Details of the Daring Airdrop at Tristan Da Cunha

(tristandc.com)

167 points | by kspacewalk2 8 hours ago

16 comments

  • echoangle 3 hours ago
    Very nice story.

    One thing I often ask myself in these situations: What do the inhabitants on these islands actually do?

    There are 259 of them in this case.

    Are they self-sustaining? How do they pay for stuff the want to import? Do they live off the cruise ships they supply? And do people generally stay there or do young people generally move to mainland?

    Edit: For economy, it looks like they live off exporting langustas.

  • connorgurney 5 hours ago
    I think this is one of the few things as late that makes me feel genuinely proud to be British, because, beneath the hostility that feels so rife across our country recently, we’ve so many good people making things like this happen. Bravo.
    • walthamstow 3 hours ago
      The hostility is rife across social media. I don't see much of it day to day.
      • frereubu 45 minutes ago
        Reminds me of the Bill Hicks bit during the early days of CNN and 24-hour news channels: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGjuPJskNRE
      • andrepd 3 hours ago
        Unfortunately, for a few years now, social media is real life...
        • qsera 2 hours ago
          As the persons said, they are not observing it in real life.

          This is what I also have observed in various contexts as well. Social media is not a representation of what real people think. Most people in real life does not comment in social media, or they comment on inconsequential or trivial things....

    • SuddsMcDuff 1 hour ago
      I know exactly what you mean. But for me there's an even greater emotion here... relief. At a time when everything feels so utterly divided, it's such a relief to see a positive story that everyone can celebrate and feel proud of, regardless of their stance. Better, it's a story that can't be politicised one way or the other, it has a purity about it. I think if we had more positive stories like this, our political & ideological differences wouldn't seem so all consuming.
    • tomjen3 4 hours ago
      It certainly involved a lot of skill and expense, but how many more lives could be saved if the same money had been spent on improved traffic safety or NHS in general?
      • argsnd 4 hours ago
        Probably not that many. You underestimate how expensive either of those things are.

        We have obligations to provide services like this to the people living in our overseas territories, and you won’t find many people who’ll oppose that.

      • Arnt 3 hours ago
        This is a classic. It occurs in two forms:

        Wow, logistics to <remote place> are very expensive! We could spend that money better in the cities!

        Wow, logistics in <city> is expensive! We could spend that money better in rural areas!

        I read about a new road tunnel in London last year, a ten-digit price tag for about 1km of road IIRC. I'm 100% sure some people suggested that that money could have been better spent in rural areas.

        • bcjdjsndon 2 hours ago
          We shouldn't be wasting a penny on colonies, this isn't the age of Napoleon anymore, get the English out of any country that isn't England.
          • loloquwowndueo 38 minutes ago
            The one thing you seem to be missing in your anticolonialist tirades is the fact that Tristan was uninhabited. It’s not like native peoples were displaced by the British colonists, right?
            • SuddsMcDuff 32 minutes ago
              This guys comment history is absolutely wild! So utterly full of hate and ignorance. Amazing how often those two things go hand in hand.
      • shermantanktop 3 hours ago
        People respond to inspiring stories that show what is possible. Inevitably that means choices that might not match what a perfect allocation looks like.

        Quiet, bland execution in government will get you voted out. Technocrats tend to come in after corruption, but they don’t usually last.

