Saturday, April 23, 2011

Air Traffic Controller is Raising a Crop of Solar Nerds




Amateur and professional astronomers will go to any lengths to pursue their passion as we learned last month at the Northeast Astronomy Forum & Telescope Show (NEAF) in Suffern, N.Y. Stargazers travel to one of the darkest skies in the world, the desert of Atacama, Chile, where local lodges host “star parties.” Enthusiasts will journey to Hawaii in 2012 in pursuit of the transit of Venus; trek to the sunniest spot of the Australian Outback to view the 2012 eclipse; or build elaborate fiberglass “Astro Haven” domes in their backyards to control their telescopes from the comfort of the kitchen table, no matter the weather outside.

NEAF is where you can buy a 54 lbs. meteorite from Campo del Cielo, Argentina, for $3,900. Or for those of modest means, meteorite particles the size of raisins for $10. Astronaut Buzz Aldrin is represented with his signature Moon Explorer ED102 Air-Spaced Triplet Apochromatic Refractor Telescope from Bresser ($1,999.95 sug. ret.).

Atlanta air traffic controller Stephen Ramsden’s passion for the past four years is to teach solar education around the world, starting with presentations to schools in the U.S. southeast based out of his Ford-built Sun Specific Public Outreach Truck or “SUNS.P.O.T.” Ramsden’s non-profit Charlie Bates Solar Astronomy Project, named for a fellow controller who committed suicide in 2007, reaches approximately 50,000 students a year at 60 schools. The Navy veteran owns 11 telescopes – about $100,000 worth of observatory quality telescopes and cameras including a Lunt Hydrogen Alpha Solar Telescope which can show sun prominences and surface detail.

Ramsden, who likes to dress in a yellow sun costume, is booked six months in advance by educators eager to have him teach about the sun’s effects on aviation, communications and climate. He’s lightly funded to say the least. The National Air Traffic Controllers Association supplies thousands of giveaway eclipse viewers, but otherwise the program’s $60,000 annual budget comes from small private donations and out of his own pocket. “I hate fundraising and would just as soon rip off my toenails than ask for donations for the program,” he explains on his website.

“I’m trying to breed a new crop of nerds, attempting to get kids interested again in something real like science. We have a tight budget but it’s worth it – the emotional reward comes back to me 12-fold,” he tells us in between deflecting snarky comments about sleepy air traffic controllers. (“I guarantee no one falls asleep where I work. Atlanta Center is the busiest airspace in the world.”)

Ramsden adds, “When the Sun cooperates with a 60,000+ mile filament or prominence or a large active region with sunspots there is no replacing the look on a kid’s (or the faculty's) face after you explain the enormity and origin of the features.”

(For more information: sramsden@solarastronomy.org, www.charliebates.org; see a photo of Ramsden at www.expeditionnews.blogspot.com)

Monday, April 18, 2011

Expedition News This Month - Return to Mariana Trench

INTO THE DEEP

Hawkes Ocean Technologies announced this month that the experimental prototype DeepFlight Challenger submersible is being prepared to make a record 36,000-foot dive to the Mariana Trench. The dive, planned for sometime this year, is part of the Virgin Oceanic Five Dives project, a series of ocean expeditions being carried out by DeepSub LLC. Concurrently, Hawkes Ocean Technologies is prepping two Deepflight Super Falcon craft for separate expeditions: a Hawkes-led project in the Gulf of Aqaba, Jordan, and a multi-year ocean expedition, led by venture capitalist Tom Perkins.

The DeepFlight submersibles are designed and built by Hawkes Ocean Technologies, Point Richmond, Calif., a company founded by renowned marine engineer Graham Hawkes, to introduce a new generation of ultra-lightweight, cost-effective manned craft, based on the Hawkes-patented concept of underwater flight and the higher safety standards of positive buoyancy. Since the late 1990s, four generations of DeepFlight vehicles have been launched, and are now proving to be a flagship technology in enabling privately funded ocean exploration using manned submersibles.

