Tuesday, 28 December 2010


Thursday January 16th

Last night was hot, but I couldn't throw off any bedclothes as they are all frozen to the wall! This evening I managed to tear the eiderdown from the wall and now it has large pieces of ice attached to it. If only the bedroom remains cold it will remain ice and all will be well. There will be a mess if it thaws.

I caught Ayo this morning; all efforts at catching him have hitherto failed, and in the end he fell to the wastepaper basket. I put it on the ground and he joined in the general rush to investigate, and the wily old man got wedged and I managed to grab his harness and avoid his teeth till Andrew came. They are mighty strong, though, these dogs.

Euphemia is frightfully affectionate now and rushes up when she sees you. Andrew and Brownie went for a walk to look for Dupelik and the others; in this they were unsuccessful, but they found a slope for learning skiing on.

Frightfully hot to-day; maximum temperature at the absurd figure +30℉. Shirtsleeves or less; no ice visible in Bay.

Finished to-day making a pair of trousers out of a blanket for Andrew. He seems very pleased with them and they look most athletic. It's a grand sport making clothes with the Singer.

Again did Bear Island at night. David as usual bicycled - I wish my knee would get better soon as one feels a beast merely tapping while others sweat, and to-day it was worse than usual for David felt the pedal coming off in the middle, and he and John carried on turning the thing by hand - a most strenuous job, in a stooping position. The met. report went off in patches as David and John took it in turns to turn. I added "Generator breaking" at the end in case he hadn't got it and we couldn't send better next time, but he sent "R. OK OM. GN." (received ok old man, good night.)

At night we settled the thorny question of the morning met. The others think they should take their turn as - they say - it involves all the dirty work of getting breakfast etc., but they can't see my point of view, viz that it is only reasonable that I should do it entirely and also help the others by doing more than my share of the work about the house, for it is my own work and through my own carelessness in breaking things I have practically no other scientific work to do. For the sake of peace I had to give in. I now do it 4 mornings a week, the other three once a week, and Brownie not at all as he always must be up at 7.30 for sending off the report.




Friday January 17th

The hot weather continues; some of the others have taken to wearing boots again. Komagers do not seem to be generally popular, but I find that if you take trouble over them (and no more than is necessary to shoes in England) they are really admirable; their warmth can be varied by putting in more or less saennegras, they are comfortable and light so that you can move quickly and neatly in them, and they are so easy to slip on and off. Their only drawback is the infernal turn up toe that catches on literally everything and is entirely pointless.

I was up late this morning, but was entranced on going out soon after 9am. to find a perfectly clear sky with signs of the coming spring in the South. Here above the ice-cap was a band of rose-coloured pink, a beautifully clean and clear colour such as I have never seen before, and above it a pale green strip, bright low down and becoming fainter up towards zenith. Quite high in the sky Daneb and Vega seemed to remind us that we are still in the Arctic winter, but half way down to the horizon Altair shining apparently more brightly and more steadily than usual reminded you of Venus suggesting the advent of dawn. High to the E. and W. were a few rays of aurora, whose green colour far excelled in beauty the beauty of the sunrise green. An hour later, nearly at local noon the rose tint had disappeared, above it shone brighter with a silver green, shining on the lapping waters of the bay, with one white streak of ice far away, but a few clouds settled on the ice-cap made the picture more startling; the worst months are still to come, and though the sun will be up soon it will be months before spring weather begins.


Saturday January 18th

Old Ayo is wonderful. For months we have been trying to get near him, but he never came within reach. Now that he has got a harness and trace on, he knows he can be caught easily and is affection itself, and comes up to you to be petted.

Helped Andrew with dog harnesses this afternoon. While he wrestled with the big machine joining the various bits together, I sewed up the canvas forming the long strips - an easy job with a machine as easy to handle as the little Singer. She really is a little beauty, and simplicity itself to work; such a well finished off piece of work too, and we find it great fun watching it wind the bobbins. I've now made two pairs of trousers, 14 harness strips and mended Brownie's sleeping bag and enjoy it so much that I'm looking out for more employment.

Andrew Croft sewing dog harnesses

Monday, 27 December 2010


Sunday January 12th

Andrew allowed me to do the met. this morning for the first time since I hurt my knee. It has really been alright for some days, strengthened by a bandage, but Andrew says it must be rested; he certainly has taken a great deal of care and trouble over it.

Made best bread up to date today, and also some mince-pies which were "marvellous" - they were so hot that no one can have tasted them, but the pastry certainly did come out well.


Monday January 13th

The Nansen sledges which were brought in yesterday had their runners painted with linseed oil and tar.



Tuesday January 14th

Euphemia returned to her family yesterday, fit and well. Now the "oarks" have been brought in to be tamed and fattened, but they are incredibly shy and though you can pat their heads, if you make any noise they rush into a corner and cower. Upik was brought in to be fed up too - poor affectionate little thing she is frightfully thin. We had a heated discussion about the merits of the bitches today. David, almost alone, like s Hansigne (shy, aristocratic) best. She is a beautiful bitch and mother of the "oarks", but you can't get anywhere near her. Most of us like Upik (middle-class) best, a pretty little black with an enormous tail, always active and rushes up to you affectionately and is mother of the nine "little blacks." Then there is Merratark (woman of the streets) who is very good natured when she gets to know you and is mother of the late Annadark.

It is very warm and the ice has nearly all cleared out of the bay. The black team have always been fighting the Dupeliks, and a day or two ago Dupelik went away taking with him Hansigne, Dreng and Wolle, and now that the ice has gone Andrew is even more anxious about them. The only member of the team left is Amalortok, a cowardly beast and very out of condition, so now he has all the attacks of the black murderers concentrated on him, and he spends most of his time on the engine room roof.


