EXPEDITION NOTES
 
Citizen of the World is a very highly modified Twin Turbine Commander 900
Citizen of the World Aircraft Expedition Aims For the Poles
An aircraft titled Citizen of the World,
 began the call of adventure last November on a six-month 26,000 
nautical mile flight that will, according to its chief pilot, connect 
the South Pole and the North Pole and everyone in between on a mission 
of global peace. 
The
 aircraft is a very highly modified Twin Turbine Commander 900 with 
predator drone engines, custom 5-bladed nickel-tipped scimitar composite
 props, and a sophisticated avionics suite. The Citizen is intended to complete a Polar Circumnavigation this year.    
Pilot
 Robert DeLaurentis, 54, with the help of 95 sponsors, hopes to generate
 greater awareness for aviation safety, technology and education. 
According to DeLaurentis, author of Zen Pilot: Flight of Passion and the Journey Within
 (Flying Thru Life Publications, 2016), new technology is an integral 
part of the expedition, creating first-time records and science 
experiments, such as:
*    Citizen of the World
 is reportedly the first aircraft in history to be tracked globally with
 the new Aireon Space-Based ADS-B Flight Tracking using the Iridium NEXT
 Satellite Constellation of 66 satellites that have just come online. 
*    Citizen will also reportedly be the first aircraft in history to use biofuels to fly over the North and South Poles.
*  
  The aircraft will be carrying two science and technology experiments 
onboard including a proof-of-concept Wafer Scale Spacecraft for NASA, as
 well as a plastics/microfibers collection experiment for Scripps 
Institution of Oceanography. 
Celebrity ride-alongs are being sought to add to the project's global brand impact.
DeLaurentis, who resides in San Diego, reports in his latest blog on Dec.16, 2019, successfully completing the project's South Pole flight from Ushuaia, Argentina, in just under 18 hours. "It was a very challenging flight which included loss of navigation many times, extreme weather, the risk of fuel gelling, pilot fatigue and shortage of fuel." Learn more at:
A documentary is planned. See the teaser here:
 
Gregg Treinish wants your roadkill
Roadkill is Gold for Citizen-Scientists  
Wherever
 explorers and adventurers travel these days, there are scientists and 
researchers back home desperate for hard-to-obtain environmental data 
that would otherwise be unavailable for conservation.
That's
 the premise behind the formation of Adventure Scientists (AS) in 2011, a
 nonprofit that equips partners with data collected from the outdoors 
that are crucial to addressing environmental and human health 
challenges. As such, it serves as an invaluable connection between the 
conservation and outdoor communities.
Founder
 Gregg Treinish of Bozeman, Montana, spoke to the public last month at 
the Fjallraven store in Boulder, Colorado, and explained that AS studies
 some of the world's most pressing issues where the collection of field 
data is crucial. Data collection can be expensive, time consuming, and 
physically demanding, which limits the role that science currently plays
 in the conservation process. Adventure Scientists tackles this problem 
by recruiting, training and managing individuals with strong outdoor 
skills - such as mountaineering, diving or whitewater kayaking - and 
empowering them to retrieve hard-to-obtain data from the far corners of 
the globe.
Take
 the crisis of microplastics, pollution you can't actually see without a
 microscope. Adventure Scientists has created one of the largest 
libraries of microplastic pollution in the world, according to Treinish,
 who conceived of the idea of conducting field research while hiking the
 Appalachian Trail. "I decided I wanted to dedicate my life to service 
and do it outdoors," he told the chapter. "I finally felt I was using my
 outdoor skill set to make a difference."
The
 problem of wildlife-vehicle collisions is global. AS asked cyclists, 
runners and long-distance walkers to make roadkill observations to aid 
transportation officials and protect the lives of humans and wildlife.
As
 part of its timber tracking initiative, the group also collects samples
 of bigleaf maples to build a genetic reference library to help confirm 
that the wood, popular in guitar making, is harvested legally. The 
tonewood is highly prized for its complex beautiful grain, to the extent
 that poachers are illegally cutting down bigleaf maples in the Pacific 
Northwest.