DeepFlight Challenger, the third generation winged submersible, was commissioned in 2005 by the late adventurer, Steve Fossett, as an experimental prototype to push sub-sea technology to its absolute limits. Fossett had planned to make a record dive to the deepest point in the ocean, the Mariana Trench. The project was taken over by Chris Welsh and DeepSub LLC in 2010, who, with the support of Virgin Oceanic, is planning to dive DeepFlight Challenger to the deepest point in each of the world's five oceans. Hawkes Ocean Technologies owns the patents and intellectual property rights to commercialize DeepFlight Challenger for science, industry and adventure. (For more information: www.deepflight.com).

EXPEDITION UPDATE

Ancient Mariners Cross Atlantic on Pipe Raft

British adventurer Anthony Smith, 85, and a senior citizen crew have sailed their tiny raft, An-Tiki, some 3,000 miles from Portugal's Canary Islands to Sint Maarten in the Caribbean, arriving in early April (see EN, March 2011). An-Tiki collected wildlife along the way, including flying fish which leapt onto the deck at night, and "a very interesting and pretty small squid," which the crew, after admiring it, ate for lunch. The four men, the youngest a mere child at age 56, subsisted variously on flying fish and peanut butter, according to a report by Alan Farnham of ABCNews.com. (Apr. 6).

They used their crossing to raise money for WaterAid, a U.K.-based non-profit whose goal is to give the world's poorest communities access to safe water and better sanitation. A WaterAid spokesperson told the Anguilla News that An-Tiki had raised enough money for the organization to improve the lives of hundreds of persons around the world. (For more information: www.gasballoon.com/antiki/)

Uber-Sailor Reid Stowe Hits the Lecture Circuit

Extreme long distance sailor Reid Stowe, who returned June 17, 2010, after a record 1,152 unresupplied days at sea, has hit the lecture circuit. We recently caught up with him at the Riverside Yacht Club in Connecticut on Mar. 18 where he told an audience of sailors that for the first two years of his voyage, he never had time to read a single book. He worked everyday repairing sails.

“I never had time to relax, except if there was a sunset or a rainbow,” he said. Any leisure time he had was spent practicing yoga, painting and in prayer. He’s currently living in Long Island City, N.Y., with his fiancé and young son who was conceived during the voyage. He supports his family through sale of paintings while his agent, the Peter Miller Literary Agency, and ghostwriter David Fisher, actively pursue a book deal. “Lack of money,” he says, “gives me the drive to succeed.” (For more information: www.1000days.net).

Jeff Lowe's Pack Recovered After 20 Years on the Eiger

In 1991, after 9 harrowing days on the North Face of the Eiger, American climber Jeff Lowe abandoned his backpack when he couldn't find any anchors at the end of his rope. Lowe untied and left the rope and his backpack behind as he free soloed the last 50 feet to the summit ridge where he was plucked off the mountain by a helicopter, just hours before a big storm would engulf the great North Face.

On Mar. 25, Josh Wharton spent over two hours chopping Lowe's pack out of the ice and snow, high up on the North Face of the Eiger. Lowe was anxious to see the condition of the pack after 20 years on the mountain. Wharton delivered the frozen, weather worn pack to Lowe on the deck of the Bellevue Hotel at Kleine Scheidegg, Switzerland.

Lowe was relieved to have this bit of unfinished business taken care of after all these years. Leaving the pack was contrary to Lowe’s Alpine Style ascents, but necessary for his own survival on that day.

Lowe was in the region filming Metanoia on the North Face of the Eiger (see EN, January, 2011). Support and sponsorship is still needed to complete the film. (For more information: see the video clip at http://vimeo.com/21548239; for a list of contents, see our blog entry at www.expeditionnews.blogspot.com; www.jefflowemovie.com).

Shackleton’s Whisky: “Delicious”

A Glasgow distillery is betting that a whole lot of people will want to sip the Scotch that Sir Ernest Shackleton had with him on his Antarctic adventure. Three crates of the explorer’s whisky spent a century forgotten and frozen to the rock underneath the hut he used as a staging ground for his attempt at the South Pole (see EN, August 2010). Once they were discovered, it took another four years of strategizing before the crates could be safely removed, a sojourn in New Zealand where the bottles were thawed under precise laboratory conditions, a private jet ride back to Scotland, and eight weeks of exacting analysis. Now Shackleton’s Antarctic whisky has been recreated and is ready for mere mortals to drink.

Whyte & Mackay, the company that now owns the distillery that made Shackleton’s spirit, announced this month that it had tasted the original blend, deemed it delicious and created “an exact replica.”

