Montreal Gazette

British explorer aims to cross Antarctica in winter

Sir Ranulph Fiennes calls daring expedition one of the last remaining polar challenges

- CHRISTOPHE­R TORCHIA

JOHANNESBU­RG — It’s a sixmonth expedition in almost constant darkness, in the coldest place on the planet, with no chance of rescue if things go wrong. British explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes calls it one of the last remaining polar challenges: crossing Antarctica during its winter.

Fiennes, 68, and his fivemember team left Cape Town on Monday aboard a South African polar vessel for what they have dubbed “The Coldest Journey.”

After reaching the southernmo­st continent, the expedition will begin its journey via the South Pole on March 21, traversing nearly 4,000 kilometres in a place, beautiful and forbidding, where temperatur­es often dip as low as minus-70 C.

The trip is particular­ly hazardous because no aircraft can travel inland in the winter due to the darkness and risk that fuel will freeze, meaning there is virtually no chance of a search and rescue operation if disaster strikes.

Even Fiennes, who has spent a lifetime embracing peril, is circumspec­t.

“I usually look forward to expedition­s, but there is such a big degree of uncertaint­y with this one that looking forward to it is probably not the exact right word,” Fiennes said, according to the website of SABC, South Africa’s state broadcaste­r.

“Some people will say it is irresponsi­ble to go unless you know everything, in which case the Americans would never have got to the moon. If humans are going for something new, then unfortunat­ely there are bound to be some grey areas,” Fiennes said.

According to Fiennes’s website, British authoritie­s had not previously granted permits for winter expedition­s in Antarctica because they were seen as too dangerous. Satellite and other technology will allow the team to communicat­e with the outside world and provide updates on its progress.

Fiennes and his team will have high-tech gear, including battery-operated heating mechanisms in their clothing and special breathing apparatus. They will use modified,

“Once they set off and the winter sets in, they are on their own.” ANTON BOWRING

20-ton tractors to transport sledges with mounted living quarters and fuel that is designed not to freeze in the extreme temperatur­es. They will also have radars that can detect crevasses.

Anton Bowring, the expedition co-leader who is travelling on the polar ship but not joining Fiennes on the ice, said the modificati­ons to clothing and equipment for the polar trip made it comparable with preparatio­ns for a flight into space.

“Psychologi­cally, the conditions are similar,” he told South Africa’s Sunday Times. “Once they set off and the winter sets in, they are on their own. You can’t get an evacuation if someone gets appendicit­is or frost bite. There is nothing you can do about it.”

Spencer Smirl, a Canadian mechanic who will travel all the way with Fiennes, surfed the waves and got a sunburn during his break in Cape Town. In a blog posting Sunday, he described his excitement at facing the “deep freeze” in the weeks ahead.

“As much as I can anticipate I will be very seasick, I can’t wait to see the extreme violence the southern ocean can provide,” he wrote. “It will be a very new experience for me. One that I don’t think I will ever forget.”

Expedition organizers plan to raise $10 million for a charity that seeks to prevent blindness. Team members also hope to conduct research aimed at understand­ing the effect of climate change on the poles. Their project has taken years to plan.

If all goes well and they complete their journey as scheduled around Sept. 21, they will still have to camp out and wait until January 2014 to head back to Britain. Only then, when temperatur­es are comparativ­ely warmer, will their polar vessel be able to reach them.

Fiennes has compiled a long list of achievemen­ts over the decades, many involving the Antarctic and Arctic regions. He became the oldest Briton to summit Mount Everest in 2009. He is missing parts of his fingers on his left hand because of frostbite he suffered on a North Pole expedition more than a decade ago.

According to the “Coldest Journey” website, expedition patron Prince Charles wished Fiennes and his team “God speed and every possible good fortune in this wonderful, dotty adventure.”

 ?? ALEXANDER JOE/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Explorers Sir Ranulph Fiennes, left, and Anton Bowring in Cape Town, South Africa, on Monday. Fiennes is leading a team of explorers hoping to cross Antarctica in winter.
ALEXANDER JOE/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES Explorers Sir Ranulph Fiennes, left, and Anton Bowring in Cape Town, South Africa, on Monday. Fiennes is leading a team of explorers hoping to cross Antarctica in winter.

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