Archive for June, 2006:

6 June 2006

Sensory Deprivation

Greenland 2006Not much to report today – another day battling through horizontal snow and zero visibility. Lying here in the tent, with the stove emitting its reassuring roar in the background and the incessant snow fizzing against the tent fabric, Tony and I were discussing how an entire day of whiteout affected us mentally. We navigated using compass and GPS, and it turns out we were both afflicted by a worrying feeling that we were, at times, skiing round in circles – during the first session this morning I was convinced we were going to stumble across our campsite again.

During the day my mind would come up with imaginary landscapes, and for a while I skied alongside a river, around Richmond Park, and through the bottom of a snowy halfpipe (like the snowboarders use in the Winter Olympics), its icy walls curving up on either side of my tracks. Tony imagined his way along London's Tottenham Court Road, from Warren Street tube to Trafalger Square.

The good news is that neither of us are showing impending signs of madness after our day of sensory deprivation, and perhaps more importantly, our average speed remained respectable. We'll be on a tight schedule in Antarctica later this year, stretching the limits of the seasonal window for expeditions, and we won't be able to afford the luxury of sitting out bad weather in the tent.

— Filed under Greenland

5 June 2006

Scooby skiing

Greenland 2006Confusingly, we switched back to skiing during the day today – we woke up at midnight but the weather was pretty horrific, so we set the alarm to go off every two hours in order to keep an eye on it and pick the best time to make a move. That time came at 6:30am – the thick whiteout seemed to thin a little, we could just about make out the horizon, and we decided to go for it. The window didn't last long, however, and we were soon enveloped by the mist and snow.

I figured we would still have a fairly reasonable time of it as our tracks from yesterday were still faintly visible. If they lasted, navigation would be a doddle. They did last, for almost an hour. Serendipitously, this was exactly when Tony was due to take over navigation. I handed over the chest-mounted compass to young Tone and suggested that he take a bearing and then focus on a series of landmarks on that course to follow.

Five minutes later, Tony stopped to thank me for my sage advice, pointing out that the falling snow had now covered everything with a rather uniform blanket of white, and this combined with the faint snag that visibility was around four feet meant he was having a little difficulty picking out appropriate landmarks. He said something else after that which seemed to involve a lot of hand gestures, but the wind took his words away and I didn't really catch it.

Navigating on a bearing through a whiteout doesn't really rank up there with life's most pleasurable experiences, though at least today we had the wind at our backs and didn't have to wear goggles; the double-whammy goggle and whiteout-induced claustrophobia is truly horrible. Take a normal pair of ski goggles, remove the lens, trace around it on a piece of white card, then stick the card back in where the lens should be, and you'll just about get the idea.

With Tony cursing the weather and the wayward compass, and both of us cursing the sticky snow that was once again starting to glue itself to our ski skins (the strips of fabric on the base of our skis that give us traction on the snow and ice) in heavy clumps, it was panning out to be a grim day.

The breakthrough came at our second break, where in a fit of rage, I decided to remove my skins completely and try skiing without them. It shouldn't have worked – the base of the ski is completely smooth, offering no purchase on the snow, and for the first few minutes, it was like skiing on ball bearings, complete with a few hilarious 'Scooby Doo' skiing-on-the-spot moments. But gradually my style adapted, I stopped slipping around quite so much, and I realised I was travelling really fast. Tony soon followed suit, and we revelled in our new-found turn of speed. I'm sure Norwegians do this all the time, but we are English after all, and skiing with any kind of technique just isn't cricket, as Tony put it. Suddenly the day didn't seem quite so bad.

[As a technical aside, if anyone's into this kind of thing, we're using handmade Norwegian Asnes skis - 190cm Sondres with full-length skins for pulling sledges and 190cm Ragos with short skins for skiing with rucksacks. Both sets have Salomon SNS X-Adv bindings - for expedition use, I reckon this combination is unbeatable.]

— Filed under Greenland

4 June 2006

Wow

Greenland 2006Tony's alarm went off at midnight and he peered at me groggily with one eye; we had had barely an hour's sleep. I tried to set a good example by enthusiastically half-climbing out of my sleeping bag, unzipping the 'kitchen door' and lighting the stove for the breakfast snow-melting session. The first thing I noticed was the cold – probably the lowest ambient temperature we'd had on the expedition to date. My fingers stuck momentarily to the frozen metal of my spoon. It was a good sign – I knew we'd be facing some of the 'proper' Arctic conditions I'd been hoping for for days.

Quite what a surprise we were in for only became apparent when Tony unzipped the tent's outer door. I watched him step outside, fully kitted up with face mask, mitts and polarized goggles, like an astronaut stepping onto an alien moon for the first time. The sun was glowing a deep, nuclear orange and skimmed the horizon, bathing the scene in a strange blue and yellow light. Pink spindrift sped past on the wind, swirling around his ankles. Not many people have seen this I thought to myself as I strapped up my ski boots and followed him out of the door. 'Wow' he shouted back at me. 'Wow, wow, wow.'

