National
Geographic Adventure Magazine November, 2007
Out of a
possible score of 100, Polar Explorers ranks 94 (placing it 19
out of 160+ outfitters in the "Overall" category).
Rated by category, PolarExplorers achieves the following scores
(each category has a scale of 1-100):
- Client Experience
-100
- Education - 95
- Spirit of Adventure
- 95
- Sustainability - 90
- Quality of Service
- 90
"Nearly
every PolarExplorers trip hits the North or South Pole--and one
expedition even goes to both. Clients learn about Polar history,
ecology, and conservation methods, and receive fitness-training
advice before they head out. One option is to participate in the
"Polar Shakedown" trip in Ely, Minnesota, to get schooled
in how to cook and load a dogsled in the extreme cold. PolarExplorers
pays homage to its forefathers with nightly campfire readings of
the writings of Robert Peary, Fergus Fleming, and Will Steger...."
National Geographic
Adventure's Methodology
"With assistance from the Adventure Council, Adventures in
Travel Expo, the Adventure Travel Trade Association, and other travel
and tourism organizations, we reached out to hundreds of tour companies
around the world. The outfitters were asked to complete a comprehensive
28-question survey and were scored from 1 to 100 in each of the
following categories:
Education and Interpretation:
This score reflects how effectively a company provides educational
and interpretative information to trip participants about the geology,
history, wildlife, cultures, etc., for the places in which it operates.
Sustainability: How a company runs its trips often means
the difference between tourism that safeguards a regions cultural
and natural heritage and tourism that serves as a threat to the
chosen destination. This score indicates how engaged the company
is with sustainable tourism practices.
Quality of Service: This score represents the level of customer
service that a company offers, from the nature of interactions with
each client to the quality of gear provided for sport-specific trips
and general amenities.
Spirit of Adventure: From trying new food to visiting exotic
locations, there are many ways for todays active traveler
to experience adventure. This score reflects how effectively a company
brings the spirit of adventure to each trip itinerary.
Client References: Researchers contacted client references
for every company and generated a fifth score, also between 1 and
100, based on their feedback.
Each outfitters
overall score represents the average of these five scores.
A team of Adventure editors,
travel writers, and experts vetted those with overall scores of
80 and above and, from this pool of candidates, chose the Best
Outfitters on Earth, 55 of which were profiled in the November
2007 issue of National Geographic Adventure. The rest are listed
online.

The Sunday
News-Register December 25, 2005
On Top
of the World
"...The planet Earth actually has two North Poles - a geographic
North Pole and a magnetic North Pole. The geographic pole, according
to About.com, is the northermost point on the Earth's surface, located
at 90 degrees north latitude. All lines of longitude converge at
the pole. The North and South Poles are connected by the planet's
axix, the line at which the Earth rotates.
Located
about 450 miles north of Greenland in the middle of the Arctic Ocean,
the geographic North Pole has six months of daylight and six months
of darkness. Sea ice usually covers the pole, but water has been
sighted there recently. Robert Peary and his partner, Matthew Henson,
are credited with being the first people to reach the North Pole
in 1909, along with four Inuit, indigenous arctic people. An American
nuclear submarine crossed the pole in 1958, and today dozens of
planes fly over the pole as they travel between continents.
The magnetic
North Pole differs from the geographic North Pole in that it is
in motion and has even switched places with the magnetic South Pole
at least a few times during the Earth's history, according to Wikpedia.
Published
reports indicate that the magnetic North Pole is in Canada now,
but remains in motion and could be in Siberia in 50 years if it
maintains its current course and speed. The magnetic pole is the
place to which magnetic compasses point from nearly any place on
Earth. The Earth's magnetic field is produced by the movement of
molten iron beneath the surface of the planet.
A company
known as The Northwest Passage with offices in Wilmette, IL offers
expeditions to the geographic pole, traveling by ski and/or dogsled.
The excursions leave from Longyearbyen, Norway, and require participants
to pitch in and help with setting up camp, cooking, tracking and
more. Following a champagne celebration upon reaching the North
Pole, a flight returns expeditioners to Norway, where they can take
a hot shower, have dinner and spend the night in a lodge.
A ski trip
covering one degree of latitude could be scheduled for the alternative
dates of April 16-27 in 2006 at a cost of $17,000. Company officials
recommend that participants have a high level of both skill and
physical fitness before embarking on such an expedition. Information
provided by the company states that SAS is the only commercial airline
flying in and out of Longyearbyen, and connections are made through
Oslo.
The trip
takes a total of 13 days, including a day of preparation and a flight
by chartered aircraft to a Russian research camp, from which the
ski trip will begin. For seven days, participants will travel by
ski and sled, four to ten hours a day. Campsites will be set up
along the way. Upon arrival at the pole, each person in the party
will be able to make a brief telephone call to any place in the
world.
The company
also offers a one degree dogsled and ski trip, between April 16-28
this spring for $22,500. A two degree trip, beginning as early as
April 11, costs $27,500.
Trips to
the North Pole by air also are available at costs from $9,500 to
$13,500. Participants will depart the same Russian research camp,
Borneo, aboard a helicopter. The craft will land at the pole for
a celebration similar to those of ski and dog sled excursions.