Wednesday January 15th

The "oarks" after being filled up with reindeer till they could no longer stand, were turned outside, so now the asylum is empty. Brownie and John went up the glacier to-day, and John has made more moves in the fixing of Northeastland. Bay almost free of ice. Exquisite aurorae at night.

Did the evening met. to Bear Island and got through all right; his morse in reply was so slow and irregular that I could hardly read it. The bicycle broke down when we were sending to Robert - the pedal came off.

Wednesday, 22 December 2010

Thursday 9th January

Was a bit tired by the end of the international day today - the weather was colder and my knee not sound and this probably accounted for it. Brownie and I carried on in the morning and the others didn't get up till lunch time - and were then asleep mostly. Was bullied into bed (extremely cold) just after supper, but was so cold couldn't get to sleep soundly. Hoar frost is covering all the walls and parts of the bedclothes and it's most unpleasant when tossing about if you find your nose sticking in the snow! All my bedclothes used to fall on the floor but now they are frozen on to the wall. We have an oil-stove in the bedroom sometimes.


Friday January 10th

Black dogs and puppies let loose today. One of Upik's nine puppies died some days ago, we think she was choked by a bone as she looked well. Another has not been looking well and was brought into the hall to be fed on bread and milk etc. Euphemia, she has been named, and a sweet restless little thing she is. When you go into the hall she is invariably wandering about near the reindeer meat, but rushes to her box when she hears you coming and tries to look innocent.

The Petter wouldn't work this morning. Brownie tried hard and failed. In the afternoon it was a bit warmer and after many vain attempts at starting, and a few false starts she at last got going. She is now to be kept going - if possible - till it gets warm again - in April? Poor thing.

I've been making a pair of windproof trousers for Andrew as his second pair were eaten by the dogs. They were finished this evening - an incredible sight but serviceable, I think. Andrew calls them a 'work of art,' and if art consists of making lines crooked that should be straight, he is certainly right, for the seams run not at all parallel and even cross one another. I made them too small round the waist at first, and had to fit in a V-piece in front which added complication. With the Singer machine it was great fun, though I took an extremely long time over it.


Saturday Jan 11th

A washing day, but not so successful. Andrew threw in two pairs of pyjamas that were perfectly clean. He said that one pair had been worn all the time we were in tents and the other pair all the time at the Advanced Base, as if time of wearing were the criterion by which the washing question should be settled. It is the thickness of dirt that matters. I'm glad to record that they came out dirtier than when they went in owing to some honourably dirty shirts and underclothing of David's.

This is a veritable literary den nowadays; composition of the expedition is proceeding apace. John is really an excellent writer, amusing and able to pick out what is not important, and David is a valuable critic and also types at express speed using only the middle finger of each hand. Their combined chapter on the Boat Journey is more realistic and interesting than any chapter in any of the Polar books I have been reading recently. Andrew has been engaged with his earlier chapters, but writes too much about himself and fails rather in discriminating between the vital and the trivial.


Tuesday, 21 December 2010

January 1st

Brownie got through to Johnson splendidly this evening, and between 10.30pm and 2am got through all the messages that were to be sent. The most sensational message was one to Brownie from Martin Lindsay asking him to join a winter station at the North Pole 1937-38, taken there by the Graf Zeppelin.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graf_Zeppelin


January 8th

There is another International day round and some time to write at last. Life is so different now with Andrew John and David here, they are absolutely ideal people to live with for though I like Brownie we have so little in common that in December I was really beginning to get bored with the life here. But so human and unselfish and amusing are the three new arrivals that these days since Christmas have been by far the best on the expedition, even though we are indoors all the time. It's the general conversation and mutual help that makes existence in such conditions so pleasant. Andrew and David have gone off to the advanced Base today and it's already beginning to be a bit dull!

On the other hand it's been an uninteresting series of days up to now; David concluded his developing by printing some of the better photos, and that ended the photographic week. It was grand for us to see the photos taken on the boat journey and on the ice-cap etc.

We've started betting too, tho' why I cannot tell, but "I'll put 8 squares (chocolate) on it" is a saying liable to come out at any time. There's so much chocolate that it's just dull to eat one's own ration, so that if at lunch you have neither gainings nor losings, you advertise "who'll put something on anything?" I won 32 squares over Christmas, but have generally lost since then.

On Jan 4th we went along to the local traps, as usual one was blown down and neither had caught anything. After that we thought we would run about on the bay ice and were running along - what a treat - when suddenly I put my foot down and didn't find the ice just where I expected to - like when you run downstairs and think there's one more step than there really is - and jolted my leg and fell over. I never thought it was at all bad, but when I had limped home Andrew said I had torn a ligament (or some such nonsense) and must be careful of water on the knee. So I have been firmly repressed these last few days and haven't been allowed to do lots of things that I easily could have managed. You feel such a beast when you do nothing in the way of collecting snow or coal etc. and I haven't taken meteorological readings since then - tho' this is perhaps justifiable for it's rather difficult uneven walking round the instruments.

The weather on all these days had been gradually improving though usually with poor visibility, and the others were constantly wondering whether they should go off to the Lady Franklin glacier to do some meteorology and glaciology. Nobody wanted to go: Sandy instructed John to do it, but as usual he gave no idea why the measurements were to be made, or how, and never considered where the instruments were to come from. I feel these days meteorological readings are not worth much, and general opinion was that it was just one of Sandy's ?things?
Moreover John was anxious for fine days so that he could 'fix' Northeastland astronomically. So Andrew decided that he and David should go, as David had done that sort of thing at A- station. Poor David, he has had an unsettled time and an extended stay at A, and evidently doesn't enjoy the thought of camping out at this time of the year, and was beginning to enjoy the luxury of the base, and certainly didn't want to go; every time it became clearer you could see his anxiety growing, and when it became cloudier and it was decided to postpone departure temporarily his whole face lit up!