Fifty thousand bottles will go on sale for $160, with 5 percent of each sale being donated to the New Zealand nonprofit responsible for conserving Shackleton’s hut, according to
Whyte & Mackay Master Blender Richard “The Nose” Paterson. His tasting notes reveal Shackleton’s Scotch has “delicate aromas of crushed apple, pear and fresh pineapple. It has a whisper of marmalade, cinnamon and a tease of smoke, ginger and musovado sugar.”

Makes the thirstier members of the EN staff wonder whether you drink it or eat it.

EXPEDITION NOTES

Explorers Club Annual Dinner Attracts the Brightest and Bravest to the Waldorf

The Explorers Club 107th annual dinner at the Waldorf=Astoria in New York on Mar. 19 was packed with a who’s who of exploration, including astronauts, mountain climbers, an ant expert, naturalists, ethnobotanists, and all matter of scientists, researchers and authors. The theme this year was Exploring 2012: The Maya Prophesy. Each talk was interspersed with The Explorers Club theme song ¬– a stirring piece of music that makes you want to put on a pith helmet and study pygmies in equatorial Africa.

EN sat mesmerized next to two young emergency room doctors, both 28, who explained the meaning of “Lover’s fracture,” a condition they treat on a regular basis. Also known as Don Juan fracture, it’s a fracture of the large bone forming the heel that occurs when a lover jumps from great heights while trying to escape from the lover's spouse who arrives unexpectedly. Fascinating stuff, but we digress.

Highlights of the evening included:

• Former Mutual of Omaha sidekick Jim Fowler throwing away his cane to celebrate his new knee, although still in pain: “It’s like a Soviet tank drove over you for a few weeks.” His animal presentation included a monkey named “Wilson,” drinking coconut milk with a straw. Fowler warned, “We have things happening in our natural world today that are pretty scary. … We humans can’t survive unless we treat the other creatures with us (on the planet) in good shape.”

• Edward O. Wilson, American biologist, researcher, theorist, naturalist and author, offered his praise for the 2,900-member organization, “The Explorers Club is devoted to the exciting process of exploring parts of the world unknown physically and intellectually – and that’s vital to steering us through this volatile world we find ourselves in.”

• The fast talking Wade Davis, the noted Canadian anthropologist, ethnobotanist, author and photographer, spoke of meeting five men in the desert who were down to their last liter of water and who, nonetheless, offered him tea. He joked about those forced to travel across the desert short of water: “The great thing about brake fluid is that it keeps you off the battery acid.”

• Don Walsh, American oceanographer, explorer and marine policy specialist, said, “On Spaceship Earth, there are no passengers. We’re all crew.” Later in his keynote address he decried the world’s fisheries that are “vacuuming the oceans,” and the unfortunate fact that “we have better maps of Mars than of the world’s oceans.”
He continued, “We can’t build enough ships and enough scientists to research the oceans.” Walsh, who calls himself an “inner spaceman,” believes researchers need to do more robotically to study the seas so they can launch a mission to “Planet Earth.”

Record Everest Climber Returns to Clean Up

Apa, a Sherpa who has climbed Everest a record 20 times, plans to bring down 11,000 pounds of garbage during the spring climbing season.

Since Everest was first summited in 1953, thousands of people have climbed it, leaving behind the empty oxygen bottles, ropes, tents and other garbage that made their journey possible. Nepal has since required climbers to bring down everything they take up the mountain or lose their deposit, but debris from past climbs still litters the slopes.

The team hopes to clear 8,800 pounds of garbage from the lower part of the mountain and another 2,200 pounds from near the 29,035-foot summit.

Expedition members, porters and guides of other expeditions will carry the garbage down the mountain, receiving 100 rupees ($1.40) for every kilogram (2.2 pounds) they haul out.

Ang Tshering Sherpa, organizer of the Eco Everest Expedition, said this is the fourth year a cleaning expedition has been held. He shares some of the details with EN: “There are 22 climbing team members consisting of seven Americans, eight Indians, three Brazilians, one Japanese, one Spanish, one Mexican and one Swiss. Eco Everest Expedition's advance team staffs are already at Base Camp building platform sites for tents.