By Jennifer
Compston-Strough
Back
to top

Chicago
Tribune Sunday May, 8 2005
Vacation with Icy
Reception
The trip to the North Pole has gripped mankind since 1818
Annie Aggens stood at
the top of the world marveling at the frozen horizon of white stretching
for millions of acres. A step in any direction took her south. For
a moment, until the ice of the Arctic Ocean shifted, she was positioned
at the North Pole.
The brief visit to the
northernmost spot on the planet culminated a frigid two-week April
journey from Chicago. Aggens and six fellow travelers crossed open
leads that could plunge them into 12,000 feet of icy water, negotiated
rubble blocks of ice on skis and courted frostbite from a deadly
wind that threatened to freeze exposed flesh.
The effort expended added
to the satisfaction of reaching 90 degrees north. "When we
got there," says Aggens, 34, of Wilmette, "it was really
sweet."
The idea, the mystique,
the romance of the North Pole, has gripped mankind's psyche in earnest
at least since 1818 when the British sought a Northwest Passage
connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.
During her pause at the
Pole, Aggens, a student of Arctic history who trained by dragging
tires tied around her waist through city streets, let her mind drift
to past explorers who opened the path north. Ships were trapped
in cement-like ice and expeditions endured harsh winters while crews
perished from scurvy. All the while hardy leaders dreamed of fame,
glory and riches, of scientific and geographic revelations and of
history writing their names in capital letters.
Aggens thought of Elisha
Kent Kane, Charles Francis Hall, Fridtjof Nansen, Frederick Cook,
Matthew Henson and Robert Peary, and the controversy of 1909, when
the argument over who reached the North Pole first erupted.
Against that dramatic
backdrop, it seems somewhat curious that citizen adventurers of
the 21st Century, guided by firms such as the aptly named Northwest
Passage of Wilmette, now take vacations at the Pole. From the North
Shore to the North Pole.
Neither governmentally
nor militarily selected as in days gone by, clients willing to spend
$15,000-plus and committed to pushing their bodies 78 miles northward
in minus-35-degree cold, qualify. This is a holiday for those who
would rather recline on the white snow of the far north instead
of the white sands of the tropics.
Still, many find it surreal
the Pole is visited routinely.
"A lot of people
look at you for a while," Aggens says. "`Surely she doesn't
mean the North Pole.'"
`What's there?'
The North Pole is a moving
target in the Arctic Ocean. Unlike the South Pole, it is not on
land. It does not stay still, either, and frequently those who camp
near the Pole awake to find they have floated miles backward.
"The average adult
question is, `What hotel is there?'" says Rick Sweitzer, the
operator of Northwest Passage who has led groups to the North Pole
12 times since 1993.
Also commonly asked:
"What's there when you get there?" Except for flags tour
operators raise, it's snow and ice as far as the eye can see.
Sweitzer led the first
commercial trip to the North Pole when other adventure travel companies
thought the notion was outlandish.
"We asked people
to write wills," Sweitzer says. "It cost about $20,000
to get them to trust us with their lives."
Aided by expert musher
Paul Schurke of Ely, Minn., Sweitzer mapped out a plan recreating
Peary's last two degrees of latitude gain, or about 130 miles. Departing
from Resolute Bay in Northern Canada by dog team, the leaders guided
11 civilians to the Pole. It fulfilled a dream of Sweitzer's and
nobody died. The group partied with vodka and beer.
"We had a remarkable
adventure," says Sweitzer, now 50. "It was one of the
finer moments of my life, without a doubt. And I knew I was in business."
He was, but the game
has changed. Over the last decade, the starting point has moved
from Resolute to Siberia to Norway. The price soared to more than
$27,000, then dropped to $15,500 as the location changed. "Champagne
flights," taking those who merely wish to stand at the Pole
without fighting the elements, were added and cost $13,500.
Iridium phones are carried
for rescue protection. The method of approach now is skiing. There
are many competing guides of many nationalities jumping off from
a communal tent site at 89 degrees north called Borneo Base Camp.
This all reflects the age of the adventurer who wants more from
a vacation than a tan.
Bill Burd, 61, a Chicago
coin dealer, went north in 2003 because the Arctic fascinated him.
He spent six days skiing 60 miles in minus-20 weather and was unfazed.
"You start acclimating to the weather," Burd says. "You
actually start sweating." His reaction upon arrival at the
Pole? "Wow, I'm really here," Burd says.
Burt Meyer, 79, a retired
toy inventor from Downers Grove, lost 15 pounds in 15 days in 1995
despite eating 6,000 calories daily.
In his family, he was
"kind of a hero," Meyer says. Acquaintances weren't impressed.
"They said, `You're an idiot and you're back and we're glad
to see you.' No one else ever went on my recommendation," he
says.
Those who go, Sweitzer
says of the approximately 80 clients he has guided to the Pole on
the ice and about 80 more via champagne flights, are "big adventure
type-A's and polar aficionados. There's quite a bug."
April is the safe season.
Any stay beyond May 1 risks more spring breakup than is wise.
For those with a polar
passion, the ignorance of the many is baffling. Aggens, Sweitzer
and Burd all said the average Joe thinks the North Pole is in Alaska.
A century ago that geographic blind spot would be less common in
the general populace. The nation's biggest news was the quest for
the Pole and the competing expeditions of Cook and Peary.