Everybody has been very busy all this time - John and Andrew especially. Andrew at first had a lot of work with the dog harnesses and is now generally preparing for the Northern Journey, and is also writing part of the expedition book. He is an extremely hard but slow worker. John is wonderful the way he gets down to work and goes on with it quietly (but untidily) all the time with his tongue out. He did a lot of the dog harnesses at first, then with his upper air instruments in bad weather, and when fine he has built a fine observatory of packing cases with a 5in. theodolite on a pillar in the middle; in the last few days he has been making star observations and is settling the longitude of N.E. land as this is uncertain - the longitude of Spitzbergen is uncertain to an extent of a few seconds. John spent a long time worrying last night because he calculated we were 4 minutes, ie. 1ºE of where we thought we were; he could find no mistake in the calculation and concluded that we must have got the date wrong, as that would put things exactly right, but there was too much evidence against that theory. Finally he solved the problem during his sleep. David worked hard and continuously at the photographs for some time, and since then has been helping everybody else so that now Brownie and I have little to do.

On Monday Brownie and David went and visited the Zeipel Bay traps along the ice and were late home so I had to do the morse to Bear Island. I hardly distinguished myself, for though I got our report through I couldn't get the receiver to work, and only just heard him and couldn't read it. However it broke the ice; he sent very slowly so perhaps I'll be able to do it more in the future.

Andrew and David have just returned from the Advanced Base, having got there in 2½ hours and finding Sandy was full of no end of wild goose schemes, which Andrew quietly had to prove impossible to carry out. A leader with ideas and schemes and imagination is absolutely essential, but we would be wasting time and trying the impossible if it were not for Andrew's good sense. Sandy didn't mind a bit about the postponement of the Lady Franklin glacier trip.

Fun watching the dogs pull off the sledges for the first time. A very distinct glow in the South at noon.

Monday, 20 December 2010

Thursday 26th December

A day of reaction after Christmas. Practically no breakfast. Resolutions were made but not carried out. It was not till the evening that anything occurred to break the lethargy. At the end of the news bulletin it was announced that the BBC had received a telegram from the Oxford University Arctic Expedition, Brandy Bay, Northeastland ''Thank you for your messages, greatly appreciated and perfectly received. We send you all our best wishes for New Year." At 10pm we turned to the Regional Program and I won 4 squares when we heard the message repeated. Afterwards we got on to the news bulletin in Welsh and I lost the 4 squares again when we were not mentioned!


Friday December 27 - Monday December 30th

There has been great activity in the photographic line. Andrew and David have been going hard at negatives first, and then some printing.


Tuesday December 31st

We sat up for the wireless program but were profoundly disappointed. The idea of the bells was distinctly good, but went on too long, and the dinner in Carlisle was just absurd. However we were given the idea of the black stranger bringing luck: we went out (it was cloudy but the temp. -6℉ - our coldest up to now) and John, who is dark, visited the observatory and ionosphere hut, and then we brought indoors one of Upik's puppies - they all have black tips to their tails, and we were lucky enough to pick up the odd one out of the jumble. We had great fun with the little fellow running over the table. Brownie unfortunately had been in bed all this time, as his England communication began at 2am on New Year's Day.

Sunday, 19 December 2010

Wednesday December 25th Christmas Day

Up at the usual time for we were not let off out meteorological report. Then we had an extra good breakfast, first porridge then a big plate of fried sausages, ham and eggs, so there was not much room left for bread and marmalade. After that while the others were unpacking parcels of presents, cakes, plum puddings etc brought from England I made some mince pies which turned out remarkably well. Then much of the morning was spent in the usual routine, so I was hardly able to listen to the service from Leicester Cathedral, but the reception was so poor that I never heard a word when I could listen.

Special piece of reindeer meat for Leonidas!

We had a sort of Christmas tea - lunch about 1pm. - cold reindeer meat and mince pies and Christmas cake (John's) followed by crystallised fruits, raisins, almonds chocolates etc. We finished just about in time for the Empire broadcast. It's the first time I have ever enjoyed this, and away from home was very moved when we called up Canada and New Zealand and I thought of Emily and Freddy. If only I knew where Esther and Cicely and J & A were, and who was at home. It's many months since I've felt at all home-sick, but I almost broke down when greetings were sent to the British Greenland expedition, the East-Greenland expedition and the Oxford University Arctic Expedition. It was wonderful - if somewhat egotistical - to think of so many people at home who would be listening and would be thinking of you: so absorbed was I thinking over all at home that I hardly listened to the King's speech, though actually it faded away at the end so that it was only just audible. We were not expecting a greeting at this time and were on tenterhooks when the first two expeditions were mentioned.

We spent a longer time than usual sending messages and greetings up to the ice-cap by radio-telephone. Afterwards it was a case of preparing the Christmas dinner; John and David skinned the ducks that Karl had shot for us, and I got John's plum pudding going, and John and David made some superb rum-butter. Andrew photographed Brownie's marvellous cake (which we did not begin till the next day) and we decorated the cake and table with candles and then Andrew started taking a photo of the whole table by flashlight, but there were many false alarms and I used up almost a whole bottle of rum keeping the pudding flaming. The duck was delicious, and we had with it green peas and potato- crisps (we got potatoes skinned and ready but in the excitement we forgot to cook them). Then the plum pudding, and many toasts were drunk and we got through six of our nine bottles of champagne.