National Geographic named Treinish an Adventurer of the Year in 2008 when he and a friend completed a 7,800-mile trek along the spine of the Andes Mountain Range. Since then he has undertaken several epic long-distance treks, served as a field technician on diverse expeditions, and guided others to experience the wild firsthand.
The
 list of Adventure Scientists projects is extensive, all supported by 
hikers, bikers, skiers, and photographers from all walks of life who 
have chosen to make a difference by donating their time in the field. 
Learn more at:
EXPEDITION FUNDING
 
Explorers Club Explores Relationship with Discovery Channel
Many Explorers Club members were caught unawares earlier this month when a confidential board document was leaked to the New York Post. According to the Jan. 2 story by investigative reporter Melissa Klein, The Discovery Channel is contemplating a multi-million dollar, multi-year relationship with the New York-based Club established in 1904.
The story reports Discovery would provide the Club with 
approximately $1 million a year for a fund that would support 
exploration. Some $2 million will be spent to renovate the headquarters 
building; and $300,000 per year would be paid to rename the Club's 
headquarters located in a 1910 Jacobean townhouse on the Upper East 
Side. The building is currently named for former Club member and 
renowned broadcaster Lowell Thomas (1892-1981).
News of the proposed deal, which is still under negotiation, was 
generally well received by the members we spoke to, with the exception 
of strong pushback over renaming the building.
In a Jan. 15 letter to members signed by president Richard Wiese, 
Development Committee Chair Richard Garriott, and Dr. Janet L. Walsh, 
Chair of Ethics and Governance, the Club emphasized that it has a team 
of experts working on this sponsorship.
"Our Club's most outstanding leaders including members of our 
Board, our Club's attorneys (including expert outside attorneys), media 
and television specialists, communication professionals and tax experts -
 all (are) working to make a potential Discovery sponsorship a 
beneficial relationship for each of our members. From our perspective, 
this team's attention to detail, dedication to the Club's mission, 
vision, and values, has been indispensable to Club stewardship," the 
letter states.
It continues, "At the root of any of our 
existing sponsorships is our ability to provide expedition funding for 
our members, advancement of our Club's mission and support for youth 
activities and grants. .... at no time would we ever compromise our 
mission, our vision, and the values we hold as a Club."
If it goes through, this would be a win for both Discovery
 - which seeks more awareness and exclusive content - and the Club which
 would receive welcome revenue - possibly upwards of $20 million this 
decade - to continue its support of exploration.
The
 media giant has a successful history supporting exploration-related 
nonprofits including an almost 20-year relationship with the Lowell 
Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, where Pluto was famously discovered. 
In that sponsorship deal, the media company provided major funding to 
build the 4.3-meter Discovery Channel Telescope (DCT) near Happy Jack, 
Arizona.
The DCT project got underway in 2003, when Discovery
 founder and former CEO John Hendricks proposed what would become a $16 
million gift to Lowell Observatory from his foundation and from 
Discovery Communications. In return, Discovery received naming rights to
 the telescope and first right of refusal to use images from the 
telescope in their online and broadcast educational programming. As of 
last year it was the fifth largest telescope in the continental U.S. (https://lowell.edu/research/research-facilities/4-3-meter-dct/)
Full disclosure: EN editor and publisher Jeff Blumenfeld is a member of The Explorers Club. 
 
QUOTE OF THE MONTH 
"When asked if I am pessimistic or optimistic about the future, my answer is always the same: If you look at the science about what is happening on earth and aren't pessimistic, you don't understand the data. But if you meet the people who are working to restore this earth and the lives of the poor, and you aren't optimistic, you haven't got a pulse."
"When asked if I am pessimistic or optimistic about the future, my answer is always the same: If you look at the science about what is happening on earth and aren't pessimistic, you don't understand the data. But if you meet the people who are working to restore this earth and the lives of the poor, and you aren't optimistic, you haven't got a pulse."
-
 Paul Hawken (1946 -), American environmentalist, entrepreneur, author, 
and activist.  Source: Commencement Address to the Class of 2009, 
University of Portland (Oregon).   
MEDIA MATTERS 
 
 
PBS Born to Explore Renewed 
Born
 to Explore hosted by Richard Wiese, a half-hour television series 
produced by Explorer Films, LLC, in partnership with WGBH Boston, has 
been renewed for its eighth season. The show travels worldwide to 
celebrate world cultures, encounter rare and endangered wildlife and 
discover the wonders of the planet. 
