Shackleton Antarctic bid makes landfall
AUSTRALIA: An exhausted British-Australian expedition
recreating Ernest Shackleton’s 1916 crossing of the Southern Ocean in a
small boat made landfall Monday after a perilous 12-day journey.
Led by renowned adventurer Tim Jarvis, the team of six reached
Peggotty Bluff on rugged South Georgia, where they landed their vessel
in the same place Shackleton and his men beached the James Caird nearly
100 years ago.
The next leg will see three of the team tackle a two-day climb to 900
metres (2,950 feet) over the mountainous, crevassed interior of South
Georgia.
That will take them to the old whaling station at Stromness on the
other side of the island, where Shackleton and his men, with little more
than the clothes on their backs, raised the alarm about the sinking of
their ship, the Endurance. Jarvis said the boat trip, using only the
equipment, navigational instruments and food available to Shackleton,
was extremely tough, describing it as “truly about endurance -- mental
as much as physical”.
“There was just no way to keep dry. The waterproofing with wax didn’t
work,” he said.
“Below deck, the boat was constantly damp and being on watch meant
that you were directly exposed to the elements.
On a few occasions a big wave washed over the deck and down the hatch
soaking everything down below.”
Along with Norway’s Roald Amundsen, the first man to reach the South
Pole in 1911, Australian explorer Douglas Mawson and Briton Robert
Falcon Scott, Shackleton was among the great Antarctic explorers.
AFP |