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Below are excerpts from my expedition log. These
brief notes, written (or often scrawled) in
my notebook, describe a rather unusual daily
routine. As we huddled in the tent and the stove
hissed and murmured, trying to melt enough snow
to make our soup, I had time to make some observations.
The log was devoted to technical information:
distances, altitude, our situation, etc. All
those vital things essential to our survival.
Thierry also kept a Daynal--it was our nod
to intimacy, our secret gardens in our shared
adventure.
I hope you will find it interesting.
Bernard
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01.07.95
|
THE
COUNTDOWN
Here we go. The countdown has started. In four
months, we'll be off on a mad adventure in the
greatest desert of ice on Earth, the Antarctic!
My great dream is about to come
true. I'll be sharing it with my friend Jean
Castonguay. But it won't just be two explorers
alone in the Antarctic. It will take dozens
of people like you to support us in this great
polar adventure: sponsors, Daynalists, craftspeople,
scientists, friends... So I thought that I should
keep all of you, who give us extra energy and
encouragement, informed of our preparations.
I hope this bi-monthly newsletter will bring
a blizzard of information and take us all one
step closer to the axis of rotation of the Earth,
at the South Pole. (excerpt from The
Polar Gazette, No. 1)
|
01.08.95
|
OUF...
Welcome to issue No.
2 of the Polar Gazette. Can you feel the tension
mounting? The sun is sinking, the days are getting
shorter, the cold is getting nearer. There's still
lots of work to be done. Hundreds of telephone
calls, kilometres of faxes, agreements to be signed,
interviews, not to mention complicated air routes,
Chilean customs, insurance... whew! Our team is
working hard to get everything wrapped up for
our deadline of October 1. We are receiving letters
from international correspondents concerning our
scientific program, our satellite communications
or simply to find out what is driving us to go
to such a cold place. I sometimes wonder whether
it actually takes more energy to prepare for this
kind of expedition than it does to ski all the
way to the South Pole pulling a 145 kg sled. I'll
find out in a few weeks! |
01.09.95
|
A few weeks from departure time, I now have a
new companion in adventure, a partner ready
to take the risk and make it to the final goal.
When I'm getting ready for an expedition I
often have to confront my past and my difficult
memories of cold, my fears and my deepest motivations.
That's when I remember my swollen lips, my stiff
fingers, the pains in my feet and my burning
cheeks, the endless distances... I need energy
and I find it in the challenges facing me and
the desire to succeed. I need to share these
feelings with my expedition partner and make
him understand. Whom can I talk to about all
this? Who will want to gaze out at the same
horizon, at the same time? What will he expect
of me? Will I be up to it?
Confiding your dreams, your goals and your
life to someone else over a period of months
means all kinds of feelings that are difficult
to describe, impossible to identify. Just thinking
about it isn't enough, you have to hope and
believe. I am holding my decision in my hands
to really feel it; I put it in my pocket so
that it will always be with me. (Excerpt from
the South
Pole Gazette No. 3)
|
01.10.95
|
Yes,
we're really leaving, but I admit, I'm
afraid. In the past few days all the events
have been piling up, my garage is full of gear,
plane tickets are sitting on the corner of my
desk with the departure date marked on them:
October 24. But that's only a few days away!
That's when I'll be making a great leap into
reality and touching the Antarctic. The cold
will take me by the hand and welcome me... I
hope. I realize that soon I won't have to call
all the suppliers whom I've been asking for
assistance any more. I'll be able to put aside
the expedition budget I've been carrying around
to explain and justify and sell myself. I'll
leave the fax machine and the telephone behind,
along with the photocopier and fast food. I've
been eating to fatten myself up. I've intentionally
put on 8kg as extra energy that I'll be shedding
along the way. I'm tired. I look at the maps
of Antarctica I've spread all over the walls
of my office, and it frightens me. I will never
have to pull such a heavy load again, never
go farther than this. Even though everything
is ready, I'm afraid. But the urge to get on
my way is ber. (Excerpt from the South
Pole Gazette, No. 4) |
05.11.95
|
Punta Arenas, Chile.