“We are using 124 sleeping tents for members and staffs, seven big dinning tents at BC and Camp II, five kitchen tents, two storage tents, four shower tents, one communication tent and six toilet tents for this expedition.”

Apa, who first climbed Everest in 1989 and has repeated the feat almost annually, has campaigned about the degradation he has seen on the Himalayan peaks due to global warming and other issues. He is a resident of Draper, Utah. (For more information: www.asian-trekking.com)

Busy Month for Prince Harry

In addition to planning what we suspect must be the biggest bachelor party of the decade for his brother Prince William, Prince Harry this month was in the Arctic supporting the Walking With The Wounded charity walk to the North Pole involving four wounded UK servicemen. At press time the prince was stranded due to cracks in the runway at the Barneo Ice Camp at the 89th parallel. Will he make it to the church on time to be best man? Stay tuned.

Harry is patron of the Walking With The Wounded charity. The four servicemen, who were all injured in combat in Afghanistan, hope to enter the record books as the first disabled team to walk unassisted to the North Pole. The charity hopes to raise 2 million pounds ($3.2 million) through donations and sponsorships for the expedition.

The men are: Capt Martin Hewitt, 30, whose right arm is paralyzed after being shot; Capt Guy Disney, 29, whose right leg was amputated below the knee after he was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG); Sgt Stephen Young, 28, who suffered a broken back in a roadside bombing; Pte. Jaco Van Gass, 24, who had his left arm amputated and suffered significant tissue loss to his left leg after being hit by an RPG. The trip is guided by Inge Solheim, 36. (For more information: www.walkingwiththewounded.org.uk).

Radiation Danger Suspected at McMurdo

The Disabled American Veterans (DAV) is supporting a request from Sen. Sherrod Brown (D- Ohio) that the Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs evaluate the probability of radiation exposure from a leaking nuclear reactor at McMurdo Station that may have caused cancer in veterans serving there from 1964 to 1973 during Operation Deep Freeze.

“Thousands of service members may have been exposed to radioactive contamination in the air, their water and their food,” said DAV National Commander Wallace E. Tyson. “The experimental, one-of-a-kind nuclear reactor used at McMurdo Station suffered hundreds of reported malfunctions over its lifetime. The same reactor was used to melt snow and desalinate seawater used by the service members stationed there for as long as 13 months at a time.”

In his letter to Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, Sen. Brown said that veterans stationed at McMurdo have made numerous disability claims to the VA for cancers they suffered, only to be denied. Many died before their cases could be fully decided. (For more information: www.dav.org).

Record Double Summit of Everest Planned

For over 40 years, Bill Burke was a corporate lawyer just dreaming about what he would do in retirement. Little did he know that he would enter the record books and become an inspiration to millions around the world.

At 60 years of age and keeping in mind that he had never climbed a mountain in his life, Burke, from Costa Mesa, Calif., set a goal to climb the Seven Summits, the highest peaks on all seven of the world’s continents. He succeeded and at age 67 summited Mt. Everest, becoming the oldest American in history to stand at 29,035 feet and return alive.

Forward to 2011 and The Summit Expedition. Burke, now 69 years of age, has arrived in Nepal in preparation for a record dual summit attempt. He plans to summit Everest from the North (Tibet) side of the mountain and then turn right around and head for the South (Nepal) side and summit once again in the same season (other climbers have summitted twice from the South side in the same season).

Not everybody is as confident about the likelihood of attaining such an ambitious goal. Renowned mountaineer Ed Viesturs tells GrindTV.com in an email, "The key factor is the physical endurance that will be required. I've pulled off a few doubles in my career, and everything has to fall into place – health, endurance, perfect conditions, etc. Take it one climb a time and see how it goes."

In case you were wondering, as we have, what the modern Everest climber brings in the way of gadgets, here’s Burke’s list of gizmos:

satellite telephone
iPad
iPod
Apple computer
Kindle reader
still photo camera
high definition video camera
GoPro head-mounted video camera
monitor for Go Pro head camera
portable speakers

It’s a far cry from George Mallory’s Vest Pocket Kodak camera, which by the way, went missing with Mallory in 1924.
DreamQuest Productions is working on a documentary of the effort and is seeking funding. (For more information about the climb: www.eightsummits.com; to learn more about the documentary, log onto www.dreamquest.tv or contact Allan Smith, allan@dreamquest.tv, 661 998 3542).

