Monday, 25 May 2015

Tent life.


Tent life. #Homathko #ski #expedition.; http://flic.kr/p/thwQTP

Skied a peak above camp but the weather slowly but surely closed in as we climbed, so we descended in a disorienting whiteout, avoiding crevasses by following our GPS track. The light was so flat we couldn't turn properly and were reduced to snow ploughs!


Skied a peak above camp but the weather slowly but surely closed in as we climbed, so we descended in a disorienting whiteout, avoiding crevasses by following our GPS track. The light was so flat we couldn't turn properly and were reduced to snow ploughs!; http://flic.kr/p/tgqPxk

Sunday, 24 May 2015

William Bradford (1823-1892), The ‘Panther’ among the Icebergs in Melville Bay – 1874



Homathko Icefield Part 1





















Homathko Icefield Part 1

Flying into Anahim Lake, we were picked up by helicopter pilot Mike King, who drove us to White Saddle, informing us that with the weather forecast he wanted to leave for the mountains immediately. Cue rushed unpacking of freeze dried dinner from cardboard boxes and rushed stuffing of tents, crampons, axes, harnesses, ice screws, food, gasoline, stoves, pans etc etc…

The flight in was stunning, but unexpectedly heavy cloud made finding his way hard for the pilot, Les. But we found a great spot to stash half of our food and fuel in the middle of the icefield and finally managed to find Klattersine Creek. As we flew down Klattersine Glacier we were happy to see it looked passable, with not too much crevassing. Cruising up and down Klattersine Creek we found a high, flat clearing perched on a medial moraine, with what looked like a reasonable descent to the valley floor which we could then follow uphill to the glacier. Thick, wet snow fell on us through the night and the next day but we found a route up onto the glacier.

The second morning we awoke to perfect blue skies and bright sun which set off an almost continuous stream of avalanches from the south-facing side of Klattersine Ridge. We wove between crevasses and continued to climb to the col topping the glacier; here we expected an easy ski down to the base of the Homathko icefield, which stretched away ahead of us. 30 minutes later we were bogged down in a complex crevasse field, and ended up escaping onto the left bank where a gully appeared passable and uncrevassed.

We unroped and packed our sleds onto our packs (shockingly heavy!); Jonty fell into a crevasse and we all struggled with deep, wet afternoon slop and our progress slowed to a crawl. We began triggering small avalanches and so immediately exited the gully and followed a set of snow bridges back onto the glacier. Exhausted, we stopped and camped.

The next morning we finally managed to leave the glacier, at least 18 hours later than we thought the previous afternoon(!) and made it onto the icefield. Ahead lay a complex crevasse field at the top of the Jewakway glacier, barring our way. More in Part 2.

Friday, 22 May 2015

lauren: What does it cost for a digital photo of your name...



lauren:

What does it cost for a digital photo of your name written in the ice at the North Pole? 

$35 through the Kickstarter for my Arctic Ocean Sea Ice Citizen Science Project

Only 11 of these rewards left! Also we’re almost fully funded in 3 days, crazy. 

Saturday, 16 May 2015

Flying into Klattersine Glacier, our access point to the Homathko Icefield, British Columbia. More here:
http://coldwilderness.tumblr.com/