|
|
Many expeditions choose the Russian route
although it’s longer than the Canada route,because it’s smoother and has a positive drift.
In Canada, the ice is pressed towards the land,
in Russia it floats away from the land. That
means ice rubble in Canada, and open leads in
Russia.
If you choose to go from Russia, be prepared for
more Polar bears and more open water, at least
initially. If you choose the “classic route” –
Canada – you can expect hard going and counter
drift. Although the Russian route has been
considered “easier” by tradition, serious open
water have affected the end results seriously in
the recent years.
The classic route (Canada)
You will leave Resolute Bay in the early hours. A
“go” call from the pilots will wake you up around
4 AM and you’ll have your last bacon and egg
breakfast in the warmth of the hotel. It will be
dark and cold outside, and you won’t feel much
like talking.
A few hours later the small plane stops over in
Eureka, the last human settlement up north. It’s
a research station and not much else. A barren,
frozen tundra by an ocean inlet, a few icebergs
frozen stuck in the ice flow.
Half an hour or so later you are back up in the
air, watching America’s Northernmost mountains
disappear below you. You feel an increasing
terror. There is nothing but hostile land mile
after mile, not meant for humans at all, but
where you are going it’s even worse. And soon you
spot it. The ocean. A jagged maze of open leads
and pans of ice forming a intricate pattern like
bindings out of some chemistry class. It looks,
and is, very inhospitable. Your only neighbor in
this top frozen ocean will be the blood red, cold
sun and the occasional man eating polar bear.
The plane lands just off the coast, in other
climate conditions this would probably be a
beach. And before you even have the chance to
finish the “hey-wait-a-minute” sentence the
pilots are gone. And the warm, cozy plane along
with them.
Camp routine
Don’t camp up. Hook on to you sled and go
immediately. After around 2-3 km of a weak
incline, you reach the shoreline. The instep is a
sharp wall and your first obstacle. This is the
place to make the first camp. There is often an
open lead just between the shore and the ocean
and it freezes over night. Make your camp in the
last light of the declining sun.
Now commence the challenge of your unsupported
trek. If you allow your sleeping bag and clothes
into the tent when you cook, they will ice up
within weeks. A sleeping bag can easily add on 20
kgs, 40 lbs of ice. So you don’t. Put up your
tent. Take the shovel, cover the tent on all
sides with snow and fill the vestibule with some
fresh snow for water, then strip out of your
outer shell clothing. It will be covered with ice
on the inside (your frozen sweat). Brush it off
with a hard brush. Throw in sleeping pads, food
bag, kitchen stuff and other gear in the tent but
leave the sleeping bags and gun outside. Arrange
the sleeping pads over each other. Cover the
floor with three diagonal Ridge Rests, and then
add another two fitting them crosswise on top.
One lightweight foam mattress is very handy for
all kinds of things, not just to sleep on.
In this cold, everything has to be organized. The
stove, fuel, warming cup - all in one place. The
lighter should be pre-warmed in the palm of your
hand inside the glove as you work outside (always
carry the lighters in your inner pockets on
travel). Needless to say, you must work fast.
Once you put on the stove, you are wearing only
your underwear and sit on the bare ridge rest.
Don’t light up the stove until just ready to
cook, you can’t afford to waste gas. At
Antarctica you cook in the vestibule, in the
Arctic you cook inside the tent, and without heat
exchangers due to the severe cold. Make sure to
ventilate well at night.
Place the stove on top of a plywood board. In
extreme cold, pour a teaspoon of gas in a
metallic cup. Set on fire. A tall flame will
brush the inside wall of the tent. Have a lid at
hand to protect the tent roof from the fire. Heat
the stripped stove nozzle in the flame. As the
flame dies out, turn on the stove and light up.
This procedure must be practiced before hand! As
soon as the stove is on, put on the first pot
with snow. Always have a small amount of water in
the bottom before filling up with snow (save up
from today’s drinking water). It will melt the
snow easier and faster. Cover with the lid.
Now is your only time in warm temperatures. This
is the time to make repairs, work technology and
prepare for tomorrow. Develop an organized,
efficient schedule. Never leave water to boil or
the fire on without cooking or melting snow.
You’ll run out of fuel if you do. Place all water
bottles, thermoses and food in an exact order by
the kitchen so you can work fast with each boil.
Organize the procedure so you can eat in the
warmth of the fire melting tomorrow’s water. In
extreme cold, it’s a good idea to work two stoves
at once; it will heat the tent better, and cut
your cooking time by half. If you do work two
stoves though, you must be even faster with
regards to camp routine. You should work so fast
that you even break a sweat.