The city of Punta Arenas is located on the northwest
shore of the Strait of Magellan, separating
Chile from the Tierra del Fuego, the southernmost
point of the Americas. From there it is another
1 000km to Antarctica.
After a few days checking our gear, everything
is loaded onto a big Hercules aircraft. But
we run into technical problems at the end of
the runway. Everybody out... What a way to start! |
06.11.95
|
A
night-time flight to the most beautiful continent...
with my forehead glued to the cockpit window,
I wait for daybreak. The first glow soon reveals
the icebergs forming a protective belt all around
the Antarctic.
The plane touches down on the
free ice in the midst of the Ellsworth mountain
range. It's like something out of a fairy tale.
Everything is unloaded and then loaded again
right away into a Twin Otter. Takeoff from Patriot
Hills at 20:49 UTC heading for Berkner Island,
trapped and buried beneath the huge Filchner
ice shelf on the edge of the Weddell Sea.
|
09.11.95
Day
1 |
Our
starting co-ordinates: 78°35’S
49°16’W. Altitude 250 m. That
means 1500 km to ski, 2550 m to climb and 170
kg each to pull to reach the South Pole!
Today we
skied four hours. We put 3.5km behind us, now
there are 1,496.5 to go...
|
12.11.95
Day
4 |
Hurray!
We travelled 10.5 km today. Already we're
having to make some adjustments in our gear.
The sun is shining around the clock. The pulkas
are heavy, terribly heavy. We did six stages
of 45 minutes. |
13.11.95
Day
5 |
We
have decided to set our watches to Montreal
time, to simplify all our satellite communication
schedules. The land is flat, but covered with
small sastrugis, a Russian word that refers
to mounds of snow hardened by the wind; when
they aren't too high it looks like corrugated
sheet metal. The land is white all the way out
to the horizon, and we're looking forward to
seeing the mountains, but the Pensacola range
is at least ten days away. Still, our morale
is good, despite the pulkas, which remain very
heavy. Each day is divided up into six stages
of 45 minutes, with breaks of 15 minutes. We're
making slow but steady progress (13 km)...
giving us lots of time to think. Thierry is
wondering who won the elections for the Mayor
of Gaspé, and whether the hay for his
animals has been brought in for the winter!

|
14.11.95
Day
6 |
A
storm. The tent is shaken by winds of at
least 100km/h from the SE. It's –11°C
inside the tent. I take the chance to call my
friend Joël Le Bigot. Nathalie manages to
talk to me for a few minutes and get a fix on
my position. Everyone laughs when Joël says
"But what's he doing lying down?!" |
16.11.95
Day
8 |
Very
poor visibility. I'm worried about the condition
of the satellite telephone batteries. I'm afraid
I won't be able to talk with my love any more.
15.5km. |
17.11.95
Day
9 |
A
whiteout today (a "Day blanc,"
as we say in French). It's a frequent weather
condition in the Antarctic, caused by very thick
fog; you can't see anything, not even a metre
away. It's the reverse of a pitch-black night---a
blinding white day. It's exhausting to find
your way with a compass in this infinite whiteness. |
19.11.95
Day
11 |
79°35’
We've made it past our first degree.
Anything is cause for celebration. Whatever
keeps our morale up. One
degree means 111km. Everything is going
as planned. We're maintaining a good pace. We're
satisfied with the progress we've made so far.
The pace we have settled on, 7 stages of 50
minutes, is right for us. We're racking up short
distances every day, but it's what we expected. |
20.11.95
Day
12 |
The
"waves" of snow are higher all the
time. The winds are violent, the sky is overcast.
