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The Dispatches from the Trail...
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| A final statement from the dogs
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Goodbye & happy travels

Sun 25 April: The team is finally splitting up, heading to
their respective homes. The dogs are back in their kennels, taking a
well-deserved rest and lots of food. They were driven home from Nordkapp in
a giant dog-trailer. Rona, Cathy and Per-Thore took the luxurious way home,
sailing along the Norwegian coast in a cruise-liner.
After two days of sightseeing in Tromso, Rona and Cathy are flying back to
the UK this afternoon. All that remains of the expedition is a line of sled
tracks stretching across 528 kms of snow, and some 4 million paw prints from
the dogs, gradually melting away in the spring sunshine.
Meet the team on the evening of 13 May at the Travellers Club in London to
see the pictures and hear the full story.
Goodbye and happy travels from the Nordkapp 2004 team.
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There ain't no mountain high enough

A beautiful moment sledding up a deserted valley, birch
forests in
front of us and mountains beyond them.
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Norway's hunk of the month.

Per-Thore Hansen, our enigmatic third team member. His
favourite instructions were: Rona, push! and Cathy, eat!
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Rona & friend

Rona shares a moment with Shakira, one of the most
affectionate of the dogs.
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Route planning

Per-Thore planning the route in one of the cabins.
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Lunch to go

Rona making up the daily lunch pack - flat bread with ham
and cheese.
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English breakfast

Per-Thore eating an instant muesli breakfast. Using dogs we
could afford to be relatively generous with the catering and we ate a
combination of dehydrated meals and more substantial fresh fare.
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Tent time

Cathy relaxing in the tent with a cup of coffee. The
expedition ran on dog food and coffee - the last coffee granules were shared
out on the final morning. We couldn't afford to be out there another day!
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Modelling canine booties

The long days and tough snow conditions took their toll on
the dogs' paws and by the last day most had booties on. The majority hate
the booties and the two dogs here, Shara and Zita, Cathy's lead dogs, were
expert at removing them by opening the velcro tabs with their front teeth.
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Rock dodgems

Tue 20 April: As we approached the coast (which is warmed
by the Gulf stream) there was less and less snow, making for interesting
navigation through the rocks and grass hummocks.
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Our final camp

Tue 20 April: Our final campsite. Little red tent for the
boy, big green tent for the girls, dogs sleep outside.
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Thanks for all the support!
Congrats on successfully completing your venture.
Dimitri.
Congrats - it souded awesome.
I really enjoyed (and looked forward) to reading your daily dispatches.
Barbara.
the website is fab
Rhona
CONGRATULATIONS ! What a great achievement and wonderful adventure, and
thank you so much for keeping us all entertained and informed along the way
- I shall miss looking in on your daily dispatches. Have a safe journey
home.
CONGRATULATIONS !!!!!
WELL DONE!
Anna.
Congrats, how's the shoulder and nose?
Nicola
Congratulations, proud of you.
Love Si
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Support emails.
What a technological feat to post regular updates from the
ice!
Wish you and Rona and Per-Thore all the best for the expedition, and safe
return.
Jiri Rezac
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Time to head home.

Rona turns her sled away from the ocean that lies beyond
Nordkapp. It is time to head for home.
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Tourist welcome

Wed 21 April: The three teams arrive at Nordkapp to be
greeted by tourist cameras.
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Celebration!