Wiese
 and co-executive producer Mercedes Velgot have produced over 200 shows 
and has received two Daytime Emmy Awards and 14 Emmy nominations, as 
well as 35 Telly Awards, 4 Parents' Choice Awards and a CINE Golden 
Eagle. Primary funding is provided by Aggressor Adventures. 
Earlier this month, The Explorers Club announced that Wiese was re-elected president by its Board of Directors. This will be his third term in that leadership role.
Learn more about the show here:
 
Folds and grooves still visible in this 2,600-year-old brain. Photo: York Archaeological Trust 
He Lost His Head; Researchers Find it 2,600 Years Later 
Nearly
 2,600 years ago, a man was beheaded near modern-day York, in northeast 
England - for what reasons, no one  knows - and his head was quickly 
buried in the clay-rich mud. When researchers found his skull in 2008, 
they were startled to find that his brain tissue, which normally rots 
rapidly after death, had survived for millennia  - even maintaining 
features such as folds and grooves, writes Rodrigo Pérez Ortega in Science Magazine (Jan. 7, 2020). 
Now,
 researchers think they know why. Two structural proteins - which act as
 the "skeletons" of neurons and astrocytes - were more tightly packed in
 the ancient brain. In a year-long experiment, they found that these 
aggregated proteins were also more stable than those in modern-day 
brains. In fact, the ancient protein clumps may have helped preserve the
 structure of the soft tissue for ages, the researchers reported earlier
 this month in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface (https://royalsocietypublishing.org)
Read the story here:
 Borge Ousland and Mike Horn. (Photo courtesy Borge Ousland)
Borge Ousland Says "Leave Your Fears Behind"
Borge Ousland is the first person to have completed an unsupported solo crossing of the Antarctic via the South Pole. Last month, Ousland, 57, and fellow explorer Mike Horn, 53, completed a grueling, 87-day expedition across the Arctic Ocean in the dark of the polar night, experiencing temperatures below minus 40 F.
Borge Ousland is the first person to have completed an unsupported solo crossing of the Antarctic via the South Pole. Last month, Ousland, 57, and fellow explorer Mike Horn, 53, completed a grueling, 87-day expedition across the Arctic Ocean in the dark of the polar night, experiencing temperatures below minus 40 F.
In an interview with Jim Clash, contributor to Forbes.com
 (Jan. 8) Ousland says, "Mike and I wanted to do a classical, old-style 
polar expedition, crossing the North Pole by entering and exiting the 
ice by boat. The last time this was tried was when Fridtjof Nansen and 
Hjalmar Johansen left the polar ship Fram in 1895. Nansen and Johansen 
did not, however, reach the North Pole, so this challenge remained 
undone up to now. It was a battle from day one, but we made it 
unsupported.
"No
 one has completed a trek across the polar ocean in this style before, 
and no one has done an expedition up there that time of year. We probed 
unknown territory, so to speak."
When
 asked how he managed fear, Ousland replies, "You have to leave your 
fears behind on a trip like this. The focus is on survival. There is 
only room for that fear that keeps you safe and alive, and that helps 
you deal with immediate danger. We were beyond rescue for most of this 
trip, and wouldn't have made it if we were going to be afraid all the 
time." 
Read the story here:
EXPEDITION MARKETING
  Guide Service Celebrates 100th Polar Expedition
For years we've met amateur adventurers who say they've skied to the North or South Pole, while in reality what they accomplished was the so-called "Last Degree" about 60 nautical miles. We often congratulate them for the effort, while cautioning them to qualify their claims for the sake of their own credibility.
One company that has led exactly 100 Last Degree amateur expeditions to date is Chicago-area-based PolarExplorers. In a recent promotional email to EN, they proudly announce that despite strong winds, limited visibility and extremely cold temperatures, a five-person international team reached the South Pole on Jan. 12.
The team skied the Last Degree of latitude from 89° degrees S to 90 degrees S. This 60 nautical mile (111 km) journey was the second polar expedition for four of the five team members who have already skied the Last Degree to the North Pole.
