People & Culture

At the edge of the world with Louise K. Blight

Episode 127

The conservation scientist and seabird researcher shares her insights on studying Adélie penguins in Antarctica and what it’s like to live in one of Earth’s most remote research stations

  • Published May 19, 2026
  • Updated May 20
The Cape Royds Adélie penguin colony on Ross Island in Antarctica. (Photo: Louise K. Blight)
Expand Image

Listen & Subscribe

“There’s something really profound in being in such a vast landscape with nobody else around… You feel like such a diminutive thing in the landscape, really insignificant. Putting you in your place in the world.” – Louise K. Blight

Louise K. Blight during the Antarctic "summer" research season. (Photo: Louise K. Blight)
Expand Image

In this episode of Explore, host David McGuffin sits down with Louise K. Blight for a live conversation recorded at the Ottawa International Writers Festival about her new book, Where the Earth Meets the Sky.

Drawing on her time studying Adélie penguins in Antarctica in the early 2000s, Blight reflects on life at the edge of the world, where she lived among hundreds of thousands of penguins and endured brutal storms and isolation in this remote corner of the planet.

Working alongside legendary penguin researcher David Ainley at Cape Royds on Ross Island, Blight spent months immersed in one of the harshest and most surreal environments on Earth. The conversation explores the rhythms of penguin colonies, the eccentric culture of Antarctic research stations, the psychological realities of isolation, and the growing impacts of climate change on polar ecosystems.

Blight also shares stories of hurricane-force winds, skua attacks (predatory seabirds), the unforgettable smell of penguin colonies, and the profound sense of perspective that comes from living in a vast frozen landscape with almost no other humans around.

In this episode:

  • What it’s like living and working in Antarctica for months at a time
  • Studying Adélie penguins at the world’s southernmost colony
  • The remarkable resilience and behaviour of penguins in extreme environments
  • Life at McMurdo Station and the unique culture of Antarctic research communities
  • Isolation, endurance, and the psychological challenges of remote fieldwork
  • How climate change is threatening emperor penguins and Antarctic ecosystems
  • The strange beauty of Antarctica’s landscapes, wildlife, and silence
  • Why Antarctica continues to inspire scientists, explorers, and conservationists
Expand Image
Expand Image

Louise K. Blight is a conservation scientist, seabird researcher, and professor in the Environmental Studies Department at the University of Victoria. Her work focuses on seabirds, marine ecosystems, and conservation biology. She also serves as co-chair of the Bird Specialist Subcommittee on the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada. Her new book, Where the Earth Meets the Sky, chronicles her experiences studying Adélie penguins in Antarctica and explores the intersection of science, solitude, and environmental change.

Adélie penguins incubating at Cape Crozier, the most easterly point of Ross Island in Antarctica. (Photo: Louise K. Blight)
Expand Image
Cape Royds field camp, a temporary research and conservation base located on the Ross Island in Antarctica. (Photo: Louise K. Blight)
Expand Image
Advertisement

Help us tell Canada’s story

You can support Canadian Geographic in 3 ways:

Related Content

Wildlife

Secrets of “Secrets of the Penguins:” Behind the scenes of the hit docuseries

Penguin expert Pablo García Borboroglu and wildlife filmmaker Bertie Gregory share insights into the latest installment of National Geographic’s hit “Secrets of” franchise 

  • 1305 words
  • 6 minutes
Ten years after the release of her seminal book Sea Sick, Alanna Mitchell again plumbs the depths of the latest research on the health of the world’s oceans — and comes up gasping

Environment

“There’s no coming back from this:” Why the global ocean crisis threatens us all

Ten years after the release of her seminal book Sea Sick, Alanna Mitchell again plumbs the depths of the latest research on the health of the world’s oceans — and comes up gasping

  • 4426 words
  • 18 minutes
Dayo, an African penguin, sits on a tabletop where actress Taylor Thorne, in character as Taylor West, is completing homework

People & Culture

What it was like to work with penguins on the set of Northern Rescue

Meet the avian stars of Northern Rescue, the new family drama from CBC and Netflix 

  • 602 words
  • 3 minutes

Wildlife

Up close with the penguins of the Arctic

What Wildlife Conservation Society Canada scientists discovered after examining a colony of thick-billed murres in Cape Parry, N.W.T.

  • 876 words
  • 4 minutes