Who's on first?
Nearly 100 years later,
no one is positive either Cook or Peary made it.
It is telling that only
a few weeks ago a team of adventurers completed a 37-day, 475-mile
mush to the Pole five hours faster than Peary to demonstrate it
was possible he did it as he said in 1909.
It is telling that only
a few weeks ago a new book called "True North" by Bruce
Henderson was released, offering a case that Cook might have made
it first in 1908. Cook, Henderson wrote, was victimized by a smear
campaign.
When Sweitzer heard Henderson's
premise he said, "Oh my God." That's because Cook's claim
was largely discredited 96 years ago and he has acquired few fresh
disciples. Cook's credibility is weakened more because his declaration
of climbing 20,320-foot Mt. McKinley first was shredded and years
later he was imprisoned for stock fraud.
In his seminal work,
"The Arctic Grail," the late Canadian historian Pierre
Berton called Cook "a con man" and "the prince of
losers" in Arctic exploration. Yet Cook made remarkable forays
into the Arctic and Antarctic and is supported by The Frederick
A. Cook Society, a non-profit organization aided by descendants.
The society believes history has treated Cook unfairly.
Peary's first-to-the-Pole
claim initially was applauded as the genuine article, although recent
examination of his diaries raised issues.
"I'm a Peary believer," Sweitzer says. "I have always
believed it. I believe it on faith."
Bert Peary Stafford,
a great-grandson of Peary's, is a 56-year-old history teacher in
Portland, Ore. Stafford says he thinks improved scientific sophistication
ultimately will prove Peary's assertion.
Stafford says he has been aware of the family fame "since I
was conscious. We had relics around the house. We had a polar bear
rug. I still have the admiral's sextant."
The Peary name carried
weight in Resolute when Stafford and his brother, Gregory Peary
Stafford, showed up in 1997 on a Sweitzer-led North Pole dogsled
trip. "I was treated like Robert Redford," Stafford says.
Every April 6, the anniversary
of Peary's recorded date at the North Pole, Stafford lectures his
five classes on his renowned relation. In Stafford's telling, Peary
makes it first.
Following in the footsteps
The wind was constantly
in their faces, cutting like a too-sharp razor. The temperature
plummeted to minus-35 and the windchill to minus-50.
"If you took your
mitts off for 30 seconds, your fingers got chilled immediately,"
says Keith Heger, 29, an outdoor winter recreation instructor from
Morton Grove. "It was cold. It was relentless. You're in your
tent and it's still cold."
Sweitzer, Aggens, Heger,
and four others skied together. Sweitzer, whose fingers annually
are frostbitten in the north, called it the coldest North Pole trip
he has taken. Even more surprising was the number of leads, or open-water
gaps in the ice. Some were 6 to 10 feet wide. They were like fences
guarding the Pole, Aggens says. "There was a lot more open
water than I thought there would be," says Kevin DeVries, 37,
of Pinckney, Mich., who runs a communications firm.
Only 1 1/4 miles from
the Pole, the team came upon a lead 100 feet wide. It was 4:30 p.m.
and, hoping the water would freeze overnight, the skiers camped.
The lead froze by morning. But the ice drifted south and an expected
hour sprint turned into five hours of hard slogging.
Heger packed a Santa
Claus outfit--hat, red pullover and white beard--to unveil at the
Pole, but the cold intimidated him. "It didn't get pulled out
of the bag," he says.
DeVries says he could
see how Peary or Cook might miss the Pole because a high tech GPS
told the Northwest Passage team it was on the right spot only for
seconds. "It's elusive," DeVries says.
Aggens knew where she
was. Stinging hands and numbness in her face provided a North Pole
welcome.
"The [explorers]
had it tough," she says. "But we didn't have it so easy
either. We had to work for it."
Peary and Cook returned
to civilization seeking recognition for eternity. Aggens returned
to Chicago with her own Arctic Grail fulfilled and a different reward
in mind. "I'm going surfing in Florida," she says.
-Written by Lew
Freedman
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to top

The New York Times - February 6, 2005
Q & A
ON TOP OF THE WORLD
I would like to take
a trip to the North Pole. Are there agencies that organize these
trips? - Joseph M. Hassett, NY, NY
The North Pole and its
vast tracts of pack ice and polar wildlife have been a lure for
adventure travelers since Adm. Robert E. Peary made his way there
almost a century ago. Not many travelers expect to make the trip
in their lifetime, but a variety of options are available - none
cheap, though cheaper than some years ago - including travel by
icebreaker or helicopter or, for the intrepid, on foot, on skis
or by dogsled.
One company offering treks to the geographic North Pole at the 90th
parallel is The Northwest Passage, in Wilmette, IL, which pioneered
such trips in 1993. Rick Seitzer, Northwest Passage's founder, has
been more than a dozen times; group size for the trips has ranged
from 6 to 16, with ages from 16 to 69. This year, The Northwest
Passage is offering a Polar Ski trek (next year it will be part
dogsled) from remote Longyearbyen, on the island of Spitzbergen,
Norway, with up to eight hours of skiing a day from Borneo base
camp, at 89 degrees north latitude; on reaching the Pole, travelers
celebrate with champagne and photos and call home, then are picked
up by helicopter. The trip is set for April 9 to 21; $15,500 a person,
which includes some clothing and equipment. A Polar Shakedown trip
($2,500; April 5-9), a training session, is all but obligatory,
and makes the trip much more enjoyable, says Mr. Sweitzer. If such
a trek sounds too rigorous, you can take a Champagne Flight by helicopter
from the Borneo base camp, $11,500 to $14,000 (three to five days),
departing April 9 and 18. Information (800) 732-7328; www.northpole-expeditions.com.