      • ninalanyon 3 hours ago
        You'd rather we ignored our overseas compatriots?
      • petterroea 2 hours ago
        It's a small price to pay to keep political control. Probably not the entire motivation here, but generally countries like keeping their remote islands and settlements lived in because it represents a claim of the land by proxy.
      • benj111 4 hours ago
        True, but this is military expenditure. So would you rather they spend this on an exercise or on actually saving people?
        • fiftyacorn 3 hours ago
          Yeah and helps demonstrate thst Tristan is strategically important
          • bcjdjsndon 2 hours ago
            I think it's rich the English dont like foreigners given how many countries they think they're entitled to posses
  • markb139 1 hour ago
    I think this was also a “look what we can do at short notice” kind of exercise. Just in case a country was thinking of maybe trying to take over another set of islands in the south Atlantic
  • kitd 3 hours ago
    I'm no expert but that looks like an impressive feat of skill, coming blind through the clouds and picking out a relatively small patch to land on. Remember also it is late autumn there, pretty windy (according to TFA) and the wind would probably be doing weird things off the sea around those cliffs. All in all, very cool.
    • fnands 2 hours ago
      That jump video is wild. Can't see the island until the last few minutes.
  • trebligdivad 23 minutes ago
    Were the ICU nurse and Doctor trained for the tandem jump previously - I've not seen that said in any of the stories published. Or did they just find a random ICU nurse and Doctor who was up for it?
  • cbsks 6 hours ago
    Amazing! Tristan’s entire website is a treasure. It’s a throwback to when the web was great.
    • brendoelfrendo 5 hours ago
      Agreed. The story is great, too. A really interesting logistical challenge that arose from unusual circumstances.

      There's probably something to be said for the fact that TDC is a small, remote community, so it shouldn't be surprising that its website is reminiscent of a smaller, more communal web... but I'm not going to try to read too much into it and let the story stand on its own.

      • argsnd 4 hours ago
        Until recently TDC had a very slow FCDO satellite link that required their website to be quite basic in order to actually be viewable on computers on the island.

        They now have a fast Starlink connection, but I’m glad they’ve kept the website as it is.

        • imdsm 3 hours ago
          If they hosted locally, it shouldn't have been an issue, they could have had a mirror system, but that's by the by, I love the website
  • rimeice 2 hours ago
    Tremendous stuff. Made better by the throwback web styling. Almost broke out in to the national anthem halfway through the article.
  • dmos62 4 hours ago
    What a heartwarming article.
  • fnands 2 hours ago
    Visiting Tristan Da Cunha is on my bucket list. Just a shame it takes so long to get there, but maybe that's part of the appeal.
  • wmanley 3 hours ago
    Wonderful. I love the poem at the end too.
  • Neil44 2 hours ago
    In case you're as interested as I was, they have google street view.
  • qingcharles 4 hours ago
    Literally one of the worst places to fall seriously ill due to the fact you are absolutely and totally stuck in the actual middle-of-nowhere.
    • m4rtink 2 hours ago
      Polar stations are even more inaccessible during polar winter with months of total darkness and it is just too dangerous to reach them. The winter-over crews need to be completely self-sufficient until the sun rises again.
    • repelsteeltje 3 hours ago
      Free (but admittedly useless) advice when you plan to fall seriously ill:

      - do not get on a cruise ship

      - do not get off at a remote island

      • alibarber 1 hour ago
        From what I gathered from the article the person who got off was a resident of Tristan? They have such limited shipping options that this might have been the only way for them to travel from any mainland. Not sure though, but I don't think they got off there to seek medical assistance.
  • musikele 3 hours ago
    The only reason military should exist is to perform such life-saving, not life-ending, missions...
    • pasc1878 3 hours ago
      What if you were Ukrainian?
      • corford 2 hours ago
        Seems consistent. Ukrainian soldiers are performing life saving missions i.e. defending their citizens from an unprovoked attack.
      • hambes 2 hours ago
        then the military would also act life-saving, since they are defending the attacked country
  • stavros 3 hours ago
    > The plane flew between Inaccessible and Tristan

    My god there actually is an island called Inaccessible Island! That's fantastic.

    • uncertainrhymes 54 minutes ago
      In that case, you will probably also be happy to learn about:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unnecessary_Mountain

      • nephihaha 8 minutes ago
        We have a mountain here called Bod an Deamhain meaning the Demon's D*ck. It has been anglicised into something more polite.

        If you want something more bleak, there are also Disappointment Island and Desolation Island.

      • stavros 53 minutes ago
        This is the best thing, thank you.
    • SuddsMcDuff 29 minutes ago
      Definitely on the short list of locations to build my Bond villain lair.
  • bananamogul 6 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • ofrzeta 6 hours ago
      You did? What did you make of the word "daring" and the name "Tristan da Cunha"?
      • qingcharles 4 hours ago
        I think he was trying to make a joke about Airdrop, I guess.
  • bcjdjsndon 2 hours ago
    [flagged]