I am writing these lines in mid-air between Ascension Island
and the Falklands, after 4 days in Ascension. After a 3-year absence, I am back
to the South Atlantic! This flight of almost 9 h, in a high-flying jet aircraft
(an RAF A330 Voyager, a military version of the A330 capable of in-air
refuelling, troop / passenger and cargo transport as well as medevac purposes)
always reminds me of how little of the Earth’s surface is suitable for human
activities. During this flight, one doesn’t see any other aircraft or ships –
only sky and water in any variation!
The little volcanic island of Ascension has intrigued my
curiosity and inspiration ever since I first heard about it from my friend in
Dublin, Margaret Casey, in early 1989 (whose brother had been deployed to the
island as a meteorologist). On the map it resembles a speck of dust in the
middle of nowhere of a very big ocean or, to be a bit more precise, it is about
half-way between Angola and Brazil, in the South Atlantic Ocean.
My friends Kostas Tsiamis, Aldo Asensi and I had compiled an
inventory
of Ascension’s marine plants, based on the collections from our 4 previous
visits in 2011 – 2013. I have now returned to the island, accompanied by 2 dear
friends, Eleni Kytinou (Athens) and Akira Peters (Roscoff).
We spent our 4 days in Ascension with diving, hiking on
Green Mountain and shore-based collections. Eleni and I had 4 very long,
fantastic dives at Comfortless Cove, the east side of Triangles / English Bay,
Pan Am Bay / Portland Point and also Georgetown Harbour. Our visit coincided
with the egg-laying season of the Green Turtles (
Chelonia mydas), which meant that we saw many of them during our
dives, but also at night on Long Beach (just outside Georgetown, Ascension’s
capital). Ascension has recently attracted a shoal of
Galapagos Sharks which tend to linger
around Georgetown Harbour expecting to be fed by the St. Helenian fishermen
gutting tuna and other catch. During our night time dive in the harbour and
bay, one such shark approached me from behind, sniffing out my left hand and yellow
collection bag – I did not notice any of this, but Eleni did. Since all this
was too fast and too dramatic to be captured by camera, she drew an image of
the scene by hand:
Eleni intended to trial a new visual survey technique which
she had developed for her work in Greece, counting fish along a transect. The
challenge in Ascension was the exceptionally high density of fish, including
those quite high up in the food web like groupers!
On our last day (when we did not go diving in order to
decompress before our long onward flight to the Falklands) we conducted some
terrestrial sampling for my friend and colleague
Prof. Steve
Woodward at the University of Aberdeen (for studying soil-borne fungal
diversity). We hiked Green Mountain and visited parts of the coastal desert
near North-East Bay and Cross Hill. Green Mountain is a lush oasis on a
mountaintop in the midst of a very hot and dry volcanic desert island. Its
famous cloud forest goes back to a suggestion by Charles Darwin, who visited
Ascension on the last leg of his epic voyage – the garrison of Royal Marines on
the island, initially established to prevent escape or rescue attempts of
Napoleon from St. Helena, was struggling with a constant shortage of water.
Darwin had the idea that rainfall on Ascension could be enhanced by planting a
forest, using trees from a variety of tropical countries around the world. The
idea worked, and within a few decades, a totally artificial cloud forest
established itself from the sapling sent there by the botanic gardens at Kew
and Stellenbosch. Of course this would be illegal today – swamping an island
with non-native plants and see which ones become established, while driving
native plants into extinction! But it remains a fascinating and unique
geoengineering experiment – and Green Mountain is a refreshing getaway, especially
during the present hot season in Ascension.
A few more hours to fly to our destination - the Falkland
Islands are waiting for us!