QUOTE OF THE MONTH

We climb the highest mountains,
just to get a better view.

We plumb the deepest oceans,
‘cause we're daring through and through.

We cross the scorching deserts,
martini in our hands.

We ski the polar ice caps,
in tuxedo looking grand.

We are reckless, brave, and loyal,
and valiant to the end.

If you come in here a stranger,
you will exit as a friend.

– Adventurers Club Creed from the fictitious Adventurers Club, an attraction at Walt Disney World’s Pleasure Island. How did we ever miss this place when we dragged the kids to Mouseland? It was styled after a private club for world travelers and explorers and was set in 1937. Alas, despite a rigorous online petition, the Club closed in 2009, with many props sent to Hong Kong Disneyland.

Scenes from the Club’s “Last Hoopla” are on Youtube.com at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mOGBcRaVP_s&feature=related

EXPEDITION MARKETING

Pepperoni to the Peak

Always one to admire a well-orchestrated publicity stunt, especially if it relates to outdoor adventure, our admiration goes to Carmelle Druchniak of Scout PR (www.scout-pr.com) in New Hampshire.

It seemed like a great idea: the ultimate pizza delivery to the top of the mountain trademarked as "Home of the World's Worst Weather." To bring fresh pizza to weather observers atop Mount Washington in New Hampshire (www.mountwashington.org), Druchniak donned three layers of thermal underwear (“…très alluring for any woman self-conscious about her caboose,” she blogs) and arranged for her pizza client, Rustic Crust, to drive its wood-fired pizza oven truck to the top and throw a pizza party for the weather-watchers and researchers at the 6,288-ft. summit. The stunt a few months ago required the help of a snow tractor.

The folks at the Observatory were gung-ho for this bit of PR derring-do, since their first-ever take-out dinner also marked the start of a partnership between the non-profit Observatory and Rustic Crust. Druchniak joked she trained in advance by eating a raw-meat diet in the event of a Donner Pass-type scenario. “I even made a mental list of my traveling companions, and decided the CEO would be the last on the menu, since he signs my checks. Bad news for the field marketing manager, who'd be the first to go.”

The pay-off was exposure on the local TV news. The Pittsfield, N.H.-based pizza crust maker will be a sponsor of the Observatory’s 11th annual Seek the Peak hike-a-thon, July 22-23, pledging cash and healthy pizza to the event. (See the pizza expedition at www.tomguilmette.com).

Swedish Sponsorship Darling

The 42-year-old Swedish explorer Johan Ernst Nilson has embarked on a yearlong expedition from the North Pole to the South Pole titled Climate Neutral — Pole2Pole.

Nilson’s journey of some 12,000 miles starts with a 124-mile walk on the Arctic ice of the North Pole to the Svalbard Archipelago in Greenland. He will then navigate across the Arctic Ocean to Ottawa, and cycle six months through North and South America, passing through major cities such as New York, Philadelphia, Washington, and Austin. He’ll trek the Amazon Jungle before arriving in Patagonia. Finally, he plans a two-month journey in Antarctica on skis and a parafoil, to the South Pole. The expected duration of the expedition is a year.

According to the Wall Street Journal (Mar. 21), he’s become a darling of various sponsors. Last month, Nilson traveled to Geneva where Zenith is unveiling a watch in his honor that also celebrates the 100th anniversary of Roald Amundsen's South Pole expedition.

Nilson is also sponsored by Audi, which has created light equipment for him, including sleds and ski poles. "I tried some of it out in their cold chambers in Germany which went down to minus 40 or 50," he tells the Wall Street Journal’s Marshall Heyman. The automotive company is also naming a lightweight hybrid Q5 after him. (For more information: www.pole2pole.net)

WEB WATCH

Ocean Adventures Gone Awry

This month, adventure filmmaker and explorer Jon Bowermaster writes on his website www.jonbowermaster.com:
“A trio of sailboat adventures gone bad in recent weeks have me thinking about the limits of adventure in this modern day. Four Americans on a sailboat headed into "the most dangerous waters on the planet" off the coast of Oman are grabbed by pirates and killed. Days later two Danish families, including three teenagers, sailing off the coast of Somalia are taken hostage by Somali pirates and are held for ransom somewhere in the desert. And off the coast of Antarctica a trio of sailors die when their 48-foot sailboat, the Berserk, ices up in a monstrous storm and sinks to the bottom of the Southern Ocean.

