Tracking
the Journey

  • Distance to go: 0 Mi
    Distance

    Ben and Tarka will cover 1800 miles starting from Scott's Terra Nova Hut at the edge of Antarctica to the South Pole and back to the coast again. That's equivalent to 69 back-to-back marathons hauling up to 200kg each (the weight of roughly two adult men) of kit and supplies necessary to survive.

    Distances here are shown in statute miles.

Deja Vu (Day 104)

Day 104: S77° 52' 32.34", E167° 24' 47.88"

Duration: 10 Hr

Daily distance: 25.1 Mi

Distance to go: 11.1 Mi

Temperature: -9 °C

Wind chill: -22 °C

Altitude: 197 Ft

As I type this, we're camped about 15km from our Ross Island finish line, which is less than four hours' skiing away. We'll have a massive lie-in tomorrow before setting off in the afternoon, principally as the bases here run on New Zealand time, which is 11 hours ahead of us, so if anyone's going to be there to wave us over the line and take a photo for our holiday snaps, we need to fit in with their time zone.

Antarctica, true to form, didn't make life easy or comfortable for us today, and the weather seemed to be messing* with us in a spookily adversarial fashion; luring us - wearing far too little - out of the tent with bright sunshine and a still warmth first thing, before pelting us with a blizzard barely ninety minutes later. The wind intensified just as we stopped to eat and drink at our first break, and as we sat on our sledges with our down jackets on and our backs to the gale, whirling eddies and vortices of sandy spindrift were spun up into our faces, filling our pockets and sledges and anything else left unzipped for more than a few seconds with fine, gritty snow. It calmed down before we started skiing, then revved up again at the next break, in a pattern that dogged us for most of the day.

As I mentioned yesterday, our sheer exhaustion seems to be overriding any chance of outright back-slapping glee at being so close to pulling this vast journey off (our GPS says we've clocked a cumulative 2,859km now, which is 68 back-to-back marathons dragging sledges) but team morale is definitely much improved, and the prospect of skiing a mere 15km after a big lie-in seems infinitely more manageable than another mammoth day. Interestingly, despite never having seen the view we faced today, skiing past White Island towards the giant flanks of Mount Erebus until we picked up our final (hundred-day-old!) depot, before hanging a left and heading past Castle Rock towards McMurdo Sound, the scenery felt strangely familiar after so many years of dreaming of reaching this point.

We'll start skiing tomorrow in the late afternoon UK time so don't be alarmed if the tracker doesn't budge for a while after our usual kick-off. We should finish in the evening, but it may take us a while to get online again and send a blog post back, so watch this space. I'm sure Andy, Chessie and the team in London will update the site as soon as we phone in from Ross Island, so you'll be the first to know when we're home and dry.

At the moment, the magnitude of it all hasn't really sunk in yet, though I'm excited about getting more than five hours sleep for the first time in weeks, and I suspect lying here tomorrow morning the excitement - and if I'm honest, the sheer relief - may start to finally kick in...

*This may not be the precise word Tarka used as we were shouting at each other in the blizzard, but it was hard to hear him over the wind.

Comments

# Heidi, February 7th 2014

Our 8-year-old got his compass, we faced south, and toasted you all several time.  Well Done!  So excited and happy for you.

# Rosie V, February 7th 2014

I can see someone walking towards the vans. It s very dark but it could be one of the boys!

# Dave, February 7th 2014

There’s someone at lower right in the webcam image.

# dj, February 7th 2014

Andy…. there’s a heck of a lot MORE support on this end than there is in his face- thousands more.  The sun is going down.

It looks like a person on the edge of the photo now.  They’re going to need to get closer to the ocean if we’re going to be able to see him.

# dj, February 7th 2014

The person in the lower frame went away at the refresh.  The guys will need to go stand by the green tank in order for us to see them.

# Davi, February 7th 2014

Great news Ben & Tarka - History made and thanks for allows us to peek over your shoulders. Thanks too over the past hours to the various bloggers that added their expertise to guide others through.

# Lydia, February 7th 2014

WAAAAAAHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Fabulous - well done guys, job done, History made.
Lydia x

# dj, February 7th 2014

Richard… guess we were following the wrong media - they wanked on Twitter but didn’t think to ping on the web.  The marker still shows them at the bottom of the hill.  Were you following Twitter?

# Richard Pierce, February 7th 2014

No, didn’t really follow twitter. R

# dj, February 7th 2014

Well guy… it looks like it’s just you and me here - everyone has disappeared.  The marker has been forgotten I guess and hoping that they would catch the vision of having thousands of internet fans watching on web cam just didn’t strike their fancy.

# Richard Pierce, February 7th 2014

Hey, DJ, thanks for all the hard work and late hours you’ve put in. We may not have said it much, but we really appreciate what you’ve done for us.

Find me on tettig.com, email me.

All my best,

R

# Intrepid, February 7th 2014

Yes, dj… with deep appreciation for all your efforts!

# CaninesCashews, February 7th 2014

DJ As much as I’d like to see the guys -  I’m sure they are completely whacked and might not want to ignore all the people who have come out to greet them to stand in front of a tank until a camera refresh :-)
For me I’m happy to wait for the blog or some photos to trickle through.
As much as we followers are a part of this - this is there time and they must do what they wish.
Just my opinion though and it is 1.45am here so that might not make sense at all ;-)
Before I forget thanks for all your work with the tracker this evening/morning.

# dj, February 7th 2014

@Cashews… you are quite welcome.  Yes, a lot of things could have been… but weren’t.  My guess is that the lot we’re looking at is only yards from where they went into the building - and with a little of imagination, having the locals in the photo wouldn’t have hurt at all.  Too bad.

# Heidi, February 7th 2014

DJ, Canines Cashews, Intrepid, Mal, others ...so many voices I’ve come to rely on for information and encouragement these last months.  Thank you to the blog community for making this a bearable experience (I nearly had to give up back around Day 67; it was just too nerve-wracking.  I can’t imagine what their loved ones must have gone through).  Cheers, fellow armchair polar explorers!

# Heidi, February 7th 2014

Richard, OK, we’ll let you go to bed now.  Thank you for so many contributions to the community of Ben and Tarka followers.  You’ve had great information, keen counsel, and great passion.  Very kindest regards to you and your family.

# Rebecca, February 7th 2014

Goodnight, Richard. I’ve really enjoyed the information you’ve shared here over the past months, and wish you well.

# Dave, February 7th 2014

My computer’s refresh button got a real workout tonight.

# Andrea, February 7th 2014

We will be glade if you accept our compliments.

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