place to place was beginning to wear her out. With her youngest going into full-day kindergarten, the timing just felt right.

“It feels like it was meant to be,” Jeanne said.

Jeanne's husband Tom was very supportive of her decision. On top of handling the books for the boutique Tom also provides a lot of assistance at home.

“He helps out with the laundry and meals and still has his corporate job in Denver. I could not do it without his partnership, that's for sure.”

When the kids seemed unsure about their mother going to work Tom even helped convince them it was a positive transformation for both Jeanne and the family.

“It's a big change for a big family to go from a mom that completely stays home to a mom that's working full time,” she said. “Now that I have [the boutique] they are just funny. Of course the four girls think it's their closet,” and the boys are proud of their mother's shop.

Jeanne just celebrated the one-year anniversary of her Lilian's location and while things are going swimmingly she still has a tight-rope to walk between her work life and home life.

“The kids like it as long as they're getting enough attention,” she said.

And though the loss of Christopher was a blow to the entire clan it ultimately has brought them closer together.

“It really affected the kids... but it bonded them to each other and to us. It's made life a little bit less difficult because I feel like they talk to us more,” she said. “Because we went through such a difficult thing together there's just not so much of the parent/kid dichotomy that I feel that we were always fighting against.”

“Although there were days after Christopher's death that I didn't want to get out of bed, I would think about how hard he fought, all 1 lb. 5 oz. of him, for twelve long days, or about the bravery of my living children and the outpouring of love and support from our community, and I couldn't stay sad or give up,” Jeanne said.

“After facing trials that tempted me to give up and let grief consume me... in a very real sense, opening my Lillians was like crossing a threshold of hope and embarking on a new journey.”