I now have another official responsibility onboard, which is cool – I will be communicating our daily position (latitude and longitude) to the International Arctic Research Center in Alaska. I was planning to periodically tell you on the blog too, but the days get a little confusing here. At the time I’m writing this, we are at about 79°N and 105°E, and the air/water temperature are both around 0°C. But when am I writing this really? Here’s why it’s confusing. Firstly, it’s daylight ALL the time. Secondly, there are no landmarks. Then there is the issue of time zones. The Captain has decided to keep the ship on Norwegian time, but in real time the ship could pass through multiple time zones pretty quickly (since time zones converge at the pole). Every day, I am writing about happenings that day and the day before. I only have access to send email once a day, and what I write and send then gets forwarded to you on the blog the following day. To add to this, as the ship moves around to the other side of Earth, it’s going to be daylight and we’ll be awake at night, because on our ship time, it will be daytime, even though it’s the middle of the night local time. Confused yet? Einstein would have a hard time keeping time and space straight around here. Grab a globe and try to figure it out.