Science Editor Nicky Phillips and video
journalist Colin Cosier are on a four-week expedition to Antarctica,
based in Casey station.

An Adelie penguin on Shirley Island near Casey station, Antarctica.
Photo: Colin Cosier
With an ice axe in one hand and a camera in the other, Colin
and I join a few Casey locals on a walk to see the Adelie penguins
nesting on nearby Shirley Island. The small, rocky island is connected to the continent for
most of the year by sea ice. But come summer, much of the sea ice melts,
and we arrive to find only a narrow ice-bridge crossing.

Fairfax's Nicky Phillips and AAD expeditioner Clare Ainsworth on the ice walk.
Photo: Colin Cosier
Walking on melting sea ice can be risky, so we each carry
survival backpacks with axes, ropes, shelter, water and emergency
clothing - just in case anybody is unlucky enough to get wet. As we near the crossing, our guide, field training officer
Tim Gill, takes his axe to the ice, hacking the surface to assess its
structural integrity. It's brittle on top, but the layer underneath is
sturdy enough to cross. Fellow walker Clare Ainsworth drives an ice drill into the
surface to measure the ice thickness. At one metre she hits the water
below.

The penguins react as a skua tries to snag an egg.
Photo: Colin Cosier
While it is safe to walk on solid, intact sea ice that is
only 20 centimetres thick, some of the ice around us is brown and
slushy. Clare is the first to navigate a safe path to the island. I
follow, taking one tentative step at a time. It's eerie to hear the ice
creaking underfoot. A few times my boot breaks a newly formed ice crust
and plunges a few inches into the slush. Another walker is unlucky enough to sink knee-deep into the icy mush.
The penguins seem mildly amused by our misfortune. A few are bold enough to come close and gawp. The Australian Antarctic Division is strict about keeping a
distance from the birds, especially when they're breeding. On the
island, the penguins congregate on ice-free nooks.
We pick a section of rocks to sit and watch. Most are sitting
on their nests, incubating eggs. Others, in the process of building
their homes, take any opportunity to steal a neighbour's rocks for their
own building material. A brown skua, a bird that looks like overweight pigeon,
attempts to snag an unattended egg. The colony reacts with a loud
symphony of squawks.
We head back to station after an hour, taking a new route
over the ice bridge. By the time we get back to station, the afternoon
Shirley Island walk has been cancelled – the sea ice is too
unpredictable. I'm glad we decided to forgo our sleep-in and take the
morning option – we were the last walk this season. The sea ice will
detach any day.
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