Post office team picked for Antarctic Port Lockroy base
- Published
Five people have beaten off competition from more than 200 people to run the UK's most remote post office in Antarctica.
The team will man the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust's post office at Port Lockroy for four months.
The first permanent British base to be established on the Antarctic Peninsula, it has been run as a museum and post office for tourists since 2006.
The new postmasters start work in November and return to the UK in March.
Each year, the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust, which is based in Cambridge, advertises for a new intake of seasonal postal workers.
Hundreds apply despite there being no running water or mains electricity and the job involving working in sub-zero temperatures 11,000 miles away from home.
As well as running the office, museum and shop, the chosen team monitors the island's resident gentoo penguin population.
Several brooms are sent to the team each year to clean the penguin droppings outside the building - which the trust admits would otherwise look like "a penguin toilet".
Meet the postmasters
Lucy Dorman - The team leader, originally from Oxford but now living in Cambridge, will be spending her second season at the base and has been working as an operations manager for the trust for the past year
Vicky Inglis - Originally from Aberdeen, but now based in Leighton Buzzard in Bedfordshire, the marine biologist and countryside ranger will lead wildlife monitoring on the island
Kit Adams - The only male on this year's team is from Newcastle in County Down, Northern Ireland, and is a specialist in polar and alpine change
Lauren Elliott - Is from Portsmouth and will be working in the polar region for the first time and will be in charge of the shop
Heidi Ahvenainen - The former Lapland winter safari guide, originally from Finland but who has been living and working in Edinburgh since 2003, will join the team for the second half of the season
Port Lockroy, on Goudier Island, was home to explorers and whalers before becoming the first permanent British base to be established on the Antarctic Peninsula.
Built in 1944, it was used as a science base until 1962, when it closed permanently.
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Restoration began in the 1990s and since 2006 it has been managed as a post office and museum.
The island is deserted for most of the year but comes to life during the Antarctic summer when the trust's staff are shipped in and thousands of tourists begin arriving.
More than 120 cruise ships visit the base during an average Antarctic summer season and tourists send more than 60,000 postcards home - each one franked by the postal workers.
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