Larry Nearly Seals His Fate

On a break from his job running electrical for the new Amundsen-Scott Station, Larry travels the 850 miles from his digs at the South Pole to McMurdo Station (77°51’S, 166°40’E), the main U.S.station in Antarctica.  It is a coastal station at the southern tip of Ross Island, about 2,415 miles south of Christchurch, New Zealand,

Although McMurdo nightlife can be a bit wild on a Saturday night, in McMurdo Sound, marine wildlife can be seen any day of the week.  Within 20 miles of McMurdo Station, Adelie penguins are the quintessential, tuxedoed avians. The closest rookery to McMurdo Station is at Cape Royds, a little more than twenty miles to the north. It is common to see individual penguins or small groups not quite on track for either open water or the rookery, waddling past the station,.

Southern elephant seals (Mirounga leonina) live in sub-Antarctic and Antarctic waters that feature brutally cold conditions but are rich in fish, squid, and other marine foods the seals enjoy. Southern elephant seals breed on land but spend their winters in the frigid Antarctic waters near the Antarctic pack ice.  They can dive to over 1500 meters and can stay submerged for up to 2
hours.

The only time elephant seals get upset is if you approach them walking upright.  When these seals threaten each other, they rear upwards to get as much height as they can and so assume that an upright figure is being aggressive and so is a threat. Fights are actually quite rare; the males usually size each other up quite accurately and settle the matter by bellowing and rearing up.  Only when two of the largest males are closely matched does a fight result. This consists of them lifting themselves up and throwing all the weight they can muster (and it’s a lot of weight), at the opponent. Such fights can be very bloody.

Standing upright, Larry is mesmerized by a gargantuan elephant seal not far away lying in all his smelly, two-ton, sharp-toothed. blubber-blob glory.  Larry grabs the 14’ long, 6,000 pound bull male by the tail. Roaring with hellaciously bad breath and seething with anger, the seal swiftly flips around and baring his sharp yellow teeth goes for Larry’s arm.  Luckily, Larry’s reflexes are a split second faster than the seal’s or for the rest of his life he might have become known as the one-armed electrician.

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About the Author

Julie Peterson Freeman, née Wren Dubois, has been spotted in dark piano bars and tiny cafes in the oldest sections of cities around the world. At the beginning of her career, one was most likely to find her strolling the cobbled streets in the 18th Arrondissement of bohemian Paris. I spotted her arm in arm with the notorious Amantine Dupin (better known as George Sand), exiting Le Tagada, a quaint and popular bar among artists and eccentrics in the famed village of Montmartre. It was here where the flâneur was created. Bien sûr, none of this is true, except in Julie’s imagination.

Julie Peterson Freeman
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