“Each story is tragic, each was easily avoided. The Indian Ocean sailors had been warned repeatedly to stay away or travel in packs. The boat lost off the Antarctica was in an always-dangerous place renowned for ice and storms, in the wrong season. All I could wonder when I first read the accounts was, 'What were they thinking?'

“I am the first to encourage an adventurous life. But good adventuring includes knowing your limits and possessing some kind of personal radar to help recognize the boundaries between adventure seeking and foolhardiness.

“One of the four passengers killed aboard the Quest was quoted as saying, ‘... If anything happens to us on these travels, just know that we died living our dream...

“Really? That is your dream? To sail into the most dangerous waters on the planet, be kidnapped by a gang of thugs and shot to the death in the galley of your sailboat? In retrospect, of course, it sounds far more like a nightmare.”

CLIMBING FOR DOLLARS

Eddie Bauer Grants $50,000 for Explorers Club Expeditions

Climate change and the threat of extinction emerged as the core issues in the first round of $25,000 Youth and Expedition Grants (totaling $50,000) sponsored by Eddie Bauer, the Outfitter of the Explorers Club. Chosen by a committee of Club members and representatives from Eddie Bauer, recipients were awarded at The Explorers Club Annual Dinner in New York on March 19, 2011.

The Explorers Club-Eddie Bauer Youth Grant and the Explorers Club-Eddie Bauer Grant for Expeditions will be used to fund expeditions related to climate change, conservation, and sustainability. The grants support young scientists early in their careers as well as established explorers working in remote climes on the cutting-edge of discovery. The five awardees are:

• The Explorers Club-Eddie Bauer Youth Grant (total $25,000)

Jan F. Gogarten – “How Will Climate Change Interact with Disease Dynamics to Affect Wild Primate Populations?”
James B. Voirin – “Shielding from Extinction the Pigmy Three-Toed Sloth of Escudo de Veraguas Island, Panama”

• The Explorers Club-Eddie Bauer Grant for Expeditions (total $25,000)

Gregory Deyermenjian FN’88 – “2011 Paititi/Pantayqoya Expedition”
Nathan K. Lujan – “Aquatic Inventory of the Rio Mamore: Last Untouched Corner of the Amazon”
David G. Buck – “Climate Change, Environmental Contaminants, and Ecosystem Health in the Maya Forest Region of Mesoamerica”

The new grant program underscores the Club's commitment to "explore, discover, share, preserve, and sustain" the Earth and its creatures. “Specifically, The Explorers Club and corporate sponsor Eddie Bauer look to support young scientists early in their careers, as well as established explorers working in remote climes on the cutting-edge of discovery,” said Explorers Club President Lorie Karnath, MBA, Ph.D. (hon.).

Said Neil Fiske, president and CEO of Eddie Bauer, “Eddie Bauer has been an important part of The Explorers Club long before this grant program was conceived. Members have relied upon Eddie Bauer gear and apparel for decades to survive some of the most extreme climates on Earth. We each share a mission to promote a spirit of adventure and discovery, and we are proud to support both the current and next generation of explorers as they extend the frontiers of knowledge and geography,” said Fiske.
(For more information: www.explorers.org, www.eddiebauer.com)

ON THE HORIZON

Steger North Pole Reunion Celebrates 25th Anniversary, May 15, 17, 2011

Has it really been that long? On May 1, 1986, the Steger International Polar Expedition went down in history for making the first confirmed dogsled journey to the North Pole, without being re-supplied along the way. A 25th anniversary reunion, organized in conjunction with the Will Steger Foundation, will be held for team members, including Minnesotans Will Steger, Paul Schurke and Ann Bancroft. A North Pole ’86 Expedition Family Day will be held May 15 from 12 to 4 p.m. at the Minnesota History Center in St. Paul. The 25th anniversary reunion is May 17, also at the History Center. (For more information: www.willstegerfoundation.org).




