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Home / World

Family to follow in Shackleton's steps

Independent
12 Aug, 2008 05:00 PM3 mins to read

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Ernest Shackleton. Photo / Supplied
Ernest Shackleton. Photo / Supplied

Ernest Shackleton. Photo / Supplied

KEY POINTS:

Exactly 100 years since the British polar explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton travelled further south than any human being, his and his team's descendants are to follow in his footsteps and undertake the gruelling 1448.48km trek to the South Pole - on foot.

On October 29, 1908, Shackleton set out to become the first man to reach the South Pole. Two months later, after travelling south in severe weather conditions with temperatures dropping below -30C, the group, running perilously low on food, decided it would be too dangerous to continue and turned back. They were 156km short of their target. Three years later, the Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen succeeded where Shackleton failed.

On his return to Britain, Shackleton was hailed a hero and awarded a knighthood for his achievements.

Now, relatives of that expedition will attempt to follow the same route, setting off exactly 100 years to the day since that great trek, and attempt to finish a journey their ancestors first took. It will be led by Lieutenant Colonel Henry Worsley, a descendent of Frank Worsley, who was Shackleton's skipper.

Accompanying him will be Henry Adams, a great-grandson of Jameson Boyd Adams, and Will Gow who, inspired by a desire to unite Shackleton's descendants at the pole, came up with the idea of recreating the voyage. Mr Gow is related to Shackleton by marriage.

They will be joined by three further team members in January next year for the final 156km trek to the point that cruelly evaded Shackleton and his men. This team will include Shackleton's great-grandson, Patrick Bergel, David Cornell, another great-grandson of Jameson Boyd Adams, and Tim Fright, the great-great-nephew of Frank Wild.

In preparation, the team has spent months training in Greenland, Scotland and Norway. Henry Adams, a shipping lawyer, said: "I didn't know what to expect when I began. It takes so long just to get from A to B. A lot of the places we've trained in so far have such massive panoramic scenes in front of you, you feel like you're not really moving.

You get lost in [taking] one step after another. Training has taken over most of our lives outside work. Every holiday for the last two years has been an expedition holiday; there has been no time with my wife and 18-month-old baby."

Unlike the original team who travelled with eight ponies - all of which died during the expedition - this team will pull 136kg sledges for 10 hours a day. As well as endless amounts of porridge, one small but important token from the original trip will be going to the Antarctic: "We want to take Shackleton's compass - the original compass - to the South Pole," said Mr Adams.

In 1914, on his return to the South Pole, Shackleton would become celebrated for his part in one of the most heroic rescue missions undertaken.

His expedition became stranded in ice which broke up their ship, Endurance. They took refuge on Elephant Island where the men lived in upturned life boats while Shackleton and five others sailed 483km across the world's roughest, coldest seas in an open boat to the remote island of South Georgia.

They crossed the icy mountain terrain on foot to reach a whaling station and find rescue for his men - who, by the time rescue arrived, had been stranded for almost two years.

- INDEPENDENT

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