We finished in time for 9.30. We had had a telegram from Binney telling us to listen in at 9.30, but some of the others were doubtful as to whether we would hear anything after the afternoon greeting, but my faith in Binney won me a bet of eight squares of chocolate. Wonderful to get a special message at the end of the news bulletin: "The BBC joins with the parents and friends of the Oxford University Arctic Expedition, Brandy Bay, Northeastland, in wishing them a merry Christmas, a happy New Year, and a safe return in Autumn." This was better than the afternoon greeting. Then a lot of photographing.

Sunday, 28 March 2010

Tuesday December 24th.


All the others had baths, haircuts and shaves in the evening, but thinking it a mistake, I only had a slight wash. The thing is that it is impossible to keep clean, and you only feel unhappy when you have to do anything that is likely to dirty yourself. So John and David acquired cherubic choir-boy faces and Andrew a priceless Farmer Larkin beard, but they cannot have got much cleaner floundering in a few inches in an uncomfortable canvas bath. Brownie and I retired to bed understanding that the others were following in a few minutes, but they stayed up putting up a fine display of Christmas decorations - coloured paper streamers and two of John’s large pilot balloons.

An active day on the bicycle, and more so on the receiver for we were sent messages from all sorts of people, including Consul Saether, Schmidt, Met, Inst, at Tromsö, Vardö radio station, and “Christmas wishes from three lonely men on L.J.B. (Bear Island).”



Wednesday December 25th. Christmas Day


Up at the usual time for we were not let off our meteorological report. Then we had an extra good breakfast, first porridge then a big plate of fried sausages, ham and eggs, so there was not much room left for bread and marmalade. After that while the others were unpacking parcels of presents, cakes, plum puddings etc brought from England I made some mince pies which turned out remarkably well. Then much of the morning was spent in the usual routine, so I was hardly able to listen to the service from Leicester Cathedral, but the reception was so poor that I never heard a word when I could listen.


Special piece of reindeer meat for Leonidas!


We had a sort of Christmas tea-lunch about 1pm. - cold reindeer meat and mince pies and Christmas cake (John’s) followed by crystallised fruits, raisins, almonds chocolates etc. We finished just about in time for the Empire broadcast. It’s the first time I have ever enjoyed this, and away from home was very moved when we called up Canada and New Zealand and I thought of Emily and Freddy. If only I knew where Esther and Cicely and J and A were, and who was at home. It’s many months since I’ve felt at all home-sick, but I almost broke down when greetings were sent to the British Grahamland expedition, the East-Greenland expedition and the Oxford University Arctic Expedition. It was wonderful - if somewhat egotistical - to think of so many people at home who would be listening and would be thinking of you; so absorbed was I thinking over all at home that I hardly listened to the King’s speech, though actually it faded away at the end so that it was only just audible. We were not expecting a greeting at this tine and were on tenterhooks when the first two expeditions were mentioned.


We spent a longer time than usual sending messages and greetings up to the ice-cap by radio-telephone. Afterwards it was a case of preparing the Christmas dinner; John and David made some superb rum-butter, Andrew photographed Brownie’s marvellous cake ( which we did not begin till the next day) and we decorated the cake and table with candles and then Andrew started taking a photo of the whole table by flashlight, but there were many false alarms and I used up almost a whole bottle of rum keeping the pudding flaming. The duck was delicious, and we had with it green peas and potato-crisps (we got potatoes skinned and ready but in the excitement we forgot to cook them). Then the plum pudding, and many toasts were drunk and we got through six of our nine bottles of champagne.


We finished in time for 9.30. We had had a telegram from Binney telling us to listen in at 9.30, but some of the others were doubtful as to whether we would hear anything after the afternoon greeting, but my faith in Binney won me a bet of eight squares of chocolate. Wonderful to get a special message at the end of the news bulletin. “The BBC joins with the parents and friends of the Oxford University Arctic Expedition, Brandy Bay, Northeastland, in wishing them a merry Christmas, a happy New Year, and a safe return in Autumn.” This was better than the afternoon greeting. Then a lot of photographing.


Tuesday, 9 March 2010

Monday 16th December

Monday 16th December


It was overcast at first, and of course started snowing when I was doing the weekly charts. Then all of a sudden after sending a report of overcast and snowing at noon, at 1pm. it was absolutely clear with stars shining brightly! It is liable to clear suddenly here, but usually get warnings of changes for the worse, which is as it should be I suppose. The clear sky meant that for the rest of the day I was engaged with aurorae and Polaris. It was a day of great auroral activity, and though it was rather messy and all over the place most of the time yet we had one of the best and prettiest displays when a long rayed band passed overhead swishing in a ghostly fashion - most mysterious in that its movements are quite unaccompanied by any noise - then formed itself into a bow formation which just passed overhead, wheeled slightly to the W. of N. and continued its course slowly until it broke up its form. And while you stand watching all is quiet except for the eerie noises made by the ice - either a rather high-pitched howl which makes you think Ayo has gone along the coast and has found a bear - this is perhaps caused by friction of big pieces of ice, or a higher pitched squeak made either by small pieces of ice on the surface and squeezing against one another or scraping across the rocks - or it is the ghost of Annadark; it is a noise reminiscent of the squeals she used to make when young, and it originates from the point where we dropped her into the sea.


Made bread today; it’s funny how each time it turns out differently though you apparently go through the same process. Today I made a determined effort to obey the instructions on the yeast tin to the letter. It didn’t rise much in the mixer, but did just a bit in the tins. So I put it in the oven, and when I first looked at it the bread surface in both tins had risen up to the edge of the tin, but it was hollow inside. It was not a very hot oven, and took some time to bake through and when finished it appeared normal size, or risen a bit more than usual - but actually it was hollow, a cross section being something like this...... (diagram supplied!).




Tuesday December 17th.