Back
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The Christian Science
Monitor - February 17, 2004
Christopher Sweitzer
has been to the North Pole twice. The first time hardly counts,
though, since he was only 18 months old. As a fifth-grader last
April, he returned with his dad, Rick, whose adventure travel business
has been offering North Pole trips since 1993.
On his latest journey,
a 5 1/2 day trip, he arranged to call his classmates at Highcrest
Middle School in Wilmette, IL on a satellite phone. "The connection
was pretty good," says Chris, an outdoorsy 12-year-old who
likes to play soccer and baseball when not skiing.
Their trip was far shorter
than the one Robert Peary and Matthew Henson took in 1909 (see story
on facing page.) Chris traveled mostly by air.
He and his dad flew to
Spitzbergen, an island north of Norway. From there they took a Russian
charter flight (in a special plane designed to land on ice) to a
basecamp on the frozen Artic Ocean, 60 miles from the Pole. A helicopter
took them to within five miles of the Pole. They cross-country skies
the rest of the way. It took three hours.
The skiing was a lot
tougher than Chris was used to. He often had to get over tall pressure
ridges of ice. Another surprise was where they stayed. "I never
thought about having a base there, with big tents," he says.
Tents are used at the
oddly namced Camp Borneo (the island of Borneo is very hot and humid).
The camp is temporary. The Russians who run it set it up for several
weeks, usually in April. The camp requires a large, flat stretch
of solid ice at least three feet thick, so planes can land.
The tent Chris and his
dad stayed in was about 20 feet long, 10 to 15 feet high, and heated.
"It was pretty nice," he says, surely more comfortable
than outside, where the temperature was about minus 10 degrees F.
(and minus 25 at the Pole).
When Chris called his
classmates, they wanted to know what animals he'd seen. On the entire
trip, Chris saw only one seal. He didn't see any Polar Bears, which
was probably just as well, since they have been known to attack
humans.
Chris worked so hard
skiing the last miles to the Pole that his perspiration froze on
his face, Because it's so cold, rest stops are short and infrequent.
On the trips he leads, Rick Sweitzer says the group stops about
once an hour just long enough to give you a little nourishment.
"Every time you stop," Rick says, "it takes 15 minutes
to warm up when you start again."
When the Sweitzers' GPS
unit told them they had arrived at the "Pole," (there's
no actual marker), they found they had company. A group of runners
was competing in an extreme marathon, running (well, mostly walking)
around a one-kilometer loop. There was a five-hour limit, and only
a few contestants finished the race.
Chris watched - from
inside the heated helicopter that shuttled him and his dad back
to base camp. - by R.A.
Back to top
Daily Herald- December
17, 2003
Arctic Advice
To learn how to keep warm during a Chicago winter, we went to a
man who's broken a sweat at the North Pole.You step outside and
the biting cold attacks you. The wind charges, sending daggers into
your skin. The calendar says winter begins December 21, but your
toes have been numb for a month. Every winter, you freeze, curse,
and freeze some more. Before you head to Arizona, listen up: You
can beat the cold, providing you know how. Rick Sweitzer of Wilmette
has spent years perfecting the art of staying warm. For Sweitzer,
and explorer who's led expeditions to the North Pole since 1993,
it's not just about comfort, it's about survival. The same principals
that help him endure Arctic winds and bone-chilling temperatures
can keep you toasty when you're shoveling your car out from under
a 6 foot snow drift.
Think in layers: You'll
need three layers of clothing from head to toe, Sweitzer advises,
Start with the wicking layer. Everyone sweats (and with three layers
of clothing on, you will, too), but perspiration ot other wetness
can leave you feeling cold. Choose fabrics that wick moisture away
from your skin, such as silk or polypropylene long underwear, glove
liners, sockliners and balaclava (a face and head liner). Next,
pile on an insulating layer. Try a wool sweater or a polyester fleece
top and pants, plus socks, mittens and hat. For the third layer,
the wind and water shell layer, you'll need a warm parka and nylon
shell pants. It's all about the fabrics: Consider the pros and cons
of the various fabrics on the market. A down parka buys you more
warmth than a synthetic. However, if tou're caught in a heavy rain
and get soaked, down loses its insulating abiolity, while synthetics
retain theirs. For Chicago conditions, down with a nylon shell should
work. Whatever you do avoid wearing cotton next to the skin, says
Sweitzer, who can't shake the image of the adventurer whose cotton
underwear froze solid after he fell through the ice on a 1993 Arctic
Expedition. "Cotton is extremely undesirable," Sweitzer
says.
