Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Chasing Nansen's Ghost

Surprise vistor: A young polar bear eyes the unfamiliar sight of a tent on a remote Russian archipelago. When he came closer, Borge Ousland and Thomas Ulrich scared him off with pepper spray and gunshots in the air.
Two adventurers set out across the Arctic in the footsteps of Norway's pioneering polar explorer. Article by Peter Miller
Photographs by Børge Ousland & Thomas Ulrich
"I think I see land," he said to Børge Ousland, with whom he had spent the past six weeks chasing the memory of two famous explorers across the Arctic. Beginning at the North Pole, the pair had skied 600 miles to this spot off the northern coast of Franz Josef Land, the remote Siberian archipelago where Fridtjof Nansen and Hjalmar Johansen had sought refuge after their own attempt to reach the Pole in 1895.
Like many Norwegian boys, Ousland was raised on bedtime stories about Nansen's exploits. Years later these tales inspired him to make the first unsupported solo ski trek to the Pole, one of 14 visits as a professional adventurer and guide. Now he and Ulrich, a mountaineer and photographer, were following the same harrowing route Nansen and Johansen had taken 112 years before—something no one else had done.
TheTamshee says: If you are interested in polar expeditions, detailing the adventures of daring , some would say fool hardy charactors then click Continue »

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