Crossings
Gareth Andrews and Richard Stephenson
Last week’s soft, deep snow continued as Andrews and Stephenson moved from the Sallee Snowfield to the Median Snowfield. However, over the last two days, the surface has firmed up into mini-sastrugi as they approach the Antarctic Plateau.
Andrews and Stephenson have been pulling two sleds each so far, to help spread the load over a greater area over soft snow. Yesterday, they decided to nest these together into one sled each. This should help them better maneuver through the hard sastrugi obstacle course of the Antarctic Plateau.
Preet Chandi
Chandi has made steady progress and is a little under halfway through her journey, having covered 759km of her total 1,770km.
Like Stephenson and Andrews, she has slogged through more soft snow than she’d like.
Six-person Australian team
Hercules Inlet to the South Pole
Mikko Vermas and Tero Teelahti moved to half-skins for the first time on December 16. Initially, they were whizzing along, with an immediate uptick in their skiing speed. But soon “Antarctica showed again who rules and who whines,” as they put it. There was more sticky snow, some friction problems, and a detached ski skin.
Just under halfway through, the duo will soon approach Thiels Corner.
Mateusz Waligora has picked up his pace and put in a couple of nearly 30km days to pass 85°. Waligora’s burst meant he caught up with Ben Weber again, who had passed him during our last update. In fact, it was rather a busy day at Thiels Corner on December 22, with Weber, Waligora, and the Australian team all present.
A Twin Otter plane also stopped by, and Weber reports that the pilot told him that this year’s sastrugi are the worst in eight years. Not ideal for such a busy year!
But perhaps conditions are improving for some expeditions. Norwegian solo skier Hedvig Hjertaker reported a really strong last two days, with perfect weather and 33km yesterday. However, she also mentions that she is nursing “a couple of frostbites”.
Norwegian duo AK Gluck-Teigland and Kjartan Bergsvag have also just passed Thiels Corner, overtaking the Australian team today when they passed 85°.
Speed record hopefuls
On December 19, Wendy Searle aborted her South Pole speed record attempt. Searle had made a decent start, though she was behind the pace needed to break the record from the off.
In an emotional message, Searle announced that she would abort after 340km with “the record slipping away”. She is awaiting pickup by ALE. Her expedition manager, Lou Rudd, wrote that “multiple factors have conspired against Wendy [Searle], most significantly the worst conditions in a decade and a chest infection that won’t clear despite antibiotics”.
Caroline Cote is still going and is flying along, considering the conditions. She is approaching 84° and sounds very positive, averaging a touch over 30km per day. For her, Johanna Davidsson’s 2016 time remains within reach.
Guided groups from the Messner Start
The Ousland Explorers team is a bit further ahead and reports perfect snow conditions as they passed 86°.