Even when it's cold out,
your feet sweat. A cotton sock will retain perspiration or other
moisture. making you feel colder. A silk, Capilene, polypropylene
or wool sock will wick moisture away. Try a wool sock over a silk
sock liner. An explorer's secre tricks: Sweitzer says little things
can help. In the Arctic, he wears a parka with drawstrings at the
waist and hem to seal out the cold. He takes a tip from the Inuit
and wears a fur-trimmed hood which blocks wind and wetness. If it
works for the Inuit, it can warm up your walk home from the train
tonight. - By Pam DeFiglio
Back
to top

August 11,
1996
To The End of the
Earth
Burt Meyer and Jim Gieske
have a lot in common. Both belong to an elite group of travelers
who have journeyed to the North Pole. But they didn't reach the
top of the world in the same way.
In April 1995, Meyer,
70, a retired toy designed from Downer's Grove, IL, subsisted on
a spartan diet as he traveled 11 miles a day for 15 days behind
a dogsled in biting, sub zero temperatures.
And if the daily discomfort
wasn't enough, there was always the danger of falling through ice,
succumbing to frostbite or attracting polar bears.
But Gieske, 58, a retired
surgeon from Easton, MD, expended little energy on a 15 day cruise
that departed from Murmansk, Russia, in August 1995. Warm and snug
on a Russian nuclear powered ice breaker, Yamal, he ate like a monarch
and slept like a baby.
Meyer paid $25,000 for
his torturous ride. Airfaire from Illinois to Resolute Bay in Canada's
Northwest Territorites, where the trip originated, was extra. Geiske
faired a lot better; he agreed to be Yamal's medical director, so
his trip was a freebie, and he saved about $18,000 for the cruise
as well as the cost of his flight to Murmansk.
Yet, both men joined
the ranks of adventurers and explorers who can boast they visited
the North Pole. Unlike the South Pole, which is land mass covered
by ice, the North Pole is nothing more than moving ice, a longitudinal
marking on a map.
But that has never stopped
explorers from trying to get there. And with the tries came dissapointment,
tradgedy and conflict. For example: in 1879, an attempt to reach
the North Pole by US Navy Lt. George Washington DeLong, ended in
starvation.
Then, in April 1909,
a jubilant Robert Peary, thought he had reached it overland and
exclaimed: "The Pole at last! The prize of three centuries,
my dream and ambition for 23 years. Mine at last. I cannot bring
myself to realize it." Some others couldn't bring themselves
to realize it, either, and eventually it was determined that he
had never reached the actual North Pole.
Then there was the American
polar explorer Adm. Richard E. Byrd, who, in 1926, was thought to
be the first person to fly over the North Pole. Today, critics discredit
the deed, contending that Byrd altered the data and was actually
150 miles short of his goal.
Let the debate rage over
who was first to reach the North Pole - Meyer insists he holds the
distinction of being the oldest person to trek there.
And Geneve Hein, 17,
of Oakbrook, IL, says she's the youngest. Hein, then 16, accompanied
Meyer and 12 others on last year's dogsledding trip to the Pole,
an expedition by The Northwest Passage, a Wilmette, IL based adventure
travel company.
Records aside, just saying
you've been to the North Pole is an accomplishment in its own right.
For openers, it's cold, very cold. And it's far. But the killer
problem in getting there is the expense.
The folks who set off
for the coldest spot on earth are typically well-heeled adventurers
who have been just about everywhere else. After experienceing the
North Pole, there aren't too many travel thrills left, say Pole
conquers. To use Meyers words, "It is the ultimate travel experience"
and is gaurenteed to turn heads at coctail parties.
Even if you have the
time and money, there aren't too many ways to get to the North Pole.
There's the brave-the-wilds route offered by The Northwest Passage;
the cruise-approach sponsored by Quark expeditions, based in Darien,
Conn.; or you can hook up with one of several companies that will
fly you to the Pole. The Northwest Passage has an 8-day air tour,
which leaves from Resolute Bay and includes stops at islands along
the way. It costs $9,480.
The first two options
are drawing the most takers. Quark has signed up passengers for
it's nuclear-powered cruise to the North Pole this month; and The
Northwest Passage is taking applications for two dogsledding expeditions
in April 1997. One is coed, the other is the first all-women's dogsledding
expedition.
If you have an aversion
to discomfort and no desire for physical overexertion, a comfy ice
breaker should be just right for you.
However, Meyer and Hein
insist The Northwest Passage's expedition is not half as bad as
it sounds. "They are a class act," says Meyer.
Founder Rick Sweitzer
of Wilmette, IL, 42, a former Peace Corps volunteer, has devoted
his life to wilderness travel. Besides the North Pole trek, The
Northwest Passage offers a smorgasbord of adventure travel trips,
including dogsledding in Canada's Northwest Territories, cycling
and rafting in New Zealand, and whitewater rafting in Cost Rica.
Putting romatic notions
aside, Sweitzer says dogsledding to the North Pole is not for the
average traveler. "You don't have to be a professional adventurer,
but it is clearly not for everyone," he says.
The Northwest Passage's
expedition requires physical prowess, athletic ability (you had
better bve a decent skier), team work and a good attitude, which
means no complaining or temper tantrums when you are half way there.
Once the Arctic is reached, there is no turning back.
So, to weed out weaklings
and stragglers, The Northwest Passage stages a shakdown trip in
the Boundary Waters of Minnesota, a week long simulation of the
North Pole trip. It gives takers a preview of what to expect and,
most important, to see if they can cut it.