The tent is holding up all right. We had to
anchor it with ice screws and add more straps,
though. Without our tent, we're dead.
|
21.11.95
Day
13 |
The
sastrugis are frequent and huge on the Antarctic
continent. Like a wind storm on the ocean that
suddenly froze in place. I dream of the mountains,
while Thierry is worried about them.
|
22.11.95
Day
14 |
We
made record progress today: 17.5
km. We reached the 80th parallel... quite
a psychological boost. We laugh, we know where
the south is---a long way away! |
24.11.95
Day
16 |
We're
breaking though the snow, the sleds slide badly
on the blown snow. It's like powder. I'm losing
my motivation. I have to get a grip on myself.
In one month it will be Christmas. Keep going,
Bernard. The important thing is to keep going
forward. Otherwise you die. The Pole won't come
to us, we have to go to it. |
26.11.95
Day
18 |
Whiteout.
Impossible to go anywhere. We take a complete
inventory of all our gear, down to the smallest
spare bolt. |
28.11.95
Day
20 |
I
can see the mountains off in the distance.
Finally, a landmark. Finally, a distraction. I
was dreaming of this. Now I'm skiing with a visible
objective, to reach them. |
29.11.95
Day
21 |
Thierry
skied ahead for one stage. I'm responsible for
navigation, using a compass by day and GPS (satellite)
by night to calculate our position. We saw the
moon in the perfectly clear night. |
30.11.95
Day
22 |
We
have left Berkner Island, we're on the
continental ice that separates the island from
the continent, 450 metres thick. We have crossed
the 81st parallel, and have less than 700km
to go.

|
01.12.95
Day
23 |
Another record: 22.2 km today. –12°C.
Magnetic declination of 19°East. We stopped
to shoot some film. We get up at about 7 a.m.
and we go to bed at about 8:30 p.m.
I haven't been talking much about Thierry in
this log, yet we're sharing this tremendous
adventure. Thierry is a private person. He writes
his feelings in his Daynal. We have to keep
some secrets from each other, in our Daynals.
We're making progres together and together we
want to reach the Pole. |
03.12.95
Day
25 |
One
of my heels hurts. Each time we stop I take my
boot off and put my foot in the snow. I have to
be careful; we have to take care of ourselves
quickly, because a single twist or tendonitis
could put us in a perilous situation. The satellite
telephone is becoming more and more tempermental.
But we're wondering whether we can continue communicating
by telephone. Theoretically, it is impossible
to communicate by telephone past the 82nd parallel,
according to the experts we consulted before leaving. |
05.12.95
Day
27 |
We
travelled 29 km today. We reached the 82nd
parallel. What a day! The telephone is still working.
I talked with Nathalie, and told her again how
much I love her. |
09.12.95
Day
31 |
We're
at an altitude of 1 200m. That's it,
we're really up on the Antarctic Plateau. As well
as dealing with crevasses, we ran up against katabatic
winds for the first time. They consist of a layer
of air about 300m thick, extremely cold, which
races down the glaciers, driven by gravity. They
are compressed under the relatively warmer air
mass, and can reach speeds of 190km/h. Carrying
snow along with them, these winds produce terrible
blizzards that literally tear up everything in
their path and make any progress impossible. |
11.12.95
Day
33 |
The
GPS says we have done 504 km in a straight line,
but with all the detours caused by sastrugis,
crevasses and the fog, we must have travelled
much farther.
I'm very surprised to report that
the satellite telephone is still working. Experts
in England with the Immarsat satellite network
had told us it would be totally impossible to
communicate at this latitude.
|
13.12.95
Day
35 |
We're
tense and nervous, as we progress across thin
layers of ice that can extend for many kilometres,
with a layer of air 3 to 6cm thick trapped underneath.
When you step on them, they break with a sound
of cracking that can go on for nearly a minute,
a sort of lighting bolt that sends cracks radiating
out for kilometres in all directions. |
15.12.95
Day
37 |
I
wrote my name in the snow. My son, Yoann, is 13
years old today. I'm dedicating this day to him.
I'm homesick. It's blowing, blowing, always blowing.