Fine again this morning with auroral activity and at each hour I spend ten minutes observing and taking notes, and take some photographs too. The position of the aurorae is always fixed with reference to stars or constellations. I’m getting to know these better now, and their names mean more here, for though one wonders how they can ever have been thought like what their names represent, in a lonely place like this they do seem to take a personal interest in you, more so here as they go more round and round than at home, most of them never setting at all, all the nice friends like Capella and Vega, and the constellations Taurus, Leo, Pegasus etc never set at all, but keep an eye on what is going on here. There is one which puzzles me terribly. In the star map he is merely marked E, but is not attached to any constellation, so I don’t know what E it is. Moreover E implies rather a weak star but this is bright and red. I’ve searched through the Nautical Almanack to see if any planet can be there, but no, we are to see no planets at all here, except Venus (which as a glorious morning star has now set), and it doesn’t look like a planet. So I just always have to refer to him as E: the trouble is that there are always aurorae in his neighbourhood!


In a view of what I wrote last night about the weather it must be recorded that after observing aurorae in a clear sky each hour and after taking the 3pm. observations I went in to write it up, decided to start up Polaris, collected the plate and hammer, and went out to find it overcast and snowing! It is a good thing I hadn’t opened the skylight in the ionosphere hut and then left it for an hour.



Friday December 20th.


The bread showed signs of forming a roof with an attic below today after baking a little, so I tried pricking it all over with a fork, for after all it could hardly do any harm except give the loaf a slight taste of sardines. The experiment was a great success.




Saturday December 21st.


Found Matilda had escaped this morning. I’ve inspected her cage daily and hitherto she has made no impression on the wire, but she has been getting so thin and in desperation must have got the wire bent just enough to force her body through. I’m sorry for Sandy to some extent, but my sympathies have always been with Matilda and am really glad about it. It is certainly not in the spirit of the Exploration Club rules to keep adult foxes in cages.


Today was the first day of a holiday from technical reading that I am giving myself up to January 1st. It may seem absurd or lazy to do such a thing, but I have such an immense amount of reading to make up for what should have been read last year and must be read before spring 1937, but on the other hand this will be the first time for a year and a half when I will be able to sit down and read just what I want to read. Started off with the “Testament of Beauty” and “Plato’s Republic” and enjoyed the former to the full, but I never could bear with philosophers and I doubt if I ever will get right through with Plato! I have also started learning to typewrite in the correct manner.



Sunday December 22nd and Monday December 23rd.


The special solstice international day was from 4pm. 22nd to 4pm. 23rd. We had been hoping that some of the others would arrive to help us, but in vain. We took altogether 25 runs one at each hour, but it was not half as tiring as I had expected. We were so rushed that we had no time to think of being exhausted.


To bed immediately after the 6 o’clock news bulletin. Then Andrew, John and David arrived having sledged over the bay ice at about 8pm. Brownie woke up to the fact and got up and called me, but though I myself thought I jumped out of bed and went around searching for the new arrivals even as far as the cairn wading through a mixture of rice and Fowler’s treacle, it was only a dream.


Sunday, 28 February 2010

Sunday December 15th

Sunday December 15th


It’s always Sunday in this place. Today is a good example for showing how it is the wind that makes it feel cold outside rather than the actual temperature. The temperature has been 10℉ steadily all day, overcast and almost windless, but I wore only shirt and pullover and no gloves when I cleaned out the foxes in the afternoon, and later when Brownie raised a false alarm about a bear outside we went outside with the revolver and I had on only a shirt with sleeves rolled up and it was not a bit cold. Brownie is always raising hopes about a bear, but it’s always ‘wolf.’ Matilda seems better today - she is frightened when I clean out the cage and sits on top of her little house and turns round and round in circles. Valiant Leonidas is a treat: he sits on top of his house and growls and snarls and snaps at the hook, so once I put it near him and he looked at it for about 10 seconds then made a sudden bite at the iron, which made him even more angry.


Had a washing day today - a lot of snow outside easily got, pleasant weather for fetching it and plenty of opportunity for melting it on the stove so it was an ideal day. Some towels (very dirty), two handkerchiefs and a pair of pyjamas of Brownie’s which he had put away as dirty in the days when we remembered what we called dirty in England. Yes, it was just a little dirty and it came out even cleaner even though it had been washed in the same water as the wash-up towels.


In the evening I took up a needle for the first time. First some trouser buttons which had given under the strain due to increasing girth, and then a mend in my flannel trousers. I suppose I should have put on a patch, but what with ? So I darned it with brown wool; it was rather an untidy mess in the end for the loops at the end were too long, but I hope it will shrink and also that the rent will stop getting bigger. And then really a technically good darn in a pair of pants repairing a slit made when my knife slipped and cut through trousers and pants. It was during this darning that I made up my mind not to wash clothes again unless absolutely necessary for (a) it is a nuisance (vide supra) (b) if you don’t wash yourself it’s no good washing clothes, and vice versa (c) if something fits why ask it to shrink by washing it, (d) the darnings will probably come to bits in the wash. Handkerchiefs and towels perhaps, but never more than a minimum. It really is troublesome this washing business, the water is nice and soft and all that, but it is the water production that takes such a long time and trouble: one bucketful of snow reduces probably to less than a quarter of a bucketful of water. The most efficient way is to start with a capital of water and boil it in the kettle and then pour it into the bucket of snow and melting it and then pour most of the water (equal to the capital) back into the bottle and the profit into the jug, and go outside and fill the bucket with snow again, and so on. If done systematically this is no trouble on and ordinary day, but on a washing day, not only is much more water needed but also the bucket is used for the washing so that another smaller vessel must be used for snow collecting, and the number of snow journeys is increased in the ratio of Vb/V where Vb is the volume of the bucket, and V that of the vessel used. In addition a hot fire has to be maintained for all the snow melting which is unpleasant from a physical point of view. So you see it hardly is worth while.