That whopping $25,500
price tag (it has inched up another $500 for next year's North Pole
trip) includes boots, skis, rations, sleeping bags, team jackets
and airfare, accounting for 70% of the cost.
"Prior to the shakedown
trip, people don't have a clue what to expect," sayss Sweitzer.
"Once they see videos and preview what they can expect, they
see it as not as intimidating as they thought. They also gain confindence
in our experience."
Even with the shakedown
trip, videos and pep talks, the real thing is still light years
away from a stay in a five star hotel.
Meyer says he did it
because he's always had an appetite for off beat travel adventures.
He's already been to Africa, and, a couple of years ago, he biked
3,500 miles by himself from San Francisco to Charleston, SC, in
41 days. "It was no big deal," Meyer says. "It was
a tough trip, but I just took it one pedal push at a time."
Despite his age, Meyer
insists he had no problem keeping up with the rest of the group
on the dogsled trek. "It wasn't easy," he confesses, "but
you get used to it pretty quick."
Most days went like this:
wake up, fix breakfast (oatmeal), break down camp, get the 20 dogs
and 800 pounds of equipment ready, ski until lunch (beef jerky,
nuts, chocolate, cheese). Then, ski until dinner (stew with rice
or spaghetti). Eat, sleep, get up and start over. The goal was to
do at least 10 miles a day - no easy feat traveling on ice at 5
degrees below zero, which Meyer swears is warm for the North Pole.
"The hardest thing
was getting moving in the morning," he says. "Crawling
out of a warm sleeping bag at 7 AM was the toughest part. There
was a lot to do. It took about two hours before we got going."
There wern't any major
mishaps: Meyer pooh-poohed a temporary case of frostbite he got
when his gloves got wet.
But there were those
barren fields of blue ice crashing together, forming pressure ridges
up to 30 feet high, which had to be negotiated. "You have to
either get around them or across them," Meyer says. "You
can shoot an entire day dealing with the pressure ridges."
"Day" and "Night"
became meaningless terms for the trekkers because the North Pole
has 24 hours of sunlight. Nevertheless, no one in the group had
trouble sleeping after their long days.
There were also some
minor problems caused by moving ice. If it was drifting south -
the wrong direction - the trekkers lost ground as they slept.
And while the trip was
all about reaching the treacherous North Pole, Meyer and Hein said
reaching it was no big deal.
Says Meyer, "It
was almost a ficticous goal. The Pole is nothing. It's just another
chunk of ice. You're only standing at the North Pole for a few minutes
and then it moves. The whole thing is the trip, not the goal. It
is not like climbing Mount Everest or traveling to the South Pole,
where you go to a place. There is no place at the North Pole."
There aren't any signs
to announce that you've arrived. Only a handheld Global Positioning
System, a high tech devise about the size of a desk calculator that
takes satellite readings and is accurate up to 140 yards, tells
you that you are there.
Hardships and all, Hein
and Meyer swear the trip was worth the trouble. "It changed
my life," says Hein. "When I think back at what we accomplished,
everday hassles seem insignificant," she says. "Getting
to the Pole represents a major mileston in my life."
Beyond a feeling of accomplishment,
Meyer says the trip taught him a lot about group dynamics. "There
are no grandstanding heros when you are on an expedition like this,"
he says. "Even though you have to be self sufficient, each
person must learn how to succeed as part of a team. Besides the
personal triumph there is also a wonderful feeling knowing you did
it as a team."
Hein said that she would
go to the Pole again if she could find a sponsor. Her parents footed
the bill the first time; next time, she's on her own.
Meyer says he'd pass
on another trip. It's not because he's not up to it, it's that "life
is short and there are other travel adventures to taste," he
says. - By Bob Weinstein
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Palisadian
Post
Palisadian-Post
April 17, 2003
Veterinarian skis
through cold & wind to South Pole
With just two days left
on his journey to the South Pole, Scott Anderson got frostbite.
The temperature was minus
40 degrees, and the wind was coming directly at his face at 30 miles
per hour, creating a wind-chill approaching minus 100 degrees. Just
as in the previous 5 days of pulling a 100-pound sled towards the
South Pole, Anderson had spent most of the day slogging on cross-country
skis toward his destination with a guide and another traveler.
However, today the little
bit of explosed flesh around his mouth had not been able to fight
off the cold. His lower lip and left cheek froze. Fortunately, face
frostbite is generally more benign than frostbite on toes and fingers.The
frozen area soon formed a scab and within 10 days had healed completely.
In addition, while his face was mending, he got to take a look at
the place he had worked so hard to reach.
"After a week of
hard physical labor, to see the South Pole and flags, it was an
indescribable feeling - a sensation not to be repeated," said
Anderson, a veterinarian and 8-year Palisadian. "It was a combination
of amazement that I was really actually there, pleasure at having
done it...and relief that we were finally there and had a day to
relax."
Actually, beacuse of
bad weather, Anderson's group had four and a half days to hang out
at the South Pole before their plane ride home. Anderson spent much
of that time walking around the pole and reading, but he also placed
the Norwegian flag at the historic spot. The South Pole generally
shifts about to feet each year, he said, so he calculated the location
where the pole would have been when Norwegian Roald Amundsen became
the first person to reach it on December 14, 1911.