Always in our faces. We're far away from everything,
far from the Pole. I'm feeling melancholy. |
17.12.95
Day
39 |
The
telephone is very very weak. This may be the last
time. If so, we will have surpassed the experts'
predictions by far. We're running into the real
sastrugis, the big ones. They're impressive, and
very hard to get across. We're at
1 400m altitude, 29.9km today, 84°33’. |
|
|
Press Release:
A GREAT FIRST
"Quebec is pushing back the
limits of satellite technology, thanks
to Teleglobe Canada. Bernard Voyer's
and Thierry Pétry's expedition
has shown that it is now possible
to communicate with a portable satellite
telephone past 82 south latitude."
|
|
20.12.95
Day
42 |
An
ocean of sastrugis. The Antarctic is revealing
its true colours: it is imperturbable, it knows
how to raise the stakes and draw out the time.
We skied for 9 hours and
travelled 32.9km. We have to keep going,
we have to forget the pains in our backs, ankles,
elbows... I have only one idea: the Pole. |
21.12.95
Day
43 |
December
21. Hard to believe it's summer... in
Antarctica. The distance is weighing on my mind.
I wish I were b enough to ski 15, 18 or 20 hours
a day. I feel that we have to get out of here.
It's so inhospitable. I could never have believed
that an expedition could demand such commitment.
Thierry is here, we're close to one another.
Everything has become mechanical. We've arranged
our daily routine so as not to lose any time.
To survive in this place you have to be efficient.

|
24.12.95
Day
46 |
We've
had fog and whiteouts for a few days. At the
start of the expedition, conditions like these
would have stopped us, but now we have to keep
going. Compass in hand, skiing, I have to check
our heading every three strides. There are no
landmarks. I sometimes ski straight into a sastrugi
without seeing it. Let's hope there are no crevasses.
Better not to think about it. It's
Christmas.
My first Christmas present is
that we reached 86° after skiing 30km. Then
some preparations were necessary. Thierry planted
his tiny, but real fir tree from Gaspé
a few metres away from the tent. He tried to
make some Christmas figures out of snow, but
with his big mittens he can't. We threw some
confetti. We had hidden our Christmas presents
for each other in our boot covers. It was a
touching moment. After the meal, I roasted a
tiny branch of the little fir tree on the stove.
It smelled like the forest. It smelled like
home. We're so far away from the people we love...
The most remote Christmas
in the world.
|
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|
Christmas at the South Pole
Once upon a time, way down south,
very very close to the South Pole,
there were two courageous explorers
who had skied 900 kilometres across
Antarctica, the largest desert of
ice on Earth. They hadn't met a living
soul since leaving on November 9,
1995, because no one and nothing lives
in such a cold and hostile environment.
It was Christmas Eve, and Santa Claus,
far away at the other end of the world,
would certainly not be coming to bring
them any well-deserved presents. They
were sad at being so far away from
their loved ones, missing the sound
of Christmas carols and all the sparkling
Christmas trees.
Bernard told Thierry that what he
really missed was a tree. Even just
a small one would make him happy.
And the ingenious Thierry replied,
"Really? Just a little tree four
inches high would be enough?"
"It really would," said
Bernard, "but it's just a dream.
There are no trees here." Thierry,
with a little grin, told his partner:
"Close your eyes. I'm a bit of
a magician, you know." And from
the very bottom of his sled, hidden
away, he drew a Christmas tree so
tiny that he had been able to bring
it along without Bernard knowing.
What a treat for his friend, just
a little gesture, but such an important
one!
"Now we should decorate it,"
he suggested. Here, where every object
is counted and weighed and anything
not absolutely essential is left far
away at home, it took a lot of ingenuity
to find any ornaments. "Aha,"
cried Bernard, "we can use the
bags our supper came in this evening
to make some." "That's right,"
said Thierry. "Sprinkled with
real snow, they'll be just the thing."
Christmas Eve was really starting
to look like a holiday, even though
it was hard to think of it as being
evening when the sun never went down.
"We'll just close our eyes for
a minute and try to imagine the stars,"
joked Bernard.
Now it was finally time for their
supper. How about a nicely stuffed
and roasted turkey? No such luck.