Nearly died bicycling to Robert today, for the room had got greenhouse-ish with the washing. Daniel sent a message to be sent to England including the word 'Trogdolyte.' At Brownies’s suggestion I replied (we always send double to one another) “Trogdolyte Trogdolyte usually usually spelt spelt Troglodyte Troglodyte. Shall shall I I send send Troglodyte Troglodyte or or Trogdolyte Trogdolyte”. Robert - “ Didn’t receive message, please repeat” - Self:- “Trogdolyte Trogdolyte usually usually spelt spelt Troglodyte Troglodyte. Shall shall I I send send Troglodyte Troglodyte or or Trogdolyte Trogdolyte” Robert Troglodyte Troglodyte Troglodyte Troglodyte. Good night uuu-u- (this means ‘I am closing down and will reply only if you say anything that needs reply). Self:- “ok ok will will send send Troglodyte Troglodyte not not Trogdolyte Trogdolyte. Good night. Good night. uuu-u-”.


November 28th - December 12th

November 28th - December 12th


An uneventful period and I actually began to get a bit bored at times - a thing I would not have thought possible. All the best books have gone away from here, and one tends to get tired of technical reading.


After last international day we slept hard, so hard in fact that the alarm didn’t wake us up in the morning and we missed the weather report to Bear Island and didn’t get up till 10a.m. in time for the ionosphere run. What’s more, with the low temperature outside and the absence of a fire in the living room for such a long period we found everything frozen hard in the morning. The water in all the jugs had thick ice on top, developers had turned to mushy porridge and a winchester containing clean water was frozen almost solid and cracked.


The aurorae and clear days continued and then at the beginning of the month Brownie started communications with England. This time he surprisingly got through quite well to Johnson twice which was a very good piece of work and long messages went to and fro - so glad I was able to get one to Emily this way, for it was too expensive to send direct. Sorry not to have known where Cicely was. Afterwards we had to send Sandy’s messages up by phone, and since he hasn’t got a transmitter we never knew whether he had received it or not, so we sent it seven times, only to hear indirectly from Robert on the seventh day that Sandy had not been listening at that time but would do so in future. So another seven times! On Sunday 8th December Robert says that Andrew and Dan have reached A Station, so Andrew and John are back at last from Cape Leigh Smith safely. When Brownie asked if he should shoot Ayo, Andrew says “No, I am coming at once.” He left A Station with David next day, and we expected him daily afterwards - hoping that he would come before the international day, but there was no sign of him. It was fine and calm and clear of ice up to Monday evening but then the wind changed and blew ice in, and there was a big swell on the bay for some days.


Three nights recently Bear Island has taken Christmas messages for us at night. Heard my Bach Fugue from Moscow one evening, and on another night one of the Bach suites that we have on the gramophone from the same station.


Listened in to the Oxford v Cambridge rugger match: fading bad, but an exciting match to listen to; imagined Professor watching it - he nearly always does.



Thursday, 25 February 2010

October 23rd - November 14th contd

Meanwhile Ionoark and Ozonoark are growing, but not in intelligence and are almost as frightened as ever. They will just eat out of your hand or lick your finger, but you can’t get near enough to them to pat them. It’s a pity for they are pretty little creatures. Spjaet’s leg is quite recovered - he is a nice dog - and Ayo is well too, but he is a big surly dog and nobody likes him. All Upik’s nine puppies are still alive and lively but we can’t think of names for them, but at any rate they are almost indistinguishable from one another.



Sandy and Archie stayed until 24th when it was calm enough for them to go off. It had been a most pleasant visit for us; they were both extremely helpful too, preparing meals etc, so that we had more time at our disposal than ever before.


They went off about midday on a cloudless day, and it was very light, though the sun had set finally 5 days earlier. Since then, however, it has been gradually getting darker, and at noon on a cloudy day we almost need a torch for walking along to the meteorological station. At the end of October and beginning of November we had a number of clear evenings and nights often with beautiful aurorae. (These kept one up late several times and I got into the habit of finding it difficult to get up in the morning, but am getting over that.) Then as soon as I started taking regular auroral observations we have ceased to see them - mostly because it is nearly always cloudy now. The moon sometimes shines now, and then it is brighter than at noon. This morning was really heavenly for it was absolutely cloudless and there was a glow in the South tinged pink below, and higher up Venus was shining more brilliantly than one would think possible, and higher up the ¾ full moon was illuminating the whole scene. It has been very warm all this time - just below freezing point or a bit above it. Even taking the early morning readings just after getting out of a warm bed is a pleasure when we have one of our clear mornings.


At the end of October we had a strong wind from the S.E. but very warm, and the snow thawed even in the bigger drifts. It looked as if there might be quite a difficult water problem to solve, but we managed to collect several beautifully clear lumps of ice from the shore. We thought the stream might start flowing again, but though there were many pools in the course the flow was too small. Before you come North you think it’s easy to get water - you just melt snow - but you have to go out and get in four or five buckets full of snow and then laboriously melt it down to get but one bucket of water. It took about 20 bucketfulls of snow to get enough water to wash all our dirty handkerchiefs and three dirty towels. That washing, by the way, was a great success; the things were black when they went in and came out really (or nearly) white.


We have had more time for things about the house now - Sandy and Archie were so helpful that while they did many of the ordinary things like cooking that we always have to do, we had time to make up arrears. I had a short cooking spell and made a Barmbrack for Hallowe’en; it never rose but we ate it with relish nevertheless. Next day I made two (and a half which we ate that night) plum puddings, but it remains to be seen whether these are a success or not. Dan has taken one for himself and Robert up on the ice-cap. Another event has been our cutting one another’s hair on the first of November - a first since leaving England.