Warm the technology and batteries hanging them in
the ziplock bags on the dryline. Remove socks,
hats, gloves and such and hang on dryline so the
stuff can dry while you cook. It’s a good idea to
attach several drylines in the roof of the tent,
diagonal to the straight one. Hold stuff in place
with clothes- or oversized safety pins to prevent
from falling down on the burner flame below. Take
the clothes down again before sleep and keep them
inside the sleeping bag. Leave your boots in the
vestibule, they will keep better if never thawed.
If you are prone to frostbite however, bring them
in. Do your tech work, but leave calls and
reading of e-mails until later (the sleeping
bag).
When you’ve finished your meal and all bottles
are filled up, turn off the stove. Don’t bring in
the sleeping bag until the temperature in the
tent is below zero! You need to get rid of all
the moisture and heat. This is a cold and
dreadful wait, but hey it’s what you came for,
stupid!..:)
Around ten minutes later, jump out and bring in
the sleeping bag. The sleeping bag should be an
elaborate system of a vapor barrier, sleeping
bag, another vapor barrier, a fleece cover and an
outer layer. After a few weeks of travel, it will
be frozen solid and not very easy to squeeze
into. Throw in a hot water bottle to make your
entrance at least a little more pleasant. Soon
enough your body will start to warm the bag (if
you strip entirely) and you enter the best time
of the day. Warm and still at last! Read your
mails and make a few replies. Call mum. For a
while you’ll listen for polar bear steps, but
soon enough your poor and battered being will be
sound at sleep. Have a good first polar night!
On travel
The terror continues first thing in the morning.
Brush of the snow from the inside walls with a
hard brush and turn the sleeping pad over to
collect all snow below it. Get out of the
sleeping bag and throw it out. Don’t forget to
empty out the tech, clothes, bear spray and water
bottles first. Always buy an extra long sleeping
bag as it will hold lots of stuff in addition to
you.
Put on the stove for the morning melt. The stove
shouldn’t burn more than 10-20 minutes in the
morning. Dress quickly and prepare for today’s
travel. Always carry navigation gear, snacks and
other stuff in assigned pockets so you don’t have
to search for it with cold hands on travel.
Expect not to be able to stand still for more
than a few minutes from now on, at least in the
early cold temperatures. You must work extremely
fast or frostbite will crawl up on you in
minutes.
Carry the water bottle on you, or it will freeze.
Carry more water in thermoses on the sled.
Calibrate your compass and check the night’s
drift. Get out of the tent, pack up the sled and
climb a pinnacle to scout a route if you didn’t
the evening before (it’s a good thing to scout
next day’s route before camp in case of bad
weather in the morning). If you are near sighted,
your lenses will freeze and shatter to pieces in
your eyes. Use prescription sunglasses.
Look for flat areas but don’t deviate too much
from the direction. Don’t force ice rubble if not
necessary, but stay on target. Find ways around
obstacles, not on top of them. Clever navigation
will save your strength and gear. Due to the
easterly drift, always go left when in doubt.
Watch out at high pinnacles, the sled will come
rushing down behind you. Step aside and let it
go, your feet planted firm in the snow to brake
the rush. Avoid blue rubble at all costs. At high
or wide ridges, remove your skis and poles and
throw them over to the other side. Climb up
pushing your sled behind. Let it go on the other
side, holding on to it to brake the fall. Climb
back down behind it, put your skis back on. Learn
to do this without bending over, securing the
bindings with the tip of the ski pole. Attach
your sled back to the harness, have a piece of
chocolate and leave for the next ridge.
Most often, there will be ridge-pan-ridge areas.
Don’t spend too much time contemplating each
ridge. Just find the flattest section and take it
on immediately. Sometimes there are vast areas of
blue rubble. Blue rubble is simply entire pans
broken up into an inferno of overturned ice
chunks. The blue is the water side of the pan.
It’s sharp and slippery. If you can’t find a
reasonable way around it however, you’ll have to
get into it. The area might last a few hours or
even a few days – but it will always end.
When looking for a campsite, search for areas of
old rubble – smooth and grayish white ice
sastrugi. Those areas are the thickest parts of
the ice and the safest for lay up. If the pan
begins to break up, it will least likely break
through this old, thick ice (although it’s not a
guarantee). Camp on top of one of those small
hills if possible. Always camp away from a lead
and preferably on the northern shore of it (going
from Canada). If it’s difficult to run the tent
pegs into the ice (most often though there is
enough snow) tie your sled up to the pulk. Don’t
melt blue ice for water, it’s salty. Collect snow
from old ice. If you drink brackish water often
enough, you’ll soon end up so thirsty you’ll lick
the frost from the tent walls at night!