No, they would have 6500 calories
each, the rations they absolutely
had to eat every day, everything freeze-dried
and vacuum-packed in little plastic
bags. It's no fun mixing melted snow
with greasy powder in a little bag.
You need lots of imagination. But
surprise! All the flavour of the special
meal that the chef at the Petit Extra
restaurant had prepared for them still
came through. They could actually
taste the (Shhh! It's a secret!) veal
flavoured with sage and bacon, with
cake and dried apricots for dessert.
Then Bernard pulled something from
his sleeve. Thierry, watching him,
was wondering whether his friend had
another magic trick for him. To his
great surprise, he saw in his friend's
weather-reddened palm a tiny walnut.
A walnut that opened up to reveal...
a lucky ladybug, rocking back and
forth on a spring. A strange present,
you say? Not really, when you think
about it. Like the ladybug, they would
need plenty of determination, courage
and their fair share of luck to succeed
in reaching the South Pole.
And had Thierry thought to bring
a Christmas present along for Bernard?
What do you think?
Nathalie
|
|
25.12.95
Day
47 |
When
we got up, we looked outside: the fir tree was
still there. Thierry had carefully stored it away
in his pulka. As agreed with Nathalie, we changed
the battery on the Argos transmitter. And
we're off again. |
27.12.95
Day
49 |
Talked
with Thierry about how we could advance even faster.
Longer stages, fewer breaks, faster pace... |
|
|
Press Release:
SOUTH POLE EXPEDITION
Important
We have lost contact with the Polar
expedition of Bernard Voyer and Thierry
Pétry.
After checking with Argos France
and the NACLS service in the United
States, we can confirm that we have
had no news from the expedition since
December 27, 1995. This is not an
emergency, however, but simply a technical
problem. We know that the Argos beacon
has failed because the batteries powering
the device are too cold.
We were able to track the explorers
until December 17 by means of the
NEC satellite telephone used to retransmit
their voices via the Immarsat M satellite.
The last telephone conversation was
transmitted from 84°23'00"
south latitude and 52°08'77"
west longitude. The Argos beacon,
which had been retransmitting binary
data since the beginning, then took
over. At the Montreal base camp, thanks
to the Cube Technologie system, we
were receiving hourly information
on the expedition's position in latitude
and longitude, the name of the polar
satellite tracking them and its accuracy,
the temperature and one of 15 short
coded messages established ahead of
time. In this way we were able to
monitor the expedition's progress,
learn about the major difficulties
encountered, wind conditions, etc.
Most importantly, we could ensure
that the expedition was proceeding
safely. Pending the resumption of
data transmission--soon, we hope--Bernard
and Thierry can use a beacon device
if they need to transmit emergency
messages. We will continue to provide
news of the expedition based on our
knowledge of the terrain on their
route and the average kilometres travelled
per day, so as to allow everyone to
predict their date and time of arrival
at the South Pole.
By the end of today, we assume that
they will have travelled more than
1 260km.
Expected date
of arrival: January 9, 1996.
|
|
29.12.95
Day
51 |
We
encountered the largest sastrugis yet today. Some
of them are 2m high! Pulling the pulkas in this
increasingly rough terrain, the lack of oxygen
is taking its toll—not to mention that we
are at more than 2 000m altitude. |
30.12.95
Day
52 |
18.2
km. I'm feeling weak. I haven't eaten anything.
I'm losing my rhythm. The snow is dryer and dryer,
which makes the pulkas considerably harder to
pull. Our load is getting lighter every day, as
we eat our food and use up the fuel for stoves,
but the snow is becoming less slippery all the
time. I felt as though I'm pulling just as hard
as when we started the expedition almost two months
ago. |
01.01.96
Day
54 |
When
we woke up, Thierry said "You know, Bernard,
this is the year we'll reach the Pole." Happy
New Year. The fine weather is back. It's
–22°C, at 2 400m. Thierry seems
to be moving more slowly. |
03.01.96
Day
56 |
We
have only 7 litres of fuel left. Have to be careful.