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Packing in Newburgh (Aberdeenshire, Scotland) prior to our departure |
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Waiting for our flight to Ascension Island at RAF Brize Norton |
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Landing in Ascension Island after a 9 h overnight flight from RAF Brize Norton |
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Another RAF A330 Voyager (same model like the one we came on) on a medevac mission parked at Ascension Island Base |
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Another
RAF A330 Voyager on a medevac mission parked at Ascension Island Base -
close-up view of the refuelling pod under the wing |
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Eleni
in the pilot's seat of the A330 Voyager. Our disembarkation was delayed
due to the medevac mission mentioned above, and some passengers were
allowed to visit the flight deck. |
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Arrived with our mountain of luggage in Ascension Island! |
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Getting ready for our first dive at Comfortless Cove |
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Galapagos Shark in Georgetown Harbour |
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Before our night dive with the Galapagos Sharks |
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About to jump into shark-infested waters at night |
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Akira took this photo of us from the pier head when we were diving off the pier head |
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Several of the endemic Ascension Frigatebirds off Portland Point |
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Sunset off Comfortless Cove |
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Long Beach, the main nesting beach for Green Turtles on Ascension Island, after a very busy night |
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The ESA Station at Northeast Bay, Ascension Island - Ariane rocket
flights launched from Kourou (French Guyana) are monitored from here. |
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View from the jungle at Elliot's Path on Green Mountain into the coastal desert |
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Eleni and Akira collecting soil samples for fungal metagenomics on Green Mountain |
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In the bamboo jungle on Green Mountain |
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In the bamboo jungle on Green Mountain |
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Akira and Eleni at Dew Pond near the summit on Green Mountain |
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In the cloud forest on Green Mountain |
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Psilotum nudum, probably the most archaic land plant living on Earth |
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Land crab on Ascension Island |
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Fast ARM (Atmospheric Radiation Measurement) station |
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Soil sampling near Fast ARM (Atmospheric Radiation Measurement) station
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View from Cross Hill |
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The Ascension Island Government Conservation Department |
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The recently created Ascension Island flag - note the 2 sea turtles! |
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Farewell dinner during our last night in Ascension |
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Coast at Comfortless Cove on Ascension's west coast |
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Coast near Comfortless Cove |
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The HMS Bonetta Cemetery at Comfortless Cove. The whole crew of this
sailing ship, all infected by yellow fever, were quarantined and
essentially left to die here in 1838. |
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Sunset at Comfortless Cove
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Our shadows during a full moon tour off egg-laying Green Turtles,
guided by a ranger of the ASI Conservation Department
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Egg-laying Green Turtle on Long Beach |
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Our full moon tour off egg-laying Green Turtles,
guided by a ranger of the ASI Conservation Department
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Egg-laying Green Turtle on Long Beach
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The moonscape of the coastal desert near English Bay |
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St. Helenian fisherman in Georgetown Harbour |
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Pufferfish near Comfortless Cove |
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Underwater scenery near Comfortless Cove |
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Hawksbill Turtle near Comfortless Cove |
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Scorpionfish near Comfortless Cove |
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Eleni diving off the east side of the headland of Triangles / English Bay |
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Vast maerl (coralline algal) bed off Ascension's English Bay / Triangles Headland |
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Moray eel during our night dive off Comfortless Cove |
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Eleni searching for Galapagos Sharks during night dive |
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Sleeping Black Triggerfish (Melanichthys niger) |
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Night dives offer very close encounters with fish! |
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Night dives offer very close encounters with fish! |
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Underwater scenery off Portland Point / Pan Am Beach |
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Eleni's fish survey off Portland Point / Pan Am Beach |
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Underwater scenery off Comfortless Cove |
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Underwater scenery off Portland Point / Pan Am Beach |
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Green Turtle off Portland Point / Pan Am Beach
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Grouper off Portland Point / Pan Am Beach |
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Sea cave full of fish off Comfortless Cove |
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The synaptoid Sea Cucumber Euapta lappa during night dive off Comfortless Cove |
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Rhodolith reef during night dive off Comfortless Cove |
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Cray fish during night dive off Comfortless Cove |
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Night dives offer very close encounters with fish! |
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Night dives offer very close encounters with fish! |
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Night dives offer very close encounters with fish! |
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Eleni's light attracting lots of shrimp, fish etc. during night dive |
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Night dives offer very close encounters with fish! Pictured here: Grouper |
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Octopus during night dive off Comfortless Cove |
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Our last evening: Snorkeling with Green Turtles off Long Beach |
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Our last evening: Eleni snorkeling with Green Turtles off Long Beach |
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Our last evening: Sunset after snorkeling with Green Turtles off Long Beach |