Jo Chandler: Feeling the Heat
- Author: Jo Chandler
- Title: Feeling the Heat
- Published: 2011
- List of Challenges 2018
- Monthly reading plan
- #AWW2018 @AusWomenWriters
- #WorldFromMyArmchair (Antarctica)
- Trivia: Breaking News BBC 09.04.2018 Antarctica
Who is Jo Chandler?
- Chandler is a freelance journalist and author.
- She won the Walkely Award 2017 Freelancer of the Year.
- I discovered Jo Chandler in The Best Australian Essays 2016
Introduction:
- In a attempt to understand what is happening to our planet,
- Chandler travels to climate science frontiers
- Antarctica, the Great Barrier Reef, the Wimmera and
- North Queensland’s tropical rainforests.
- Jo Chandler puts together some of the
- …pieces in the climate puzzle
- …meets many passionate and eccentric characters
- …discovers what makes them tick, and
- …learns a thing or two about herself.
What is Chandler’s goal in this book?
- The purpose of the book is to tell the authentic,
- raw story of science at the real-world climate frontiers.
- Narrator: Chandler is of a non-scientist and journalist
- ….a questioning observer.
- Chandler presents scientist’s evidence as clear as
- possible and then takes a step back as all scientists do.
- “Our leaders must define the path which will get
- …us to where we need to go.” (pg 228, epilogue)
What did Chandler find personally?
- Chandler uses the metaphor
- …the difference between bearing and heading.
- Explorers note physical markers to register
- …their drift and shift against satellites.
- Heading is not always the
- …direction you are moving towards.
- Heading is the direction you are pointing.
- If we fail to define the
- …coordinates of our objective (…in life)
- …drift out of course due to crosswinds
- …we plough blindly forward
- …without heed for perils along the way.
- It is important to find your bearing.
- …your position with reference to a known (land)mark.
- “”..it feels like a revelation. A strategy to better find my way
- …when I return to earth.” (pg 40, ch 3)
Storm Front
- Jo Chandler’s departure from Hobart to Casey Antarctica:
Flight of the Albaross – Arriving at Casey Base:
- 5 hr flight from Hobart
- 70 km (4 hrs rough riding from Wilkins Airport)
- 4000 km south of Perth
- Flight attendant Airbus landing at Wilkens Inter Airport:
- ” Welcome to Antarctica…it’s not bad out there today
- ..mild mid-summer -6 C.”
Buried Treasure
- Fact: Antarctica holds 70% of the fresh water on the planet.
- Irony: Antarctica is the driest place on earth.
- Personal: Chandler experiences Antarctica
- …as more than an scientific platform.
- She felt moments of connection with nature
- …which ache so powerfully
- …it is like the instant of finding love.
- Antarctica divines or future….and archives our past.
- Reasearch: Ice samples pulled from Law Dome
- contain bubbles of the atmosphere
- ….dating back 90.000 years!
- Expert: scroll down to see beautiful
- …video (3 min) of Antarctica with
- … Dr. Tas van Ommen
Revisiting Gondwana
- Chandler now moves to the Wet Tropics of Australia.
- …the subtropical Gondwana Rainforests of Australia World Heritage Area
- Despite its small size these tropics host the highest biodiversity in the country.
- The forest throbs with life.
- Just take the time to LISTEN to the sounds of the rainforest….so relaxing!
- I listened…while reading!
- Some of the wettest areas on Earth where forests are so
- …often shrouded in cloud they truly are “cloud forests”.
- Clouds condense on leaves and drip to saturate soils below
- But the rainforests are deeply vulnerable
- …to human induced climate-change.
- Cyclones are a part of the north
- …they have always come…and they always will.
- But what happens when warmer oceans
- …feed the frequency and fury of the storms?
- Will the rainforest have the opportunity to recover between blasts?
- Cyclone Yasi 30.01.2011 CAT 5 ..most furious storm to visit east coast
- …of Australia in a century!
- Personal: Chandler feels unsettled in this place with a high ‘ick’ factor.
- It takes some days to come to terms with
- …the tight grasp of this menacing environment.
The Sleeping Giant:
- Climatic change is everywhere in the news.
- If you want to get the most out of this book
- …I would suggest while you are reading
- …to google for images that will help you see what chandler is discussing.