Champagne all round as the the mushers and their dogs
arrive at Nordkapp.
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Racing to Nordkapp

Cathy, Per-Thore and Rona, with their teams, race across
the last snows before the Nordkapp.
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Mission accomplished!
Wed 21 April: 71° 10' 21". At 13.50 Western European time
the Nordkapp expedition reached its objective. Three tired mushers and 26
tired dogs (one so tired she was being given a lift in a sled) arrived at
the northern-most point of Europe, the Nordkapp. We cracked open a bottle of
champagne and celebrated the successful conclusion to 11 days of travelling.
It has to be said that the wilderness is not what it once was and we were
greeted by a visitors centre and a coachload of tourists all frantically
photographing the dogs.
Nevertheless we could look out over the deep blue sea, lying calm under
stormy grey skies, and know that nothing lay between us and the North Pole.
Dispatches will continue for a few days while we travel down the Norwegian
coast by boat and get the time to upload more expedition pictures.
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| April 21, Expedition completed -
champagne at the arrival
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First blood spilt

Tue 20th: The first expedition blood to be spilt is Rona's.
The team was sledding down a slope, moving fast on hard snow. In the middle
was one rock, which Rona unerringly hit. She was thrown from the sled,
face-planting in the snow, cutting herslef on the bridge of her nose. She
picked herself up, got back on her sled and we continued - no other choice
really!
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Blue ice lakes

Tue 20th: Much of the day's sledding has been through
beautiful rolling highlands with lakes of blue ice in the hollows. The blue
ice is a sign of surface melt in the previous warm days, which has frozen
again in the current cold.
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Winter woolies

Tue 20th: Cathy with hood up and goggles on for protection
against the bitter cold and biting wind.
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Born to run

Tue 20th: Sally and Vinga, Rona's lead dogs, making up time
on the hard-packed snow.
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Tuesday 20 April
Tuesday 20 April: Corfu. We covered 81 km today, with a
fastest speed of 26.5 km/h, and an average of 10.2 km/h. We have done a
total of 515 km.
After our soft snow nightmares of the past few days our prayers were
answered in bone-chilling fashion. Clear skies and sunshine made for
beautiful vistas, but low temperatures and fierce winds made it probably our
coldest day yet. Hard crisp snow made for very rapid progress and in fact we
have covered two day stages in one. However dogs and humans are all deeply
tired and many of the dogs have bleeding paws.
The day's high was sledding through herds of reindeer, the low Rona
swan-diving off her sled to face-plant in the snow.
Late in the afternoon we descended from the highlands to see the sea deep
blue ahead of us and the mountains of Nordkapp in the distance.
Tomorrow we will stand on Europe's northern-most point. While it is exciting
to see our goal so close, it is also sad to see the experience drawing to a
close.
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Read all about it...

Rona writes up her daily diary in the tent. She will be
writing a book about this expedition that she hopes to have out in time for
this Christmas. She makes notes while sledding by using a dictaphone and
then writes up the day's account each night. You can pre-order a copy of the
book by emailing Rona at
rona@ronacant.com
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Toasted boots

Mon 19 April: Another of the drawbacks of soft snow is how
wet we get, not from the snow itself (mostly) but from the pushing and
shoving and stomping reqired to shift the sleds. The sweat builds up fast
and then stays with us, cold and clammy, for the rest of the day. Here the
inners of Cathy's boots dry out over the stove in the tent.
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Rona ramps valley of death

Mon 18 April: Having given up on our attempt to traverse
out of the valley of death, we did a kamikaze run straight down to the
valley flloor. Here Rona charges down the final incline. We had our feet so
hard on the foot brake that our feet were nearly half a foot below the sled
runners and still we ploughed down through the soft snow. We finally exited
the valley via a pass at its head and found hard-packed snowmobile trails
that carried us speedily northwards.
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Valley of death

Mon 19 April: After our breakfast break we innocently
sledded straight into the valley of death. Deep snow got deeper, soft snow
got softer, and we began to climb the valley side in search of harder,
shallower snow. That proved a fatal mistake. Traversing steep slopes in deep
snow was asking for the sleds to tip over time and again. And when they
went, they tipped well past the horizontal, leaving us pushing desperately
upwards while mired in thigh-deep snow. Here Per-Thore rescues Rona's sled.
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Breakfast to go

After our early start (not one of the strengths of this
expedition) we felt we deserved a break for a breakfast snack and a cup of
coffee. This trip runs on coffee and it is a source of much concern that we
are very close to running out. However, our attempts at rationing have not
met with success.
During our break, Rona entertained the Oxford commuter traffic on BBC Radio
Oxford.
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River riding

Mon 19 April: After slow and rough progress over the
highlands, we picked up speed as we followed the Bastinjåkka river. It
provided a fast and level highway north for several hours, paved in
pale-green ice, although with some alarming cracks and holes. Finally it
veered away from north, and we headed back into the hills, heading in all
innocence into the valley of death.
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Tough on equipment...

