Saturday, August 28, 2010


There are many steps to the start of a journey. By choosing this photo in Resolute I have skipped unceremoniously past the months of training before we left Australia, the years or organising, researching and planning, the month of preparing equipment and food and doing reccy trips in Iqaluit and even the flight from Iqaluit to Resolute. Sarah, rob and I are here with a number of others - all expeditioners waiting for our lift north. Our flight has been booked for the morning after we arrive - so late in the evening we are loading our sleds onto the plane so we can leave promptly when the pilot calls us in the morning. The twin otter is in a huge hangar. The space is freezing - seems colder than the outside temperature which is well below zero. There is a canopy that hangs over the plane - maybe to keep some heat in though none is being generated.




Our sleds are on board, there are tubs of food waiting back at the main airport terminal for our resupplies. We have our expedition gear on and we have one last night in a bed, and one last shower to look forward to before heading off on our adventure.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

A snippet of the story of North Pole Expedition (March & April, 2010)

Frosty Faces
Our arrival at the pole followed a super huge effort to cover miles so that we could reach that magical spot on the earth's surface before running out of time for the helicopter pick up. The huge effort meant that in the final four days of our trip we had only 5 hours sleep. I have never in my life had to be so focused on achieving a goal and pushing for days, weeks really, to achieve it. That push to the end dominated our experience of the second half of the journey when it became apparent that we needed to step up the pace or risk not getting there. We still managed to appreciate how the icescape was changing as we travelled further and further away from the coast. The ice pans were larger, there were more low or old ridges that were easier to cross and more leads that needed to be swum or rafted or took time for us to walk along till we came to a point where we could cross.

The sun had been below the horizon at the start of our journey, coming up as a glowing yellow ball for 20 minutes on day 3 and increasing height and time till it was in the sky for the full 24 hours, after a month had passed. The sun reduced the amount of frost in the tent, made us warmer, made it easier to see and kept us more cheerful.

There’s lots we could say but the following snippets are some things we find people usually want to know about:

• The trip took 56 days, starting on the 28th Feb and finishing on the 26th of April. As the crow flies it was 780 kms.

• As the ice drifted in front of wind or ocean currents our position moved. We mostly drifted east and south. Depressing!

• We didn't see Polar Bears but we did see seals. Just one at a time, poking their heads up through a lead and looking at us to find out what we were up to. They quickly bobbed down into the water again and disappeared.

• It was -38C when we started, we averaged about -30C and the warmest we had was about -17C. We had to worry about getting too hot when it got to -20C as we didn't want to get sweaty (sweat freezes in the clothing - not nice)

• The sleds weighed about 80 kgs. We had two resupplies of food and fuel which were parachuted in. Each of those were about 100kgs.

• It’s not hard to sleep in sunlit nights - we were so tired we could have slept through a rock concert.

• The ocean can be silent but sometimes you can hear the ice moving. It chugs, sounding a bit like a steam engine. Sometimes scraping ice makes a high pitched screeching noise too. Our travel was accompanied by The sounds of our skis and sleds moving over the snow and ice which could be quite noisy.

• We phoned Matty McNair (Sarah’s polar guide mum) daily to provide a position update and to organise the resupplies. We phoned the Australian Base Communication team daily also with an update for our website.

• We didn't suffer from frostbite or any other 'Arctic' conditions apart from a small amount of cold injury Linda had on her fingers. No digits missing or scarred noses. We lost about 10kgs weight each, even though the food was good.

• We are still talking to each other and we’re still friends with Sarah—we had a great experience of working together well as a team.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Getting organised to tell the story

Rob and I have been back from the North Pole expedition now for several months. I went back to work straight away and found myself busy with voluntary commitments without a pause - though I had hoped to be able to take some reflection time before the feelings and impressions of the expedition were replaced by the humdrum of a busy urban Australian life.

We have done some talks to groups and there have been interviews on the radio, newspapers and magazines but really we are only starting to get ready now to documenting the story so we can share what it was like - in more than 30 second grabs and quick responses about polar bears and freezing conditions.

As an effort to provide some information I have written up a 'snippet' which will satisfy a small amount of curiosity. I hope to write more in coming weeks.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

A North Pole map

Seems even Google Earth doesn't go as far north as the north pole. You just have to imagine the flag at 90North. Shown on the map is:
Iqaluit - where we go first for training, acclimitisation and final preparations
Resolute - where we wait for the final flight
Eureka - where we put down on route if the flight can't get all the way through
Ward Hunt Island - where we are dropped off by the charter plane to start the expedition. We may be off to the left a wee way if conditions look better there.
Magnetic North Pole - not where we are going (but where the Top Gear cars went). We are going a lot further north than that. Our compasses will point towards magnetic north while we try to head true north.


View North Pole expedition in a larger map