Like Amundsen, Anderson's
wife, Lisa, is Norwegian and also a "big admirer" of the
late explorer. She gave her adventuring husband a large Norwegian
flag to leave at the pole. Planting the flag caused him to think
about how much harder the original expedition had been than his
trip. To be the first to reach the South Pole, Amundsen lived for
about one and a half years in Antarctica and traveled about 700
miles by dogsled to get there.
In addition, "he
and his group had no possible way to get out of there other than
by their own strength and skill," Anderson said. "It was
a moving feeling to think about that."
This January, Anderson
flew most of the way to the pole and skied the final 69 miles. While
he was waiting for the plane ride home, another group arrived. This
crew was part of a diabetes fundraising expedition, which traversed
730 miles in 61 days, following the path of Robert F. Scott, the
ill-fated British explorer who arrived at the pole one month after
Amundsen and then perished on the trip home. In the modern journey,
Will Cross became the first person with diabetes to travel to the
South Pole.
Today when people reach
the pole, they find a scientific base, the Amundsen-Scott South
Pole Station, which Anderson could see from about 9 miles away because
the terrain is so flat. Otherwise, for the remaining miles he traveled,
all he saw was snow-covered flatness, although the land does vary
slightly in height. Sastrugi, gentle ridges ranging from 1 to 3
feet high, are a part of the wind blown terrain., and Anderson said
that although the short ridges don't "sound like much, when
you're pulling a sled and it's the end of the day, the ridges are
tiring and can tip your sled over."
A typical day of his
journey meant rising at 7 a.m. to boil water for morning oatmeal
and hot chocolate as well as for a thermos-full of lunchtime soup.
By 9:30 a.m. his group was skiing. throught the day, they would
never pause for much more than five minutes, because the weather
was too cold for standing still. When they stopped at about 6:15
p.m. each night, they would make a scheduled radio check-in call
and begin making camp. The three men would build a snow wall on
the windward side of their tent and then cook dinner inside before
falling asleep at about 9:30 p.m.
The inside of the tent
was warm, and the three generally took off their coats and wore
shirt-sleeves inside. Rick Sweitzer, the trip's guide from The Northwest
Passage company, had been to the North Pole about 10 times before,
but never to the South Pole, while Nikos Magitsis, also a first-timer,
became the first Greek to reach the North Pole, so he is a minor
celebrity in his country. Anderson plans to make his own North Pole
trip in the next few years.
Anderson noted that morning
and night looked the same in Antarctica, because in the summer season
the sun shines 24 hours a day. The penguins and marine life of the
coast are not present on the barren interior of Antarctica, and
he saw neither plants nor animals during the entire journey.
The weather was uniformly
cold. On cloudy days, the temperature dropped as low as minus 40
degrees, but even on warmer days, the temperature never rose above
minus 20 degrees, he said. Anderson kept his fingers warm with three
layers of gloves and sometimes up to four hand warmers per hand.
Such care is vital. A
guide from another pole-traveling group removed his gloves for less
than five minutes to help someone, and suffered frostbite on three
fingertips. Unlike Anderson's mild case, the guide was in danger
of losing his fingertips when anderson flew home. Such frostbite
problems had made Anderson acutely aware of keeping his hands warm,
and prior mountain climbing trips to places like Tibet had helped
him acquire the right clothing and training for the various strenous
aspects of the trip.
Although Antarctica is
covered with snow, it rarely snows more than 2 to 3 inches a year
there, he said. However, because the weather is so cold, the snow
never melts. Thus, the winds can create extreme whiteouts simply
by tossing the snow off the ground and into the air.
The wind is one of the
reasons air travel can be so difficult there. Anderson spent extra
days at the pole and had to forego a second planned journey to climb
Mt. Vinson, Antarctica's highest peak, because the windy weather
delayed the various legs of his journey. If he had attempted to
climb Mt. Vinson, weather delays might have then prevented his timely
return to his veterinary work at California Animal Hospital and
to his wife and their childern, Paul, 4, and Erik, 1. One previous
group was stuck at the Patriot Hills Base in Antarctica for six
weeks because of consistent wind whiteouts.
Anderson may never have
the opportunity to return to Antarctica and climb Mt. Vinson, but
that was the one regrettable note in an otherwise unforgettable
journey.
"My first glimpse
of the pole marker as we were approaching on our skis will stay
with me forever," he said. "It's a place I'm unlikely
to be again. Even if by some strange chance, I find myself there
again, to see it for the first time, and to have made it there myself
on skis, it's a feeling I don't think I will ever duplicate."
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Men's Journal-
April 2004
The 100 Best Trips
on the Planet
Want ot be on top of Everest with these guys? How about wreck diving
in the pacific, whitewater rafting in Patagonia, or skiing to the
South Pole? We chose the world's 50 best outfitters, and then asked
them about their coolest, newest most thrilling trips. Here's your
ticket to the experience of a lifetime.
The Northwest Passage
- This small, family run company offers an eclectic mix that reflects
the personal passions of its owner, Rick Sweitzer. They're best
known for skiing trips to the North and South Poles, but they'll
also take you inn-to-inn cycling in Ireland or paddle you around
their backyard, the Great Lakes region. Classic trip - kayaking
the remote south coast of Crete, past ancient Greek ruins, sheer
cliffs, and old fishing villages. - By David Noland
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Time Magazine
- October 1999
Learn a New Skill
- For your next vacation, think about taking a trip that will provide
you with a lasting souvenir - knowledge and expertise.