On November 2nd as we were at lunch we were surprised to hear footsteps in the hall. It was Dan, and Karl was down with the skiff in the harbour. They had not brought us more dogs to look after - to our relief - but instead had brought us two white foxes - such pretty little things, and I’m sure they’ll be less trouble than a dog. Next day was spent in making more comfortable and safer cages for them - in the meteorological office boxes that had the Stevenson screens served admirably, But the wiring was a long job and Karl insisted on doing nearly all. The first was not very successful, but with the second he tried another method which was more tedious but better. The next job was to get the foxes from their travelling cages into the new ones. Karl managed the vixen and in doing so got a bit of a bite, so I volunteered to do the fox. It’s not as easy as it sounds as you cannot open the lid much in case he escapes, and if you stick your hand in he merely bites at it. I made several unsuccessful grabs at him and got him in the end by letting him bite one hand ( I was wearing gloves so he didn’t bite very deep) and he hung on so tight that with the other hand I could catch him round the neck, and then it was just a case of putting him into the cage and getting him to let go of my hand, which he did quite willingly. After that Karl showed us how to make fox traps, and we helped him to make some.


Next day - a gloriously clear day with a beautiful brilliant moon - Karl and Dan went into Zeipel Bay to put up some traps there, and came back with two plump eider ducks for Christmas. We thought they had all gone by now. Next day Karl began making his ‘automatical beer shoot’ - a simple contrivance in theory; the bear just tries to take away a piece of blubber attached to a wire, to the other end of which the trigger of the rifle is attached, and it shoots him through the head.


Karl Bengtssen



One unpleasant occurrence was on Nov 11th when I lit the fire all the smoke came out in the front, and we had to sweep the chimney by climbing on the roof and push down several poles lashed together, and a coal sack tied on the end. It was successful but we must sweep it more frequently when it is fine for it would be a very unpleasant and even dangerous job in stormy weather.


On the morning after the international day there was an opportunity for Karl and Dan to get away; it was calmer and the ice conditions in the bay seemed favourable. They began getting the boat ready but didn’t take the precaution of shutting up Spjaet and Ayo who saw what was happening and refused to be caught. In vain we tried to round them up and catch them but not till the afternoon was Spjaet taken in by a piece of meat, and in the meantime the tide had brought back ice and it was impossible to leave.


The next few days were rather unpleasant - Dan was impatient to get off, and he and Karl had never been able to get on together and it blew up into a storm. Dan, possibly not intentionally, and Brownie have always treated Karl as a social inferior and a servant; Karl would not stand for this saying that he was a respected man in Norway and in his country he was as good a man as anybody else, and that by their behaviour to him Dan and Brownie have shown that they are not gentlemen. This is in a sense true, for Brownie actually said to me that we all had to pay to come on the expedition and since on the other hand Karl is paid, we have a right to regard him as a servant - ugh! the British Army. Both sides were justified to a certain extent, and it was all most unpleasant - the first real quarrel we have had - and we were therefore glad when on Monday 18th the sea quietened down, and by pulling the boat overland to the other side of our point they found their way through the ice. I like both of them individually and each of them is easy to get on with, but together they are intolerable.


Daniel Godfrey


The moon set about that time, but even now we were surprised how light it still is sometimes, especially when there are no clouds about. I never think of putting on the torch when going over to the hut or when taking readings except actually to read the instruments. (Our torch is without doubt the world’s worst; it has never gone a complete day without going wrong: these super Ever Readys are hopeless.) Brownie and I went along to the north along the coast for a bit the afternoon the day the others left and lay a long time on a rock under the clear sky without being a bit cold - in late November in the Arctic!


Then on 19th and 20th it snowed hard so that going along to take the readings I kept on falling knee deep into snow drifts. It was when Bear Island questioned our report for amount of snowfall that I discovered that I had made a mistake in the reading, and all our snowfalls up to now have been reported ten times bigger than they really were!


One evening we had a talk with Bear Island over the wireless; there are three of them at the meteorological and wireless station and all along have been frightfully nice and helpful to us.


We went along to put up the near fox-traps which had been blown down, one afternoon with the Tilley lamp and had great fun as we kept on falling into very deep snow. It’s not at all unpleasant as the snow is so dry. At that time I was wearing pants and flannel trousers, shirt, Shetland pullover and lumber jacket. Komager on feet.


Suddenly on the 27th it cleared overhead and the temperature fell to 0℉ with a strong wind. It was an international day and not such a pleasant one, for not only did we have to work the ionosphere every two hours, but I also had to work the ozone spectrograph and also observe and photograph the aurorae which were strong that day. In addition there was all the developing fixing and washing of the records, the usual meteorological program and all cooking, water production etc. Sitting and standing about outside it was cold - our vitality must have been low - and I had to pile on clothes - more stockings another pull-over and windproofs on top. It’s a pity we had all the scientific work, for it would have been a lovely time for a walk, and the ice was forming and making eerie squeaks and grating noises. Suddenly Ayo jumps up and ‘woofs’ (a husky cannot bark properly) and I saw what looked like a very large white dog run away out to sea on the ice. Whether it was a bear or not I cannot say; it seemed too small, and the ice didn’t look as if it would have borne a bear, but I can’t see what else it could have been. Ayo’s annoyance is a testimony that I wasn’t dreaming.


Ayo is still at large. We couldn’t catch him for Karl to take away, and he bit Brownie in the hand when he nearly caught him one day. He is an unpleasant dog. However if he is going to keep bears away we will be pleased. Though bear meat is badly wanted for the dogs and the ‘automatical beer shoot’ is for that purpose, and though the skin is valuable, we personally have no desire to meet one in the dark time when we are out taking readings. Perhaps we may get good hunting in the spring. Ozonoark and Ionoark are shut up and just sleep, but Upik’s nine black puppies are getting bigger and make such a noise that the dog house is rather reminiscent of the parrot house - but smells like a dog-house!


