April 16, 2004
Eureka! A glimpse
inside Ellesmere's weather station
Who couldn't be happy
here?
GREG
YOUNGER-LEWIS
Debbie
Clouthier, who's been providing laughs and goods eats to military and research
camps in the North for 20 years, considers her kitchen in Eureka to be high-tech.
Cooking outside Resolute two decades ago, she had to keep food frozen in snow
banks. (PHOTO BY GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS)
|
The Eureka weather station
recently survived an invasion of outsiders of a size they've never seen before.
Well, sort of.
Late one Wednesday afternoon,
a plane-load of reporters and cameramen, escorted by soldiers in green fatigues,
flew into the remote colony of eight scientists, administrators and a cook -
and wreaked havoc, using every bed in the compound, stretching water-capacity
to the limit and increasing the local population almost seven-fold.
Besides witnessing 20 Rangers
roar into the otherwise peaceful compound on skidoos as part of their sovereignty
expedition from Resolute, reporters and army crew were privy to the slightly
secretive world of
Eureka, a 24-hour Environment
Canada station and internationally renowned research facility perched by the
frozen ice of a fiord on the west side of Ellesmere Island.
Most of the visitors, some
from as far away as New York City, took in the sights with awe, a few chills
and a few giggles. Coming out of Eureka's self-proclaimed "international
airport," consisting of a landing strip, reporters were exposed to high
winds and a spectacular landscape of soft-rolling mountains in every direction.
Down the main road, past
the sign warning of lemmings crossing, they found a clutch of yellow pre-fabricated
bungalows, and heavy construction machinery, half-buried in snow drifts.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Rich
DeVall, who spends half the year fishing in Ontario thanks to his lucrative
pay and long shifts, releases a weather balloon to check the temperature, wind,
humidity and air pressure above Eureka. "It's a good way to make a living,"
he said. "I've had a lot worse jobs." (PHOTO BY GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS)
|
Rich DeVall, a metereologist
who has been releasing weather balloons into the sky from Eureka since the mid-1990s,
said most of his friends down South can't imagine life "in the middle of
nowhere" on the 80th parallel.
But he said workers are
quick to adapt to the isolation, 24-hour darkness in the winter, and 24 hours
of light in the summer.
Like others, DeVall takes
advantage of the impressive recreational facilities, including a room full of
exercise weights, a big-screen TV backed by hundreds of movies lining two walls,
and an impressive lounge area called the Umingmak (Muskox) bar, complete with
a well-kept pool table and a piano left over from the Cold War.
DeVall said he came to
Eureka for the adventure, but mostly for the perks. Station employees are usually
limited to three-month work stints, during which they earn enough overtime on
their 12-hour shifts that they can afford to take three-month vacations, essentially
paid for by the job. As a result, DeVall spends half the year fishing near his
other home in Winnipeg.
Even though he offered
to stay longer than three months at a time, DeVall said his boss won't let him.
"They're probably
afraid of us going squirrelly," DeVall said before heading back to his
office to be surrounded by computers, dials, graphs and metres.
Down the hall from DeVall,
a wiley woman in a smudged apron and greying pigtails zips back and forth through
her sizeable kitchen, singing along with a country music station being piped
in through her radio. Known to some as the greatest cook in the North, Debbie
Clouthier prepared meals for more than six times her normal sitting, a full
array of beef roast, basmati rice, apple pie, and other dishes topped with fresh
mint grown in her bedroom.
Clouthier, a lady who won't
reveal her age, credits her passion for cooking and the outdoors for keeping
her upbeat and loving her job.
Speaking with the cheery
sing-song accent known to her farming community in the Ottawa Valley, Clouthier
explained that she makes a point of walking out on the land every day, "to
get a breath of fresh air and kiss of the Arctic wind."
"Who couldn't be happy
here?" she exclaimed with a clack of laughter. "It's a beautiful spot,
it's magical."
And the spot, and the weather
work done there, show no signs of disappearing.
Station administrators
say the $2 million budget for running Eureka remains firmly in place, and will
expand with the construction of a new building set to replace the main complex,
some of which was first transported to the site in 1947, when the station opened.
TOP
|