Annie Aggens, director of PolarExplorers, points out that the South Pole is more predictable than skiing across the frozen sea that surrounds the North Pole. "There is no open water within hundreds and hundreds of miles of the South Pole. There is no ocean drift. Where you fall asleep is where you wake up. And there are no polar bears."
Another important difference is that while there is nothing at the North Pole, the South Pole is home to the permanent Amundsen Scott South Pole Station as well as a small seasonal basecamp for explorers who arrive by ski. PolarExplorers guide Keith Heger adds, "It's incredibly satisfying to see the station appear like a small dot on the horizon and to watch it get bigger knowing that it is your destination."
PolarExplorers organizes annual expeditions to the North Pole, South Pole, Greenland, Svalbard, Iceland and other destinations in the Arctic and Antarctic. Their 101st expedition will be to the North Pole in April. Their polar expeditions may be just 60 n.m., but it's still no walk in the park.
For more information: www.polarexplorers.com
EXPEDITION INK
 Labyrinth of Ice by Buddy Levy (St. Martin's Press, December 2019)
Reviewed by Robert F. Wells
A bit of context. As a teenager in 1861, Adolphus W. Greely enlisted in the 19th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. Soon, his mind was marinated with imagery of the horrific battle at Antietam. Then he was off to the Dakota Territory in the early 1870's as the country's top meteorologist - while the world became enveloped in the financial crash of 1873.
In
 1879, a good friend, George DeLong, commander of the ship USS 
Jeannette, was lost without a trace while on an attempted voyage to the 
North Pole. In the face of this backdrop, Greely set off on a 
revolutionary scientific mission in 1881 to reach "Farthest North" - and
 establish a critical weather station as part of an "International Polar
 Year (IPY)" effort.
Early goings were routine. "Leads," or sea lanes of navigable water, brought the expedition through dreaded Melville Bay - known as a "mysterious region of terror." An outpost dubbed Fort Conger was set up as polar darkness settled in... and by mid-May of 1882, the goal of "Farthest North" was achieved. Along the way, impressive scientific data was recorded. Then all hell broke loose. It lasted for literally two more years.
Resupply missions never arrived - thanks in part to Secretary of War, Robert Todd Lincoln, who thought Arctic exploration was an utter waste of money. Greely's ship Proteus was "nipped" in ice, crushing its hull and sending it to the bottom. A "devil's symphony" of grinding ice from colossal paleocrystic floes relentlessly taunted the crew with combinations of moaning, thunder and shrieking. Temperatures often plummeted to minus 50 degrees F. Gales became norms.
Early goings were routine. "Leads," or sea lanes of navigable water, brought the expedition through dreaded Melville Bay - known as a "mysterious region of terror." An outpost dubbed Fort Conger was set up as polar darkness settled in... and by mid-May of 1882, the goal of "Farthest North" was achieved. Along the way, impressive scientific data was recorded. Then all hell broke loose. It lasted for literally two more years.
Resupply missions never arrived - thanks in part to Secretary of War, Robert Todd Lincoln, who thought Arctic exploration was an utter waste of money. Greely's ship Proteus was "nipped" in ice, crushing its hull and sending it to the bottom. A "devil's symphony" of grinding ice from colossal paleocrystic floes relentlessly taunted the crew with combinations of moaning, thunder and shrieking. Temperatures often plummeted to minus 50 degrees F. Gales became norms.
Meanwhile,
 the crew abandoned Fort Conger with its shelter and supplies to seek 
help farther south at Cape Sabine. Suffering was severe. Frostbite was 
common. Food ran out. At one point, the crew sat down to a meal of "a 
stew composed of a pair of boot soles, a handful of reindeer moss, and a
 few rock lichens."  All drifted in and out of deliriousness... as 19 
died. And all hope nearly died with them.
Copious notes somehow survived - which became the chronicle narrated in this book. The acute misery of each day splayed out, page after page. The tale is brutal, as men slipped into unconsciousness and beyond to death. Then, miraculously, a rescue mission in July 1884 found seven survivors clinging onto wisps of life, and brought them home. Commander Greely survived.
Copious notes somehow survived - which became the chronicle narrated in this book. The acute misery of each day splayed out, page after page. The tale is brutal, as men slipped into unconsciousness and beyond to death. Then, miraculously, a rescue mission in July 1884 found seven survivors clinging onto wisps of life, and brought them home. Commander Greely survived.