- The Sleeping Giant refers to the East Antarctica ice sheets.
- They are now relatively stable.
- But Chandler explains that the character of the ice is changing.
- (warm current sweeping under the ice sheet)
- Without this image for instance …I would not have
- ..understood what Chandler meant.
- Antarctica is difficult to imagine!
- Personal: Chandler feels in Antarctica “..very isolated, very small,
- …very lucky and a little afraid.” (pg 112, ch 6)
Strong point:
- Explanations are clear and in accessible language.
- It is not academic book but very strongly supported
- citing numerous articles in science magazines and research papers.
- The main topics that are being investigated in Antarcitca are:
- Ice sheets – ice melt – atmosphere (ozone hole) – ice cores (drilled to study the past)
Strong point:
- This is the first book I ever read about climatic change.
- Chandler’s perspective as a non-scientist observer
- …made me feel at ease.
- I was learning….as she was.
- Chandler helped me with her journalistic style ‘here are the facts’ and
- …clever analogies (bathtub = hidden underbelly of the Totten Glacier, ch 6).
Strong point:
- You can read all the chapters one after another
- …but I found I was
- drowning in information overload.
- You can also read the book as a series of essays
- …put the book down and let the information settle.
Strong point:
- Chandler’s book made me more aware of the consequences
- of climate change that I experience myself:
- frequent storms, diluvian cloudbursts and sweltering heatwaves.
Weak point: no illustrations!
Conclusion:
- This book is a great read emphasizing that
- …the clock is ticking and issues like
- …ice melt and sea-level rise are urgent.
- If there is even the smallish risk
- …of a very big adverse outcome
- ..due to sea rise and ice-melt (Antarctica and Greenland)
- it would be wise to do something about it.
- “Once the thaw starts the risk is that the
- …tipping point is tripped...” (pg 122, ch 6)
- But as we know action is blocked by
- Big Oil and Big Coal.
- I think one of the things I or any other citizen of the world
- …can do is #VoteThemOut
- Vote out the politicians
- …and leaders of countries who are on the
- ..fossil fuel industries…payroll!
Last thoughts:
- Chandler’s mission:
- Explore and explain the dynamics of
- …the forces at work in a changing world.
- Personally..
- …I was most fascinated by the Antarctica.
- Jo Chandler’s storytelling is
- ….personal (ch 6-7 and especially the epiloge)
- … mixed with scientific: for example…
- man-made ocean acidification ch 8
- Great Barrier Reef and Heron Island ch 9-10-11-12
- Penguins Antarctic Adélies, elephant seals
- …and mosses, the most advanced plants
- …on continental Antarctica! ch 13
- It is an amazing feat to
- …digest all this scientific information
- …clarify all the jargon for the readers
- …who just dabble in science, like me.
- One thing I DID LEARN...
- What caused the biting cold Polar Vortex
- …24 February – 01 March 2018 that brought
- ..The Netherlands back to ice skating on the canals?
- There is more heat coming off the relatively ice-free Arctic waters
- …increasing air pressure and
- …pushing the polar cold air south …in my direction!
- #MustRead
I’d love to learn more about climate change! Given that it’s become a political topic, it also seems like a topic worth being well-educated on.
Jo Chandler is the way to go! She’s a journalist and has the skills to explain complicated issues…and keeps it interesting! Antarctica is a fascinating place that is an important part of our climate. Thanks so much for your comments! I hope to have a great link soon for your Non-Fiction Friday post!
Awesome! I’m excited to see what else you have coming up 🙂
I missed seeing this thanks to Japan planning, but it sounds like a great read. I’ve dabbled in quite a bit on climate change reading over the years, but somehow missed this one.
Antarctica and the Great Barrier Reef are showing clear signs of the problem, but our politicians keep ignoring the message.
Maybe you missed it because you were “Feeling the Heat!” Australia has just sweated through its hottest April since climate records began!
We’ve got to get over the roadblocks that are stopping effective action on climate change….or we will continue to sizzle! I even put on the air-conditioner 19th of April. That is insane in my longitude/latitude!
And then we had a bizarre cold snap early May with snow in Western NSW where my sisters live. Unheard of for this time of year.