From Bengt: Lots of snow, powder that would have been great in a slope, not so good for us. We still managed 31.6kms. We are happy about that!
Going to bed now, a lot of the same tomorrow, and another 11.5 hours are waiting in a bit.
From Bengt: Lots of snow, powder that would have been great in a slope, not so good for us. We still managed 31.6kms. We are happy about that!
Going to bed now, a lot of the same tomorrow, and another 11.5 hours are waiting in a bit.
From Bengt: Not much sleep tonight, we had to get up and use the weather. We were on schedule till the middle of the day, then we got hit by weather, we continued but with less progress, decided to cut one leg, and hide it for later. The windy weather is supposed to continue all night, we look forward to 8 hours of sleep 🙂
In all we did 24.6kms and we descended 100m.
From Bengt: Another 10 hours plus. This morning was quite windy, but it settled during the day. Since it snowed a bit in the night the sliding conditions weren’t exactly perfect 😉
We also came in to an area with a bit of loose snow in the end of the day, so we worked quite hard the last legs. In total we did 30.6 km. Look forward to descending now!
About 170km left to the magic point before the icefall. Ideally we should be there the night of 29th…
At least we’re going to do our best. Cross fingers for our weather.
From Bengt: Great day today, we started at 0600 and did 10 hours of effective walking that gave 31km. We are now more or less on the summit. Our next goal is the icefall!
In terms of weather we had it all today, sun, snow and whiteout. Luckily not much wind. Surface was perfect for our sleds 🙂
From Bengt: Not much to say about today, tent-bound…
Sleeping, reading books, eating and drinking coffee/tea. Weather should be better tomorrow!
From Bengt: This was a cold and windy day. We only did 6 hours. We were all packed in, goggles, facemasks and extra layers. The scenery is magic, blue sky and sun straight above us, but an inferno of snow on the ground. We had a warm and nice lunch inside the tent halfway. Came early into camp and had a good evening meeting in the 4 man Spitbergen tent. In total we have 3 tents. Two of them are made for 3 people and the big one is for 4 people. They are all tunnel tents made by Helsport, one of our co-op partners. All the poles are double-poled, so they can handle heavy wind.
From Bengt: Sunny and nice weather, cold last night…In total we did 30km, very happy about that. As always we started the day with outmeal porridge. Børge’s secret recipe. 180grams that we mix with hot water. During the day we eat chocolate, nuts, cheese, freeze-dried fruit, chips, noodles, salami and biscuits. In the night we have dinner in a lot of different tastes, made my Real Turmat. Every night we have a meeting in the big tent so everyone knows the plan for tomorrow. Our plan tomorrow is skiing for 9 hours. Divided into 8 legs with a 10 minute breaks in-between. The midday break is longer, we even put up a telt as shelter. All good here, cheers!
From Bengt: A cold and windy morning, but sunshine! We woke up in the shadow of the dome after a cold night. Wind is still from the east – 8-10 m/s, temp in the 20’s. On our way we passed the runway and camp Raven which is about 3km from the station. In the summer season Raven is manned by a team of two who maintains a training airstrip for the US Air Force. It used to be a place we stopped by to say hi, sometimes for a coffee. But now with a new crew and perhaps new regulations adventurers are not welcome.
So we silently passed by. Looked to the right and left to see if there were any planes coming in, and heded towards 127 degrees on the compass. Which is our heading to the eastern icefall. Today we did 25km, wind settled in the end, now we are enjoing a real dinner, before going to sleep.
From Bengt: Nice day, with changing wind. We could see the DYE station when we started, some 20 kilometres away. We had a brief moment with weather coming over us, then it was gone. The station kept growing as we got further, but it seemed like we never got to it, and then finally we were there. We had a real dinner before we went in to see this monster from the inside.
The building got left in the late 80’s, and it really looks that way on the inside. Paint is falling off the walls, and the interior is moved around, some places are in bits and pieces. It is really good to have reached this milestone. It took forever, with slow progress and 3 days of heavy storms. Now we look forward to the next milestone – the summit. Well, not really the summit of the cap, but for us the highest point of our journey.
From Nigel: Well the storm that was predicted arrived! It was a beauty too. Winds over 30 metres per second peaking with gusts over 38 m/s. The hard work we had put in digging down and building a wall paid dividends and we were well protected despite the elements. With only room for 2 tents it was a squash and with 4 of us squeezed in one tent like sardines there wasnt much room. Upside was it was a great chance to sleep and rest bodies as we have some big days ahead. Late afternoon the wind eased and we dug the camp and pulkas out. Quite a job. We set off early evening and the wind died completely. It was glorious. We were excited to see DYE 2 in the distance for the first time. Pitching camp in the late evening we were glad to be back on the move.
Antarctic Heritage Trust
7 Ron Guthrey Road, Christchurch 8053, New Zealand
Private Bag 4745, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand
Antarctic Heritage Trust
7 Ron Guthrey Road, Christchurch 8053, New Zealand
Private Bag 4745, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand
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© Copyright 2024, Antarctic Heritage Trust
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