EXPEDITION CLASSIFIEDS

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EXPEDITION NEWS is published by Blumenfeld and Associates, Inc., 28 Center Street, Darien, CT 06820 USA. Tel. 203 655 1600, fax 203 655 1622, editor@expeditionnews.com. Editor/publisher: Jeff Blumenfeld. Assistant editor: Jamie Gribbon. ©2011 Blumenfeld and Associates, Inc. All rights reserved. ISSN: 1526-8977. Subscriptions: US$36/yr. available by e-mail only. Credit card payments accepted through www.paypal.com. Read EXPEDITION NEWS at www.expeditionnews.com. Enjoy the EN blog at www.expeditionnews.blogspot.com.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Students on Ice Announces 10th Anniversary Event, May 6-8



The Students on Ice Polar Ambassador Summit will celebrate over a decade of SOI Alumni accomplishments in Ottawa, Canada, at the Canadian Museum of Nature from May 6-8, 2011.

Dates: Friday, May 6 - Sunday, May 8, 2011

Location: The Canadian Museum of Nature, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

Registration fee: $50 CAD (to be paid at registration on May 7, includes the cost of your lunch, dinner and evening celebration)

Questions: alumni@studentsonice.com / 1.866.336.6423

Web: www.studentsonice.com | www.uantarctic.org

Monday, April 11, 2011

Jeff Lowe's Pack Recovered After 20 Years on the Eiger



In 1991, after 9 harrowing days on the North Face of the Eiger, American climber Jeff Lowe abandoned his backpack when he couldn't find any anchors at the end of his rope. Lowe untied and left the rope and his backpack behind as he free soloed the last 50 feet to the summit ridge where he was plucked off the mountain by a helicopter, just hours before a big storm would engulf the great North Face.

On Mar. 25, Josh Wharton spent over two hours chopping Lowe's pack out of the ice and snow, high up on the North Face of the Eiger. Lowe was anxious to see the condition of the pack after 20 years on the mountain. Wharton delivered the frozen, weather worn pack to Lowe on the deck of the Bellevue Hotel at Kleine Scheidegg, Switzerland.

Lowe was relieved to have this bit of unfinished business taken care of after all these years. Leaving the pack was contrary to Lowe’s Alpine Style ascents, but necessary for his own survival on that day.

Lowe was in the region filming Metanoia on the North Face of the Eiger (see EN, January, 2011). Support and sponsorship is still needed to complete the film. (For more information: see the video clip at http://vimeo.com/21548239; www.jefflowemovie.com).

The contents of the pack provide insight into what every good climber carried 20 years ago:

• 1 white Scott motorized goggles (a fan for defogging)
• 1 Thermarest stuff sack
• 6 Mazda AA alkaline batteries
• 1 Vau De prototype jacket designed by Jeff Lowe
• 1 Pair of wool socks
• 1 carabiner
• 1 small black stuff sack
• 1 pair glove liners
• 1 pair very thin/light glove liners
• 1 medium blue stuff sack
• 1 lithium battery dated 1/91
• 1 Black Diamond Red Lithium Battery Headlamp
• 1 Medium sized food bag (pretty trashed, but one Mars Bar and one snickers bar remained intact)
• 1 small black stove bag
• 1 large pink stuff sack for pots
• 1 hanging stove made by Jeff Lowe
• 2 nested pots, oxidized through on one side
• 1 potholder
• 1 small purple plastic cup
• 1 Ziploc bag
• 1 fuel canister
• 1 16 oz. white plastic Nalgene pee bottle
• 1 small zip lock with small roll of TP intact
• 1 compass
• 1 silver insulated water bottle bag
• 1 large purple stuff sack
• 1 medium blue stuff sack
• 1 pink and beige zippered side pocket
• 1 small pouch with repair kit
• 1 small clear plastic box with assorted safety pins (10+)
• 1 small tube sun cream
• 1 small film canister with a tissue and 3 pills - disintegrating
• 1 glasses case w/signature Jeff Lowe glasses, large, thick lenses w/Croakies
• 1 small can of vitamin C tabs
• 1 2” roll of medical tape
• 1 cut off 8” metal mill bastard file
• 1 extra ice pick (unattached)
• 1 hammerhead (unattached)
• 1 shovel head
• 1 green HelSport one man bivy tent with poles
• 1 black Vau De compression stuff sack
• 1 pink and purple Vau De sleeping bag (still frozen)