Mon 19 April: We did actually manage an early start this
morning, up at 4.45, gone by 6.45, and the effort paid off with firmer snow
and faster going. However, day after day of tough going is taking a toll on
our equipment . Here the three teams pile up as Rona's gangline breaks.
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Monday 19 April
Mon 19 April evening: 70° 26' N, 24° 30' E. Ska'di. 434 km
done in total, with 54 km covered today. Our fastest speed was 21.7 km/h,
with 10.1 km/h our average.
It has been a long day across varied terrain and snow conditions. Tomorrow
we may catch our first glimpse of the sea. Nordkapp is slowly getting
closer.
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Deluxe pasta dinner.

Sun 18: Per-Thore dishes out lavish helpings of our deluxe
pasta dinner. Time to replace all the energy burnt up in the day's sledding.
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Rona trapezing on her sled.

Rona demonstrates the art of traversing a slope with a
heavy sled. Both feet are on the uphill sled runner, and weight is pushed as
far up the hill as possible, butt swinging wide, to try and stop the sled
sliding downhill.
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Sleds afloat

The surface ice on the lakes is beginning to melt, leaving
the ice a strange pale green colour. The dogs are running through an inch of
water.
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The dogs cooling off.

With the warm temperatures and the hard going, the dogs
take every chance they can to cool off by rolling in the snow.
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Rona interviews Per-Thore
Sun 18: Rona interviews our famously shy (but very
competent and rather good-looking) third team member, Per-Thore Hansen.
How do you think the expedition is going? It is going good.
How are the dogs coping? They are doing fine, they are a little bit tired
after a long winter.
Do you think we will make it to Nordkapp? Sure we will one way or another.
Thanks Per-Thore, we will hear more from you please at the end of the
expedition.
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Soft and slow
Sun 18 April, late afternoon: We have covered just 50 kms,
but we are pleased to have come even that far. Conditions today turned out
to be as bad as we feared. It has been a slow-going day, floundering through
soft, deep snow for hour after hour. It is equally frustrating for the lead
team, which has the hard job of trail-breaking, and for the teams that
follow, which are continually breaking. As the brakes don't work well in
deep snow, quickly clogging and jamming, it becomes a process of continually
stopping and starting again.
The dogs hate working in these conditions and we need to get them onto
firmer ground. If the weather stays like this we need to travel much earlier
in the day when the snow is still hard. Currently the plan is dog feeding at
4am, leaving at 6am. We just can't wait!
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Soft and slow.
Sun 18 April, late afternoon: We have covered just 50 kms,
but we are pleased to have come even that far. Conditions today turned out
to be as bad as we feared. It has been a slow-going day, floundering through
soft, deep snow for hour after hour. It is equally frustrating for the lead
team, which has the hard job of trail-breaking, and for the teams that
follow, which are continually breaking. As the brakes don't work well in
deep snow, quickly clogging and jamming, it becomes a process of continually
stopping and starting again.
The dogs hate working in these conditions and we need to get them onto
firmer ground. If the weather stays like this we need to travel much earlier
in the day when the snow is still hard. Currently the plan is dog feeding at
4am, leaving at 6am. We just can't wait!
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Thanks Rikki!
Hi Cathy and Rona
What a journey - I have been following your web reports daily - Wow - I
really do admire you both - fantastic photographs - Glad you got the tekkie
stuff sorted after you near disaster in the water - Its difficult to imagine
how scary that must be - in the middle of know where - its not as if you can
flag down some help. Rona I'm so sorry to hear of your shoulder injury - I
shall send some healing energy (I did Silva training)
Hope you have had a well deserved rest today - and everything has dried out
and the pain is lessened for the second half - I look forward to the reports
next week - Good luck
Huggs
Rikki
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Arctic melt.
Sun 18 April morning: The one unexpected problem we have
encountered is that temperatures are too high. It rained gently for much of
last night and this morning feels damp and grey, with temperatures several
degrees above freezing.
We have yet to use the arctic suits we have with us, wearing merely thermal
leggings, gore-tex sallopettes and heavy jackets (which sounds like a lot
but up here is practically beach wear).
High temperatures bring unexpected problems. We carry raw meat (offal) in
frozen blocks to feed the dogs. When it is too warm it begins to melt and
reek.
Ideally the dogs want to run in -10C to -20C. When it is warmer, they
overheat and slow down.
Hard snow is easier and faster to fun on. In softer snow the dogs sink in,
and the lead team battles to break a trail. The human can't help by mushing,
as there is nothing solid to push against. The sleds, although wood lashed
together with twine, and so very flexible, damage more easily in soft snow.
Per-Thore has already broken a runner.
It is also easier to tip the sleds and jam them. Pulling 120 kgs of sled
upright when floundering in thigh-deep snow, with the dogs swimming up to
their bellies, is not easy.
The rivers and lakes that so often provide us with an easy line through the
hills are also beginning to weaken. We find ourselves sledding through pools
of slush on the lakes, and across narrow snowbridges on the rivers.
To our surprise, we are hoping for colder days ahead!
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A sled-sized hole in the ice.

