Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/06/02
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]This is a long post with only minimal photographic relevance but I hope it will correct some misinformation recently posted. I did use a Leica camera to take many pictures in Norway, including many shots of the Fram and Geoa, which I will post shortly. So please forgive me for wasting bandwidth. During a uncomfortable portion of my obligatory military service stint I was stationed in Ft. Churchill, Canada. Winter temperatures ranged down to 50 below zero and your spit would freeze before it hit the ground. When it was really cold, it would explode with a loud cracking sound before it hit. During the long winter night, our main entertainments were shooing polar bears away from the garbage dump and reading the books in the base library. They had a magnificent collection of books on Artic exploration. All we needed to do to experience the rigors of winter in the north country was to walk from the mess hall to the barracks. Baby, it was cold outside. Fortunately we had mechanized Snow Tracs to get around but some of the locals still used dog sleds. About an hour of sledding in sub zero weather was all I could handle. How the explorers could do it for 12 hours a day is more than I can imagine. The only upside of my experience was that I learned to cross country ski, a sport which I have now practiced for over 40 years. Why Scott didn't ski to the pole is beyond me. Now about the use of motorized sledges on Scott's Tera Nova expedition, Michael Barne, a veteran of the DISCOVERY EXPEDITION, had designed a new sledge. Although these sledges failed on their initial tryout in Norway, Scott took them with him to the Antartic, hoping to use them to ferry large amounts of supplies to depots. He planned to use ponies to dash for the pole, man hauling the sleds for only the final lap. The first two motor sledges were unloaded and immediately put to work hauling stores to the new camp. As the third, and largest, sledge was unloaded and hauled by twenty men towards the shore, it broke through the ice and sank in sixty fathoms of seawater. On the initial days of transfering supplies to depots nearer to the pole, one machine gave out just beyond Safety Camp while the other had to be abandoned a mile beyond Corner Camp. Scott's reliance on ponies was also misguided. The ponies would prove an equally weak link. It is true that Shackleton took nineteen ponies with him on his NIMROD EXPEDITION, but only four survived to set out on the journey towards the Pole. Of these, one had to be shot at the second depot; another gave up at the third; and by the time they reached the foot of the Beardmore Glacier only one was left. That one fell into a crevace. Had the weather not been unusually mild, Shackleton would had suffered as badly as Scott. He made the right decision to return 100 miles short of the Pole. Amundsen, a very experienced Arctic explorer despite his character flaws, had lived with the Esquimos and was well acquainted with the rigors of overland Artic travel. His use of dogs and skis was exactly right. The final dash to the Pole was largely without incident. One of the reasons that he was reviled in the English press is that HE ATE HIS DOGS as the load lightened. Or rather he fed them to the remaining dogs. Unlike Indonesians, a proper Englishman would as soon eat a dog as a Hindu would eat a cow. I can testify that letters protesting Amundsen's butchery still come into the London Times on the anniversary of Scott's death. My wife is Norwegian and comes from a sailing and shipyard family - so every time we visit her home country we get a full rundown on the lives and loves of the various explorers. Seems they were all a pretty raunchy bunch, although gifted in many ways. As far as the Norwegians are concerned, Nansen is at the top of the heap. But not for his exploration. He was Norwegian cross country skiing champion for eight years in a row and as an 18 year old set a speed skating record for the mile. In Norway, ski champions are Tiger Woods, Babe Ruth, Wayne Gretsky and Michael Jordan rolled into one. Nansen trained as a neuro physiologist and published frequently in medical journals. He was the first to cross Greenland on skis. He was a staunch patriot and was instrumental in freeing Norway from Swedish domination. Nansen was Norway's first ambassador to London. Finally he won the Nobel Prize for his work with Russian refugees after WW1. Who cares if he bonked Kathleen Scott, even through, at the time, he was married and had several children. Certainly not the Norwegians. Unfortunately he never reached either pole. Amundsen is grudgingly given second place in Norway's pantheon of polar explorers although, objectively speaking, his exploration record is significantly greater than Nansen's. He was the first to complete the Northern Passage, drifting and sailing from the North Sea to the Bering Strait in a boat not much larger than my own Willard motorsailer. The boat, the Geoa is on display outside the Fram Museum. Inside the museum is, of course the Fram. The boat that Nansen had constructed to sail to the North Pole and Amundsen borrowed for his South Pole exploration. Amundsen's expedtion to the South Pole was masterfully planned and executed. More important, he succeeded while the much more elaborate Scott venture failed. Norwegians tend to ignore the fact that he defrauded his backers, violated his promise to Nansen, and had a very abrasive personality that annoyed most of those who befriended him. In 1928 he died with his mucklucks on attempting to rescue the ill fated Nobile "Italia" airship expedition to the North Pole. A fitting passing. Shackleton seems to occupy a unique place in the annals of polar exploration. At least according to the Norwegian scholars I met. He is regarded as a man of unsurpassed courage, great leadership ability but a lousy explorer. He was blessed with amazing luck where it really counted. As a sailor, I am most impressed with his 800 mile voyage though the Southern Ocean in a boat that I would find unsuitable for an afternoon trip in the Irish Sea. On the other hand, many would question the poor planning that led to the loss of the Endurance and made such a sea voyage necessary. Incidentally, Shackleton is not to be credited with the amazing photos of the Endurance expedition. He wanted to abandon the heavy glass plates and movie film. All credit must be given to Australian photographer Frank Hurley who risked his life rescuing the films from the sinking hull of the Endurance. He later convinced Shackleton that the photos would be the only record of the failed voyage. A few years ago, my birthday gift from my kids was a coffee table book "South with the Endurance", a beautifully printed collection of Frank Hurley's photographs of the voyage. If you don't have it, you should get it. Scott is now regarded, at least in Norway, as the flip side of Amundsen and Shackleton. A poor planner, an inept explorer, an incompetent leader, and unlucky to boot. He is regarded as a necessary contrast to the better qualities of the other guys. But the Brits still revere him. Regards, Larry Z