Pic 1: How I looked 1st night in the tent. (I include pictures of myself along the way so you can see the moods and changes and what 35 days on my own on the ice do to one....!) |
Pic 6: The lone crevasse, that I came across earlier on. It was beautiful, so wonderfully shaped, and untouched, it looked so fresh and almost virginal, waiting for it's first human being! Pic 7, a series of 5 pics: Then there was the broken ski pole crisis! First photo below is the day cut short, inside the tent, all 'the pieces' on my kitchen table, with second photo me sitting forlorn, facing the other way, looking for inspiration (with my tongue!) for repair solutions. The third and fourth pics below shows the tent pole solution being implemented. The fifth pic shows the finished product with the hose clamp holding it all together! |
Pic 8: The REAL nunataks, Thiel mountain range just the peaks standing out through the ice cap. These are the mountain peaks I skied 7 hours to 'touch'! |
Pic 9: More views of the Thiel nunataks |
Pic 10: My favourite peak in the group.... Sadly I never got to touch 'her'! 'The Plan', was to camp right next to her for the night....Haha! |
Pic 11: The final straw: This is the point where after two hours of skiing without my sled and backpack, I decided they were too far away, and my dream would end HERE! It helped make it a bit of a ceremony of it! This photo begs the comment: "Geee, after 7 hours you were still THAT far away, and didn't realise that you were on mission impossible seven hours before???" Ok, it was an embarrassing fau paux, but this photo is very deceiving, because I used a special lens to get the immediate foreground words in and then also the 'very near' background mountains as well! |
Pic 12: The scholarly look, Blog writing time....! I need my glasses on to think how to write to you guys! Amazingly it was only up to about the halfway mark that I needed these, reading only.glasses to type the blog postings on my small PDA. As the wonderful environment and healthy living connnected holistically into me, my eyesight inproved...... I used to love the post dinner blog writing time, thinking of all you wonderful people out there and our special remote communication bond.... |
Pic 13: A very special sky one morning. This was actually how it looked, with this amazing almost turquoise blue sky layer just on the horizon, and then cloud above... |
Pic 14: Same sky above just a different perspective.... |
Pic 15: Antarctic Snow Dogs: A halo phenomena seen in very cold polar regions, the Arctic produced some amazing ones. Essentially a full circle halo around the sun. Their scientific term is Parhelies, and the halos are an optical phenomenon due to the reflection or refraction of solar light on ice crystals suspended in the atmosphere.
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Pic 17: I'll never forget the fantastic skies and cloud formations. The deep blue sky with the amazing cloud shapes and then the endless ice below.... It was REAL special some days! |
Pic 18: Another special sky contrasting with Nature's rough, almost harsh, 'plaster work' on the ice! |
Pic 19: A close up of a sastruggi, just before we came to head on blows! Seeing this photo takes me right back to those few very difficult sastruggi days! |
Pic 20: Freedom! All alone in the center if the ice wilderness! It could almost be seen as a sea with the sun reflecting off the light sastruggi. (I took this photo when I was skiing back from my nunatak excursion.)
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Pic 22: Another picture of the vastness, that Antarctica deep blue sky is very special: The views would have been the same for 360 degrees that day! I'm not sure these photos have any value to the viewer who hasn't experienced this vastness...? I warned that photos can't capture the vastness, but I hope there is a little appreciation of what I experience when I see these photos....
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Pic 24: This was the angle of the sun above the horizon all day and every day when it was visible! It just moves around world at this height once every 24 hours! (Well, it's actually us that moves, but we all know that!) |
Pic 25: A view from one of my 15 minute rests. Seated flatout on the ice, feet up and chasing down calories. This was a nice 'warm' day, but even in this weather at the end of the rest I'd be very cold, ready to start skiing so I could warm up again... Cold, windy days were close to meeting the definition of 'Miserable'!
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Pic 28: Another view of the 'false sunset'.... Very special. |
Pic 29: Christmas Day: On my own in the middle of Antarctica complete with my Father Christmas hat! Face damage on my chin from my face mask freezing onto my skin. |
Pic 30: A change of Nature's plastering art! Once up on the Polar Plateau, the surface changed, and patterns like this were common place, making it feel almost like I was ski-ing in an art workshop...
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Pic 32: Not the prettiest sight, but the end goal is insight! The Amundsen Scott, US Antarctic base, from far off. Gee, this was a very exciting, but confusing feeling: I was very close to my endpoint, but return to civilisation awaited! |
Pic 33: The 'tourist stuff': Me in tourist gear' at the symbolic South Pole marker, with Martin's (my good friend from Johannesburg) banadana, South African flag, that also went to the North Pole with me, and the permanenet South African flag in the background. The 12 original treaty signatory flags circle the symbolic marker in a simple yet strong statement of the unique point on the globe. |
Pic 34: Literally seconds after Ruth's arrival at the georgraphic South Pole: She hadn't even taken off her face mask, and I hadn't had a proper kiss yet, but my joy is clear! We have now completed 'The Double'... Meeting at both North and South Poles...I am proud of what she achieved! |
Pic 35 : Later that 'night': All smiles, together again, squeezed in our sleeping bags, sharing my little tent at the South Pole! Lots of sleep lay ahead....It's hard to describe the level of fatigue that just made me want to sleep and sleep! |
Pic 36: Inside the ALE tent at the South Pole. Richard (right), Ruth (left) and Michael (back to us) sitting around the table enjoying a self prepared meal. There was a good buzz here as expeditions arrived and stories were shared. I spent 4 days here waiting for the weather and the plane back to Union Glacier. We all slept in our own tents outside in the coldness of the South Pole. I met some great people and created many memories will stay with me forever. |
Pic 37: The Basler (ex DC-3) aircraft parked at the South Pole, just outside the ALE tent, ready to load up and take us back to Union Glacier. A special day: The Pole works on New Zealand time, so we had welcomed in the New Year a few hours before, and then 2 hours into the 4 hour flight back to Union Glacier we celebrated it again with a round of complimentary Baileys liquors, as the clock chimed on midnight Punta Areneas time..... ! Maybe this next year will have something even more special after welcoming it in twice! (You can see that this aircraft has ski's for landing, and works both Arctic and Antarctic each year.)
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That's it!
Hope you enjoyed it all as much as I did having you along... Thanks again, and see you NEXT TIME...!
PS: Have you looked at the photos leading up to the satrt of the expedition? There are in the post earlier to ths one...Check them out, if you haven't already! (Go back to the Blog and look at 'Earlier Post'. )
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