This is the hole into which Cathy's sled fell on Thur 15th.
The teams were crossing from the riverbank campsite onto the ice of the
river, and Cathy's team took the turn too tightly.
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Keep left, overtake right.

We have encountered various over travellers on our trip,
most commonly on snowmobiles, but also travelling on ski. Some skiers are
carrying backpacks, some are pulling pulkas (small sleds), others are
accompanied by a dog pulling the pulka.
But yesterday (Fri 16th) was the first time we have met other dog teams.
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Any idiot can be uncomfortable.

Per-Thore and his team take a lunchtime nap on the
Kautokeino river.
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Rivers: roads of the north

On Thursday 15th we spent most of the day following the
Kautokeino river. In the arctic the frozen rivers become the roads of
winter, complete with road signs!
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Support emails
As per your norm - this adventure does NOT look like a walk
around the park. But we've come to expect that from you.
Pete Major
You are really amazing! One (ad)venture after another... I will follow
your adventure "in the neighbourhood" with great interest. The dog-sledding
sounds so romantic, but I guess it's hard work alright?!
Anna Storbacka
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A word from Rona
Sat 17 April, Rona: I hadn't realised that we would have a
rest day but it is a godsend. The trail has been quite arduous, the dogs are
tired, there is the equipment to dry out and my shoulder is giving me a lot
of pain. I am rationing the painkillers so that they last to the end of the
Expedition. The terrain we have travelled through has been incredible - how
I will describe it in the book will be difficult. There will need to be lots
of pictures. This has been the most fantastic experience especially as I
said after last year's trail for CancerResearchUK never again. On Sunday we
set off again for the second half which will be even more remote. Watch this
space! Rona
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Servicing sled runners

Sat April 17: A rest day is a chance to service the rest of
our kit. Per-Thore smoothes off the plastic runners under the sleds with a
knife. Our travels do not just take us across soft snow.
We have had to cross several roads - an interesting experience as there's no
way to brake on tar, and what cars there are travel fast. The tar is not
kind to the plastic.
On Tuesday we were travelling over exposed highlands, stripped clear of snow
by the howling winds. Rough rock patches scar the runners, as do the large
rocks and tree stumps that we sometimes can't avoid bouncing off. Even the
icy patches on rivers and the hard-pack snow on snowmobile trails slowly
wear the runners down.
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It runs in the blood.