I have taken charge of the foxes; they both seem well still: Matilda is a bit frightened and tries to get out all the time, but Leonidas is merely defiant but stays at the entrance of his inner house - in his thermopylac - guarding his Reloponesus - and snarls and growls so prettily.


Sunday, 21 February 2010

October 23rd - November 14th


October 23rd - November 14th




The saddest event to record is the death of little Annadark. For some days she had not been her usual self. We thought she was just a little sulky as we had to chase her away from the foxes at times. On the 8th she seemed more like her old self and had a howling match with me, but when we didn’t notice her next day, we never expected to find her dead. It was a great loss, and if she was a bit spoilt, she was a grand little beast; she was playful and friendly and very often showed a lot of pluck. More than once when Brownie and I started off for a ramble several of the dogs would come, but they soon dropped behind, and only Annapig followed all the way. She would often howl and whine when she came to a place she thought she couldn’t get past, but eventually she always overcame all the obstacles on her own accord. The other day we went further up a gully than we have been before; we wanted to reach the top but found it more difficult than we expected; Annapup was a bit scared and went further than us by a most difficult way. We turned back but she couldn’t face going down and tried to go up instead and we had to catch her and carry her down or pass her from one to the other when coming down. She was an ugly little puppy, more like a pig than a dog. She must have picked up something poisonous about the camp. She was just 4 months old.

Sunday, 14 February 2010

Sept 11th to October 23rd contd.

David, Dan and Andrew were to return to the Advance Base next day to get B station established as soon as possible. A station was really set up now, and Robert and Sandy were up there at this time. Unfortunately three dogs have been lost in crevasses - Bamse, Isijak and alas! poor Merkujuk. What a sad end to our beloved Woolly Bear.


We needed help during the Monday - Tuesday international day as it was a special Equinox study and we took runs every hour. So what we finally decided was that we should all go to the Advance Base for the day - as Brownie and I had had no change of air since we had found Hansigne’s puppies, and that Dan should return with us in the evening. So at noon we told Bear Island we would have no report for them in the evening, and we all set off. The scenery all looked so different from the boat, and we got an idea of what a fine lump of a hill it is at the bottom of which we live - it looks very like the Roddev (?). I took the tiller most of the way going, and soon we could see the ice-cap more clearly, and the small ice-cap on Mt. Franklin showed up very white. After rounding Dog Point we ran into a more sheltered bay at the bottom of which lay the Advance Base. This is a queer little hut - Karl’s old valley hut moved over and a bit added on - only 15 ft long by 5 broad, but 6 to 8 ft high, and anything from 3 to 5 people living there at one time. It was nice to see Archie again, and also all the dogs that came out to meet us. With thicker coats they looked so different and I hardly recognised any of them. We brought Merratark with us and she was glad to see all her boy friends again and quite forgot her Annapup!


The hut is delightfully situated at the bottom of this Advance Base bay, quite near the foot of the dead glacier leading up on to the west Ice, and, what I appreciated more than anything - on flat ground so that one could run about, a thing we cannot do at the base. We were fed there - how nice not to have to get one’s own meal for a change. Then we started off a bit late, as Brownie had a schedule with Advent Bay at 11p.m. and as soon as we got properly out into the bay round Dog Point we found that the sea had got up and it was pretty rough. Luckily we were steering straight into the waves so that though we pitched badly and the propellor came out of the water at times we were never in danger of being swamped - we didn’t even have to bale at all. Of course I was sick after a bit and it was very cold going into the N.W. wind and the spray froze solid on to any object to which it was driven by the wind, but Brownie was marvellous and sat at the helm all the time and we got in just before 11.15p.m. when the schedule was due to finish; we rushed in but we couldn’t get contact with LGS. Dan stayed with us till the following Wednesday helping us with the ionosphere and a lot with the cooking; he had to return alone and it was a distinctly nasty sea, but he managed it all right.


We were just going off to bed early after an International Day on the 10th Oct. when Dn came in. He and John had come over to fetch some things, but with a strong S.E. wind it was too rough - certainly in the dark - to bring the boat into our harbour, so they had gone round the point to the shelter in our N. bay, and Dan came ashore for help. Even then we couldn’t all pull the boat up, because there was nothing firm to attach the tackle to, so they used a hydrogen cylinder as an anchor and let the boat ride in the sheltered water. Next day they brought the boat into the harbour, and we pulled it up. They made a false start a day or so later, but having loaded the boat decided it was too rough and stayed till the next day. They said they were determined to go off this time, and we got the boat into the water, but it got rougher as the reindeer and coal were loaded in and the thin rope that was holding the bow broke and the boat was thrown all over the place; we then had a long struggle trying to prevent its being thrown on the rocks and to get it ashore again. We were all waist deep in the cold water (30℉), John holding the bows with waves breaking over his head, and Dan fell over once. At last we manoeuvered it so that the stern was on the slipway and we got it up with the tackle. But all the contents of the boat were soaked through - chromometer, watches, aneroids, theodolites, wireless time signal set etc, and the bottom of the sea was strewn with Silver Bud cheeses. They resolved now that they would wait for a really calm day before venturing out again. Next day it calmed suddenly in the evening and they went off, tho’ we hear that the motor failed and they had to row to land and then walk in sea boots up a steep cliff and then a long way overland to the Advance Base - carrying Hansigne a lot of the way.


On Friday 18th. Oct night we heard a noise outside. We were expecting Sandy, and went out and found him and Archie pretending to be bears.