We skied for seven hours, and the glory dissipated as the hour of day became more sensible. We've pitched the tent next to our final (and furthest) depot of food, we'll get a few hours sleep and then repeat the process at midnight tonight, when we'll turn and retrace our tracks to the coast for the final time.

Tony is already asleep and I'm feeling pretty bleary-eyed (and utterly confused about what time/day it is now) so I'm going to sign off with a little bonus for y'all – if I've managed to get it working, you should be able to see an extra-large version of today's slice of Greenlandic sunrise (and possibly the largest image I've sent back via satphone) by clicking on the photo above…

— Filed under Greenland

3 June 2006

Out of the Frying Pan, into the Whiteout

Greenland 2006Tony and I woke at midnight last night, ready to test out our night skiing, to find that Greenland had other plans. A complete whiteout had descended and the falling snow was gently absorbing our tent into the icecap. We wanted to get a decent test of the difference night-skiing would make to surface and speed so we decided to hole up in the tent and see what 24 hours might do to conditions.

A few hours ago, the sky began to clear a little and our visibility once again extended beyond our tentpoles. We were greeted by a vista that was almost ethereal in its scope and quality. For as far as we could see, every ridge, every mark was gone; as there wasn't a breath of wind, the snow had fallen with incredible uniformity. It was as though we were looking out over glass. It seems counter-intuitive to say this, but this is something I have never encountered in the Arctic before. It had a haunting tranquility that left us both speechless. It almost seems a shame to tarnish the perfection that surrounds us with a set of ski tracks but we're hoping that the surface will have frozen a little by tonight and we can get the chance to see how fast we can go on this enormous ice rink.

(The ball of snow you can see in the picture is the belly of a snowman I started building yesterday. Thanks to the lack of a carrot, lumps of coal and a stripey scarf, it's not one of my finest creations…)

— Filed under Greenland

2 June 2006

The Heat is On

Greenland 2006I said yesterday that Tony and I are fairly impervious to cold. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for the heat, and today was a scorcher. We set off this morning in our usual warm (anything above -10°C) weather gear, but were soon stripping off to our thermals. As the sun rose higher, the heat reflecting from the ice made the sweat pour off us and our 330ml per hour of energy drink started to feel more and more inadequate. Carrying a 25-kilo rucksack didn't exactly help matters either.

However, the fun really started when the heat began to melt the snow and the surface we had been making decent progress on suddenly decided it would come along with us for the ride. Our skis felt like they doubled in weight as more and more snow stuck to the skins. There was no gliding now – it was more like trudging through a freshly ploughed field. After eight or so miles of frustration and various attempts to find a solution, we decided to put up the tent and wait for the cold of night when we hope we will have better conditions to cope with. We're having an early dinner and setting the alarm for midnight…

— Filed under Greenland

1 June 2006

Quirks

Greenland 2006When you're dragging a sledge, it leaves a nice, uniform tramline track for the person behind to follow. No such luck if you're carrying a rucksack. I found out today that Tony skis with his feet really close together, almost touching as his boots brush past each other with every stride. And he leaves a peculiar trail to follow – it looks more like someone's ridden a motorbike through the snow, and I named it the Haile Monorail. I ski with my feet wider apart (as this is a family site, I'll leave you to imagine the laddish exchange of insults that followed me pointing out exactly why I skied in this fashion). Tony blames it on playing the double-bass as a youth, and the resulting bow legs. He also maintains it's more efficient…

This morning's observation led me to reflect on other quirks we have. When skiing on a bearing with no landmarks, Tony is deadly accurate for 98 percent of the time, but throws in the occasional wild deviation for no apparent reason. I have a tendency to steer a little too far North (we've been heading NWish from the coast). I think this springs from too many expeditions where the ability to ski due north has come in handy.

Tony blows his nose an awful lot (so much so that he fears he's losing precious calories). When we stop, I down my drink in one go, and wolf up my energy bar as if someone's about to steal it; Tony is a little more civilised.

We both seem conveniently impervious to the cold, although when we do feel it, we seem to feel it at different times – yesterday Tony was skiing with gloves on when my (bare) hands felt toasty, yet now I'm curled up in my sleeping bag with my lucky hat on, whereas Tony is lying on top of his with his sleeves rolled up.

I'm always amazed how quickly the human mind and body can adapt to such a spartan, alien existence. Tony and I have each assumed different roles, often without even discussing them, and we take huge pride in everything we do, from pitching the tent correctly, to finding good quality 'melting' snow for the stove, to navigating safely through a whiteout.

Right now, I'm going to navigate my way through a beef stew. It's been a tough day (17 miles, 1,200 vertical feet of ascent, horrible sticky snow) and I'm ravenous.

— Filed under Greenland

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