And
 after a short burst of acidic press claiming rumors of cannibalism 
during the venture, Greely survived to become a richly-deserved hero. He
 carried on for decades  - giving speeches (where he never accepted a 
penny, in deference to those who died at Cape Sabine) ... and he was one
 of the founders of both the National Geographic Society and the 
Explorers Club.
If you want excitement, as recreated three decades later by Sir Ernest Shackleton's venture in Antarctica, this is your book. Just make sure you've got your "woolies" on.
Robert F. Wells, a member of The Explorers Club since 1991, is a resident of South Londonderry, Vt., and a retired executive of the Young & Rubicam ad agency. Wells is the director of a steel band (www.blueflamessteelband.com) and in 1989, at the age of 45, traveled south by road bike from Canada to Long Island Sound in a single 350-mile, 19-hr., 28-min. push.
ON THE HORIZON
If you want excitement, as recreated three decades later by Sir Ernest Shackleton's venture in Antarctica, this is your book. Just make sure you've got your "woolies" on.
Robert F. Wells, a member of The Explorers Club since 1991, is a resident of South Londonderry, Vt., and a retired executive of the Young & Rubicam ad agency. Wells is the director of a steel band (www.blueflamessteelband.com) and in 1989, at the age of 45, traveled south by road bike from Canada to Long Island Sound in a single 350-mile, 19-hr., 28-min. push.
ON THE HORIZON
 
New York Wild Film Festival, Feb. 27-March 1, 2020, New York City 
Through
 powerful, exhilarating films and conversations, the festival presents 
an opportunity to exchange ideas, celebrate the wild and effect change. 
New York Wild is a platform to create excitement, identify critical 
issues, build partnerships, and reach audiences that care about 
exploring, discovering and protecting our planet.
The
 kick-off reception at The Paley Center for Media is Feb. 27; film 
showings begin Feb. 28 at The Explorers Club, 46 E. 70th Street, New 
York, and continue through the afternoon of March 1. There's also a 
special showing of family-friendly films for ages 7-plus that Sunday 
afternoon. 
For more information:
 AAC Annual Benefit Weekend, March 13-15, 2020, Denver
The
 American Alpine Club will host the 2020 Annual Benefit Dinner (ABD) 
weekend March 13-15, 2020 in Denver. Since 1902, the Annual Benefit 
Dinner has served to convene the climbing community and garner support 
for the Club's work around the protection of wild places.
This
 year's ABD will be presented by Patagonia and will feature a keynote by
 Kris McDivitt Tompkins, Former CEO of Patagonia and current president 
of Tompkins Conservation. 
Tompkins is a longstanding defender of wild places and a champion for the planet.  
She
 will speak March 14, 2020, at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts
 (1101 13th St, Denver). She and her late husband Doug Tompkins turned 
millions of acres across Chile and Argentina into National Parks in an 
effort to restore and re-wild landscapes. 
For more information:
EXPEDITION CLASSIFIEDS
 Space Available for John Huston's Ski Expedition to Svalbard
Colorado polar explorer John Huston is organizing a short expedition March 15-22, 2020, to Svalbard, Norway - a scenic mountainous archipelago located in the North Sea at 78 degrees N. His co-leader is long-time friend and expedition colleague Harald Kippenes, a Norwegian who owns and operates Yourway Adventures & Expeditions.
Harald
 and John have worked closely together since 2005 when they were 
teammates re-staging Roald Amundsen's race to the South Pole for a BBC/History Channel film production. 
The
 route is stunning - beginning east of Longyearbaen, travel is via 
stunning glaciers, mountain passes, and mountain-lined valleys and ends 
back in town. There is a chance of northern lights occurring. 
Participants will sleep in tents and haul sleds with all the necessary 
gear and food. 
Huston
 is a professional polar explorer and veteran of the first American 
unsupported expedition to the North Pole. He has completed major 
expeditions to the South Pole, on Greenland, and to Canada's fabled 
Ellesmere Island.  
Cost is $4,750 pp. For more information: http://www.johnhuston.com/svalbard  