It's blowing all the time, hard and constant and
glacial. The snow is powdery, our pulkas seem
to weigh a tonne. After a day's efforts, 25km,
we're exhausted. Thierry seems to be suffering.
I see him far behind me whenever we take a break.
Something is happening. |
04.01.96
Day
57 |
I'm
taking some of Thierry's load. He has to keep
up the pace. I encourage him. He tells me his
hands are cold. It seems to me as though he's
closing in on himself. All his movements are
slower. I have to help him even more. "Thierry,"
I say, "We're at
88°,only two more degrees to go."

|
06.01.96
Day
59 |
Thierry
has frostbite on his face. It takes him a superhuman
effort to complete each stage. I know him, he's
got a b will, he wants to touch the Pole. In the
evening, he just falls into his sleeping bag.
He is weakening every day. Hang on, Thierry. I'm
afraid. Not much fuel, not much more food, we
can't even think of resting for a few days. In
any case, he would need a few weeks, not just
a few days. |
08.01.96
Day
61 |
30.6
km, altitude 2 750m. I have made a
nose protector for Thierry. His face is swollen.
I help him get his boots on and pull on his ski
poles. He can't move his fingers. Every morning,
I take a bit of his load. I have to remain b and
get us through this. So close to the goal and
yet so far. "Thierry, we're starting the
last degree, the last one." "We left
together, and we'll get there together." |
09.01.96
Day
62 |
30.,5
km. 2 80 m. Thierry is exhausted,
he can't do any more. I go ahead to set up the
tent and ease his load, to keep him going, to
keep him alive. "Bernard, it would feel so
sweet just to lie down on my pulka and let myself
die." "No, Thierry, every step you make
is one less step you have to make." |
10.01.96
Day
63 |
I
lighten Thierry's pulka. We're
almost there. The Antarctic doesn't show
any quarter, though. Wind, sastrugis, dry snow...
no help and no pity. What a continent. I'm starting
to hate it. |
11.01.96
Day
64 |
The
day ends with another climb. We've been climbing
for 64 days now. We deserve a bit of flat land,
but no, you have to work to get to the Pole. At
17:17 hours, it seems to me that I can see big
dark spots on the horizon. I look for my binoculars,
but my hands are cold and I can't focus. I can't
believe it, I can see the buildings at the Scott-Amundsen
scientific base. It's
the Pole. I unhitch my pulka and ski as
fast as I can to Thierry. He starts crying, he
can't believe it. I hold my binoculars up to his
eyes. He crumbles and falls against my shoulder. |
12.01.96
Day
65 |
 |
It
is 10:47 hours, 2 835m altitude.
Thierry and I put our hands on the axe
of rotation of the Earth. 90° South.
Thierry just keeps on repeating, crying,
90 degrees, 90 degrees, 90 degrees...
WE MADE IT.
One more little effort to walk around
the metal pole that identifies the geographic
South Pole. This time, our steps take
us all around the world. We'll never go
so far again. |
|
| 19.01.96 |
The
Twin Otter touched down as the South Pole. As
planned, Michel and Lise Perron, our friends
and the main sponsors of the expedition, accompanied
by Tim and Audrey Kenny and cameraman Vic Pelletier,
climb out of the plane. What a delight! Michel
says that Nathalie is fine, she's waiting for
us at Patriot Hills as planned.
We're all so happy to see each
other again. Michel asks me whether I'm ready
for a surprise, and I see Nathalie getting out
of the plane!
|
| 20.01.96 |
Patriot
Hills, the base camp, is our shelter. Between
two shooting sessions for the film, Thierry and
I retreat to the kerosene stove warming the neighbouring
tent. We're lost weight, we're weak, we're just
thinking about going home. |
| 07.02.96 |
Knowlton,
Quebec, it's snowing. Will I feel like setting
out again someday? I feel as though I've been
all the way to the horizon. I travelled as far
within myself as I skied across the Antarctic.
I took my dream all the way, and I took myself
all the way, too. |
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