Greenpeace Project Thin Ice 2006, Save the Polar Bear  
 
Life on the Ice Polar Bears Extreme Expedition Global Warming What You Can Do
 
     
Live Progress
Podcasts
Read Blog
Explorers Blog

Polar Explorers Lonnie Dupre and Eric Larsen send daily dispatches during their unprecedented four-month journey to the North Pole and back. The expedition team will pull and paddle specially modified canoes across nearly 1,000 miles of shifting sea ice and open ocean. Their objective is to complete the first ever summer expedition to the North Pole and to highlight the growing issues surrounding global warming.

Explorers Blog

Life on the Ice


Previous << | List All | >>Next

Two Rabbits and a Cardinal

May 08, 2006
sunny, 10 F
After a full week on the trail, we are bone weary, dog tired and whatever other quippy phrases one might use to describe our tired state. Its been quite a week on the Arctic Ocean for us. Above all else, we are thankful to be making good progress.

The weather has been progessively warming and the change is most notable late at 'night' and early mornings. We would have loved to sleep in this morning. Our Hilleberg tent is now warm and cozy, but with a floor space roughly the same size as a sheet of plywood, we are anxious to be out as well.

We pushed hard today through a veritable arctic potpourri. In the morning, we avoided some badly pressured ice by hopping on a newly frozen lead and cruising northeast. Later, we slogged through a heavily drifted area pulling and heaving our canoe-sleds to near exhaustion.

We had two incredible firsts today. Around 1 pm we skied into a massive line of pressured ice that towered to 30 feet. Gigantic blocks, slabs and chunks of ice formed an impenetrable wall. The whole line of pressure extended as far as we could see to the southwest and nearly as far to the northeast. We skied northeast for about a half hour then found a spot, amazingly, to wiggle through.

Our next big first was crossing a newly frozen lead that spanned almost a quarter mile. iI was covered with 'ice flowers' so we knew it was safe with the exception of spots where we got that sinking feeling (literally) as the ice bowed beneath our skis.

We had a another great travel day, covering 7.60 nautical miles, that's 15 kilometers or 9.3 'normal' miles and also saw two rabbits and a cardinal in the process. Of course, if you stare at anything for long enough...

Word of the day: assimilate - after a full week on the trail we have managed to integrate ourselves into the routines of expedition travel.

Upgrade Flash

You need flash 8 or greater to view this part of the site. Click here to get the latest version of Flash

(C) 2006 Greenpeace USA
702 H Street, NW, Suite 300, Washington, D.C. 20001 (800) 326-0959

One World Expedition
Project Thin Ice 2006 | Save the Polar Bear (home) Greenpeace