Our first week of the trip has already come and gone in a flash. I boarded the Langseth in Brooklyn Harbor late on the 9th. That was followed by a full day of preparations and getting the lay of the ship. Its quite a maze of hallwyays and decks that I easily became lost in the first several days. I would say I know it well now though I think I find a new room everyday. The ship left port in the early hours of the 11th in order to refuel and then were on our way out.

The ship’s engineers were faced with a potential delay, waiting for a part, and not wanting to waste any precious time the crew and science party decided on a new first deployment station whilst we wait. The instrumentation we are primarily using on this cruise are multi-cores, taking cylinders of mud from the sea floor, thousands of meters below the surface. The first station was a bit of a crash course for me in the operation of multi-cores as we deployed them several times over the next couple days. Some good news came at the end of this station when the engineers were able to fix the ship without going back to port.

After finishing up at our initial station it was time to make haste towards the next and official first station. Transit took several days and was a good time for all to rest and reset before the real work began. We only arrived on station yesterday and have already had our share of success and tribulations. During an inital CTD deployment the Langseth’s new winch malfunctioned leaving the CTD stuck close to the bottom for several hours. With the valiant efforts of the ship’s engineers and electricians the winch was repaired and CTD recovered in one piece. Today we’ve deployed two more cores and seem to be smoothing out all the little problems as they come. We hope for fair winds and following seas as our journey begins.