Get out every single day. Plan for a rest day
only once in ten days at the most. A team not
moving is a first sure sign of trouble and
probable failure. There will be fog. Go out in
it. There will be wind. Get out there. There will
be fog, wind and repairs to your gear badly
needed. No excuses. Stay inside the tent ONLY in
a bad storm. If you are lucky, the storm will hit
you on your rest day. That’s why it’s good to
push even beyond rest days, that way you won’t
suffer too much delay when a storm hits. You
shouldn’t spend more than 3-5 days in the tent
throughout the entire expedition.
In the beginning of the trip, the sun will set
and you’ll be enveloped in Arctic nights. Soon
enough the sun will just sit on the horizon for a
while; a striking cold, deep red lantern. Within
weeks however, it will circle endlessly above,
and you will enjoy clear, but bitterly cold
weather. Already four weeks into the trek the ice
will begin to melt considerably and fog will rise
from the ocean embedding you in clouds. “Water
clouds” vertical smoky black pillars in the sky
will mirror huge open water leads. Use them for
navigation to stay away from open water areas.
The temperatures will climb and though the travel
is easier, with a smoother surface and more
tolerable cold, this is the time to start
swimming open leads and skiing thin ice. Try the
ice by poking it with the ski pole. Three strong
hits are fine, two is questionable, and one is
too weak for travel. When crossing thin ice, it
is essential to move fast. Check “navigation” and
“dangers” for instructions on how to swim and
paddle leads. Around mid April, you can drop the
sleeping bag fleece cover, the synthetic down
jacket and other extreme cold weather gear. This
is the time to drop the smaller of the two sleds.
As you approach the 87.00 degree the drift will
increase, sometimes even earlier at 86.00. Don’t
try to make up for it too much, just keep to
target. Don’t panic even if closing in on the
dangerous 60.00 longitude. The drift changes back
and forth. Trying to make up for it will only
make you loose time. Expect more open water leads
and ice movement in general.
Towards the 88.00 degree, you’ll travel in an
almost endless fog, day after day. It will be so
warm that your tent will be dripping inside. You
can now easily get rid of the vapor barrier of
the sleeping bag and cut down the skins for
faster travel (20 cm front and 20 cm back, try a
piece at a time). The good news also is that fuel
lasts much longer and you’ll be able to work in
camp without the heat of the stove. Everything
will revive; the technology, the batteries, gear
and all kinds of stuff. Everything will soften up
and life becomes more pleasant in general.
Unfortunately, the fog obscures the sun so you
still can’t expect the nice, sunny camps of
Antarctica.
The terror of the last degree is vast areas of
open water, impossibly soft ice, treacherous
conditions and diminishing resources – namely
fuel. In addition, the last date for flight out
looms. This is where your success or failure will
be determined by your earlier decision. If you
spent too many days in camp, or if you came out
too late on the ice, you will simply run out of
time and food. Your fuel will come to an end if
you weren’t fast enough in camp and you might
have to opt for a re-supply, throwing over all
that work you have put into going unsupported.
The plane will refuse to pick you up after a
certain date, and you’ll have to stop only weeks
short of your dream. There are too many
unfinished grand projects out there in the world
– don’t become one of them. The difference lies
interestingly not in the end battle, but in the
discipline of each and every day.
But even if you did what you had to do, the end
will be a fight against time. There is not much
left to do but run for your life. You will ski
around the clock, up to twenty hour pushes. This
is the end battle – the war against the drift.
Holding your breath, you’ll attack the ridges,
the leads and the ice in sheer desperation. For
every two steps that you force forward, the ice
pushes you back one.
You camp and wake up far behind where you lay
your hat yesterday. It will be enough not to give
you any rest. If a huge lead emerges, or a
serious area of rubble, you’ll have to spend so
much time in it that you’ll make no progress at
all – whilst your last supplies run out. This is
the time to just go and not think.
Yet this is also the time to take great care. You
are so tired that you see false visions, you hear
voices and your legs tremble with each move. You
are actually losing it in the world’s most
dangerous place. You can’t judge the ice as you
used to – the shores look firm but are soft as
whipped cream. The ice looks solid but breaks at
your first poke. The entire ground you ski is
melting away, leaving treacherous traps of thin
ice and loose snow everywhere. This is the North
Pole in the end of May.
A few days away from the pole, start to look for
landing strips. Make mental notes of good, flat
pans. That will make your pick up much easier.
The plane can start to fly in as you near the
pole, and you’ll be able to meet it in a good
spot.
Soon enough though, you’ll pick that GPS out from
your pocket and watch the digits in awe:
98.97….you’ll take a few more steps
forward…….98.98….keep going….98.99…your hand
tremble….99.00.00!
You made it, mate. Welcome to the top of the
world! |
|