Tag Archive | "South Pole"

Historic Weber South Pole Expedition – Begins Nov. 16

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November 15, 2011 (Punta Arenas, Chile) – On November 16, 2011 a team of six adventurers will fly to the continent of Antarctica. The team consists of Canadian, Richard Weber, internationally renowned North Pole adventurer; Britain, Chris De Lapeunte; Americans Kathy Braegger and Ruth Storm; New Zealander Michael Archer and South African Howard Fairbank. The entire team will start skiing from the Filchner Ice Shelf at a location called the “Messner Start”, 900 km from the South Pole. The team will pull all their supplies in sleds. Howard Fairbank will ski off on his own, for a solo attempt. The journey to the South Pole should take about 35 days.

At the South Pole, they will receive a re-supply; the skiers will change boots, skis and sleds. Ruth Storm will fly back. Howard will re-join the team. Then the team will kite-ski 1,100 km back to the edge of the Antarctic continent at Hercules Inlet. The South Pole is at an altitude of almost 10,000 feet. Cold air flows from the Pole down toward sea level. Using this wind, the team should reach Hercules inlet in about 15 days. The team is scheduled to fly out of Antarctica on January 12, 2012.

Despite numerous South Pole expeditions these days, a round trip to the South Pole has only be completed twice in history. Once by Amundsen in 1911, and another team in 2004, but never on this route. The expedition blog will be posted here at skitrax.com – and on WeberArctic.com… check back regularly for updates.

Richard Weber is a world leader in polar expeditions. He has trekked to the North Pole more than anyone in history. In 1995, he completed the only expedition to reach the North Pole and return with no outside assistance. He is in the Guinness Book or records for the fastest North and South Pole expeditions.

Vegard Ulvang Journies to the South Pole

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November 02, 2011 – Triple Olympic gold medalist, Norway’s Vegard Ulvang, along with Jan-Gunnar Winther, Stein P. Aasheim and Harald Dag Jølle have finally sought out on the journey to the South Pole and skied the few first kilometers of their trek.

Delay
Due to have snowfall on the Union Glacier the expedition got delayed. The expedition had to stay at Punta Arenas, Chile longer than expected and got little bit inpatient. “Everything remains uncertain, but now they are talking about Monday as the next possible opportunity. Our patience is starting to wear very thin, even though we were fully cognizant of the risk that it might turn out like this,” they write on the website. Finally the expedition left Punta Arenas on October 28 and at 15:45 landed at Union Glacier. “The weather here is fantastic: –28°C and almost no wind at all,” the first words are on the expedition diary. “We are all thoroughly pleased to have snow under our feet and are keeping our fingers crossed for a speedy onward journey to the Bay of Whales.”

Bay of Whales
Two days later, on Sunday October 30 the expedition got the green light for the final move to Antarctica, to the Bay of Whales. Travel time – 7-8 hours.

Wikipedia depicts the Bay of Whales as a natural ice harbor, or iceport, indenting the front of Ross Ice Shelf just north of Roosevelt Island. It is the southernmost point of open ocean not only of the Ross Sea, but worldwide. The Ross Sea does extend much further south, but that area is covered by the Ross Ice Shelf.

“At long last we have arrived at the Bay of Whales. We flew for six hours with one stop to refuel, covering a distance roughly the length of Norway,” the expedition diary says. Vegard Ulvang, Jan-Gunnar Winther, Stein P. Aasheim and Harald Dag Jølle have made it to Antarctica and 1311 km skiing trip lied ahead of them.

Finally on the road
The quartet finally set out for the journey today, on November 1 in the morning. “We set out at 9 a.m. with the sun in the back and the wind in our faces. Finally, we’ve moved towards our target. Our routine is an hour’s walk. Short pause. And then the same thing over and over again,” the expedition diary says.

First day in Antarctica is over. The expedition made in five sessions 20 km. “A short day, but it is important to go in on such a trip. The body will get used to the load. Step by step, literally. So far, no pain anywhere,” the expedition says.

Follow the expedition daily!
You have the unique opportunity to follow the quest to the South Pole every day. Go HERE and then click on “Expedition Diary”. The updates are there every day in Norwegian and English! You can also follow the adventure on facebook HERE.