Arctic Getaway. Ever
since Admiral Peary made his third and finally successful journey
to the North Pole 90 years ago, there have been dreamers who saw
themselves skiing to the top of the Earth. Very few have done so,
of course, because it's hard going - and because only in the past
decade have travel companies offered would-be Arctic explorers the
kind of expedition they could manage. The company that pioneered
such trips, The Northwest Passage, is planning its fifth trek to
the geographic North Pole starting in early February with a six-day
training session on Baffin Island. In April a party of 8-15 will
fly charter aircraft from Resolute Bay, Nunavut to within 150 miles
of the Pole. Then, under a 24 hr. Polar sun, in often subzero temperatures,
the group will follow Peary's route from 88 degrees to ninety degrees
North, climbing over walls of ice, crossing expanses of open water
on ice blocks bound by rope, skiing through clouds of drifting snow.
Burton Meyer of Downers Grove, IL, a retired toy designer, first
crossed the North Pole with The Northwest Passage at 69. Among his
companions: a 16 year old schoolgirl, one of only three women ever
to reach the Pole on foot. Meyer remembers everything about his
trip, the second of 12 he's made with the company: "We traveled
13 miles a day with 2 dog teams, breaking camp in the morning and
setting it up at the end of the day, struggling through blizzards,
trying to find a way across the open water." He was thrilled
by the Arctic,"one of the most unusual places in the world
- the beautiful blue colors of the ice, the sparkle of the sun."
Travelers of any age are welcome but must be in very good physical
shape and willing to spend $25,000, the cost of the trip. Northwest
Passage also offers less expensive ways to realize a Polar dream,
including a $6,000 ski and dogsled trek across Ellesmere, Canada's
northernmost island. Adventurers travel through an expanse of mountains,
fjords and giant icebergs, observing polar bears, musk oxen, caribou
and the island's celebrated Arctic wolves. Not for the fainthearted.
- By Megan Rutherford
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Men's Health
- October 1998
I'm in a bar with a friend.
It's not late, but getting there. Sort of like the definition of
midlife. We'd intended to have one beer and head home. that was
hours ago. We have moved on to shots. Shots fires, shots taken,
the hole's in one's life. He's been telling me about this grand
adventure he once planned: a solo voyage down the western seaboard
from Seattle to Acapulco. He grew up by the water. He loves the
sea. He's an accomplished sailor. But it hasn't happened..."Things
just happened. The job, mostly." His voice trails off, and
he downs his drink... Want to know what you have to do? Think like
an adolescent. That's right, think like a kid -exactly what everybody
tells you not to do. Remember when you were 17? Did anything seem
impossible? Most guys that age think they have the world by the
balls, and in a strange way, they do. Not in terms of money or power
or posessions, but in terms of devil-may-care confidence and imagination.
What follows is my list of ten adventures to take before you die...These
are dream trips. Adventures that will force you to rise to your
potential. Adventures that will leave a tatoo on your soul.
Imagine 24 hours of continuous
sunlight but a temperature of -20 degrees Fahrenheit. Imagine turning
360 degrees and seeing nothing but brilliant ice and snow. Imagine
riding the runners of a sled, mushing a team of eight huskies through
a ghostly land of frozen silence. This is the Arctic, perhaps the
most surreal place on Earth. At its heart is the mythic North Pole,
the top of the world. Want to go? Unless you're an Inuit or an Iditarod
vetran, the best way is to travel with The Northwest Passage, an
Arctic outfitter. "The challenge and adventure are unchanged
from what Peary and Cook did a century ago," says executive
director and guide Rick Sweitzer. "We start at 88 degrees North
latitude and ski and sled for 150 miles." Sweitzer says they
navigate mostly by the sun, checking accuracy with a satellite GPS.
The NorthwestPassage provides everything from sleds to sleeping
bags, boots to expedition clothing. You sleep in tents, igloos,
or out in the open; you share mushing and cooking responsibilities,
and treat each other's sunburn, sore muscles and madness. Candidtates
for the expedition must first complete a week-long shakedown trip.
- By Mark Jenkins.
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American
Girl Magazine
The Ends of the Earth
Lysee M. has stood on
the top of the world - and on the bottom! The 14-year-old girl went
with her dad to visit the South Pole and the North Pole in the span
of about three months. From her home in Texas, Lysee traveled to
Chile on the way to Antarctica before setting out for the Pole itself.
When Lysee finally stepped
off the plane at the Pole, she was stunned. The South Pole is "very,
very pretty," she says. Even though it is also very, very cold.
"It looks like there's glitter all over the place."
It took 32 hours to fly
to the South Pole and back from the base camp. Lysee's group spent
only a few hours at the remote, frozen Pole itself, but she was
away from home for about two weeks.
On her trip, Lysee met
scientists and other visitors from all over the world. She made
a snowman, and she played a lot of Scrabble. She even got to take
controls of an airplane during a flight!
Lysee and her dad loved
the South Pole, but they wanted another adventure. So a few months
later, they made a trip to the North Pole. That made Lysee the youngest
girl ever to reach both Poles.
The trips were "really
like a life adventure for me," she says.
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