http://www.nordurpoll.is/
Weeks
of 05 to 12 May
06
May: after experiencing a fair amount of trouble with channels of
open water and pressure ridges that were tricky to negotiate, Haraldur
covered 21.7 km in a single day. His second best day's progress, which
brought him to within 100 kilometres from the Pole. Already, in his
communiqués, he was thinking of his imminent victory and recounted
that this length of stay, alone on the ice of this infernal ice floe,
had been an extraordinary experience. According to his reckoning,
he should reach the Pole on the 11th…
07 May: the weather was improving and the ice conditions were good.
The Icelander's morale was sky high. The thought of finding his hearth
and home again never left him for a second. The whole of Iceland was
behind him. A 100-strong committee was preparing to leave the island
to go to Resolute Bay to provide an appropriate welcome for the first
Icelander to have accomplished such a feat.
10
May: despite a strong drift southward, Haraldur believed that he would
finish today. What's more, he confided on the radio that he would
no longer stop nor sleep before reaching his final goal.
And
in the evening of this Wednesday, 10 May, at 21.27 as the communiqué
said - it's crazy how adventurers like to be accurate to the minute,
at times even to the second, to record their exploits! - he reached
the Geographical North Pole.
From
our calculations, he had taken 65 days to complete the journey. His
website shows that - in all - he had walked 712 km.
Weeks
of 27th April to 4th May
Lots
of wind on the 29th. On the 30th, after setting a new personal record
- 20.2 km in one day - Haraldur is now only 200 km from the pole.
Lots of open water channels along the way. The wind blowing hard makes
the snow harder and so easier to ski over, says Haraldur during one
of his radio transmissions. On 1st May, he has to negotiate five channels
with no ice; manoeuvring is delicate but not too dangerous.
While
the Icelander may be able to cross these completely dislocated areas
of the ice cap without any problem, it does not augur well for the
Norwegians and Frenchmen who don't arrive in the area for another
fortnight or so. And if the temperatures are gradually rising, they
are likely to find the ice even more broken up ahead of them.
Week
of 19th to 26th April After being successfully resupplied
by First Air on 20th April (new sledge and food supplies) and with
his unfortunate companion having to abandon
the trek on 28th April, Haraldur is continuing on his way as he gets
used to his new harness. On 23rd April, he declares to his HQ that
the weather is so fine that he had to unzip all of his clothes as
he was sweating a lot. The next day, he was obliged to take off one
of his pairs of trousers and his jacket; on that day, he still had
300 km to cover. On the 25th, after covering 16.3 km during the day,
he passed the landmark of 500 km already done.
week of 11 to 18 April
As
his sledge had been seriously damaged, Haraldur could no longer negotiate
the areas of open water by navigating over them as all polar explorers
have been doing for years. He had to go round them. Which of course
made his route longer.
This
fifth week of the expedition had nevertheless seen some greatly improved
progress: 18.8km covered on 11 April, 16.3km three days later and
19.1km on 15 April. Haraldur was certain that he would get to the
end of his journey. When in touch with his HQ, he finalised the last
details of the re-supply that should be taking place in a few days
time.
Week of 3 to 10 April
The
period of acclimatisation to the frightful conditions being over,
Haraldur was now making better progress, and the compression zones
were less frequent. On 03 April, he had already covered 180km and
he had a further 590km to go before reaching the pole. The next day,
a stroke of bad luck: his sledge broke in several places. With the
consent of his HQ, he decided to have himself re-supplied and to replace
his sledge; this operation should occur around 17 April.
Week of 26 March to 3 April : Ingtor
Bjarnason gives up
The
intense cold was without doubt taking its toll: Haraldur's companion
was again suffering from serious frostbite on all his ten fingers.
He could not go on in this condition, and the expedition decided to
call up a Twin Otter of Air Canada to come to his rescue. On 28 April,
the unfortunate Icelander was flown back to Resolute Bay.
Haraldur
Orn Olafsson decided to go on alone. But, even though he took advantage
of the plane's arrival to lighten his sledge by a few dozen kilos,
things were not going to be easy. Because he only had 22 days of rations
left. From now on, the project's autonomy was no longer practically
possible. On 03 April, when he had just passed the point of 100km
covered, he advanced 18.9km in the day. He was suffering from solitude
but his morale remained good.
Week of 19 to 26 March : message from the President
The
conditions were gradually improving for the polar explorers. There
were still hummocks here and there, but they were less high and the
wind seemed to be dying down. The cold, on the other hand, was still
intense in this season (-50°C) and seriously damaged the ski-pelts,
which came
away and could not be re-glued in the evening during the halt. Too
cold.
That said, they were nevertheless making satisfactory progress and,
on 23 March, they succeeded in covering 9.15km in a day, their first
record.
Two
days later, they received a radio message from the President of Iceland,
Olafur Ragnar Grimsson, congratulating them on their exploit and wishing
them well them in their venture.
Week of 12 to 19 March : fearfully cold
This is a question of a classic attempt to reach the Geographical
North Pole on foot, and without external assistance. Haraldur Orn
Olafsson (a friend of Alain Hubert) and Ingfor Bjarnason set off from
Ward Hunt Island (in the Great Canadian North) on 10 March. They were
each pulling behind them a sledge weighing 130 kilos.
The
first days' progress was made more difficult by the fearful cold (-40°C
without the wind chill factor) and by the compression zones that they
had to help each other negotiate. Furthermore, the snow, which had
been falling copiously on the Arctic ice floe for the last few weeks,
was so deep that with each step they sank in up to 40 cm. "It's
a though we had to pull the sledges through flour", explained
Haraldur Orn Olafsson during his daily communication with HQ.
On
19 March, the temperature was so low (-67°C with the wind chill factor)
that they could not even take time to pause every hour. .