What's Next
Well, travel-wise for me, I think the next big goal has to be going to space. Let’s see if that is reasonable to do by age 50. If anyone reading this is considering venturing to Antarctica, I would highly recommend it. Photos like these just can’t even do a place like that justice. While I tried to capture my views, you have to experience it for yourself.

Visiting a continent as beautiful as Antarctica really puts our planet into perspective. One day, it’s right around freezing in their summer and I’m surrounded by ageless icebergs bigger than a house. Just a couple days later, I’m out mowing my yard in 80° weather in California.

It’s also a reminder about how fragile our planet is. We have done so much to destroy our planet and it’s really taking its toll. Even when a world away from civilization, we were warned that it was important to wear sunscreen as the hole in the Ozone Layer means that there is much more direct UV exposure. We took pretty extreme precautions to make sure we weren’t bringing any foreign bacteria to land including wearing designated muck boots and making sure that we didn’t bring any food or plastic. Yet when I returned home, I read about a whale dying from starvation and dehydration because his stomach was filled with plastic trash bags. We’ve got to do better if we want to avoid increasing the planet’s global temperature by just 2°C, as scientists have warned is coming. We’re already half-way to that point.

Even this trip itself definitely contributed to climate change as the unfathomable amount of CO2 generated from my plane rides and the diesel fuel of the cruise ship. The ship that we were on, the Ocean Diamond, was designated as CarbonNeutral by having Quark Expeditions buy carbon offset credits. That’s a start, but we can do more.

Almost every single animal that we saw relies on krill as its food in some way or another. If krill are overfished or their numbers were drastically reduced, the population of nearly all of the animals in Antarctica would crash. Harvesting of krill is becoming common in the Southern Ocean to use as food for factory fish so they get a nice pink color to them, or as ingredients in dog food or cosmetics.
A few ideas of what you can do:
  • Recycle — go out of your way to recycle as much as you can.
  • Reduce — buy products that use alternative packaging, use a reusable water bottle instead of single-use plastic bottles, opt to carry your fast food or other items without a plastic bag.
  • Reuse — buy products containing recycled materials such as paper towels, clothing, and more.
  • Dispose properly. Never litter, even accidentally by not securing your trash into bins. Trash ends up blowing into waterways and then eventually to oceans.
  • Don’t release balloons into the atmosphere. These come down later into oceans and then animals mistake them for food.
  • Contribute to Penguin Watch or other <Citizen Science initiatives by counting penguins from satellite photos to help research.
  • Don’t buy seafood products that aren’t sustainably harvested or produced, especially products containing krill.
  • See if your power company offers an alternative to purchasing power produced with renewable resources like solar and wind.
  • Read about What You Can Do About Climate Change and Top 10 things you can do about climate change.
  • Read more about solar energy.
A few of my favorite companies providing alternative options:
  • Who Gives a Crap sells recycled toilet paper and sustainably grown bamboo paper
  • The Grove Collective sells many different home products including kitchen sponges made from walnuts and dishwasher packs made without petroleum products
  • Amazon allows you to purchase frustration-free packaging products which use less resources and also allows you to donate a portion of your purchases to the charity of your choice
  • OhmConnect tracks city-wide power usage and alerts you when dirty power plants are about to be turned on. By reducing your power usage, you earn points which you can redeem for cash. (Disclaimer: referral link)
  • SolarCity / Tesla offers solar panels for your home at rates which compete with dirty power plants