Dog-sledding must run in the blood of Per-Thore's family.
His 2 1/2 year old son, Jomar, rides in the sled while his wife, Hegge, is
taking the puppies for a training run. As she controls the speed with the
brake, he yells: don't brake mummy, don't brake.
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Tiny figures under vast skies.

Rona and Per-Thore in the late afternoon of Wednesday 14th,
crossing the soft snow plains.
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Hot to trot.

Vinga and Sally leading Rona's team of eight dogs out of
the Reisa national park on Wed 14th.
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Magic mountains.

Early in the morning soon after leaving the Reina
cabin on Wednesday 14th. One of the joys of this trip is the wide variety of
scenery that we have passed through.
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Sweet dreams in snow.

Sally, one of Rona's lead dogs, settled in for a good
night's sleep. The dogs sleep unprotected on the snow, curled up tightly to
protect their faces and stomachs.
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Friday April 16th
Friday April 16th evening:
69° 45' N, 23° 56' E at Joatkajávri.
We travelled 58km today, to a total of 332km to date. We have reached our
halfway point, and are taking a well deserved rest day, for human and dog
alike.
Despite our best intentions of an early start, exhaustion from yesterday's
dramas left us slow and tired. Even the dogs were unusually subdued as we
set out.
The morning route was beautiful, following the Lesjohka river, a narrow
valley winding through low hills. Fast flowing, there was open water in many
places, and several narrow snow bridges to cross. These were done with care,
following yesterday's disaster.
For the first time on the trip we met other dog teams, four teams travelling
light on a 2-day trip.
After lunch we crossed Iesjávri, the biggest lake in Finmark (Norway's
northern-most region, which we are currently traversing). The dogs don't
like big lake crossings, becoming bored and lethargic without a target to
run towards. But the mountains that lay on the distant horizons were
beautiful. Next week we will be passing through them.
Now we are curled up in a beautiful forestry cabin, warm and well fed, a
fire blazing in the stove. We have had a sauna, and a dip in the partially
frozen river. It is time to chill out and enjoy a lie-in in the morning.
The only problem remaining is the technical equipment, which was always
temperamental but has become far more so since going swimming yesterday.
Getting information onto the website is proving difficult. I am about to go
and huddle outside in the cold to try and send this report.
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| The going gets tough.
Things are getting tougher out here. Rona tore something
in her left shoulder yesterday, she came down a hill round a corner
(probably too fast) and the sled swung out into a tree stump, and then
jammed round the stump in deep snow. The arm is severely compromised and she
is running on painkillers this morning. We don't yet know how she will hold
out.
First thing yesterday, crossing a snow bridge from our camp on the bank onto
the frozen river we were to follow, my sled swung right and broke through
the edge of the bridge, with 2/3 of the sled sinking. We finally pulled it
out but my still and video camera are ruined. I am still trying to
resuscitate the website comms. Everything in the sled was soaked. Rona went
into the river with both feet trying to pull it out. And after all that we
still had to sled for 70 km to reach our next stop-point.
We are about to leave for another 50 km today, and then tomorrow is a
blessed rest day! It won't come a minute too soon.
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A big day.
76° 55' N 22° 36 E Addgetgekke.
Average speed 10.4 km/h. Covered 90 km in 9 hours of sledding, done 199 km
in total, nearly a third of the way.
A big day, crossing a lot of ground, at times in poor conditions.
Temperatures are surprisingly high (relatively), the dogs are hot and the
snow is soft, with the sleds tipping and jamming frustratingly easily.
Our first encounters with wildlife, flocks of white birds and, on a distant
skyline, herds of hundreds of reindeer.
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550 km to go...
69° 17' N, 21° 30' E Somas Cabin. Day 3: we covered 48 km,
at an average speed of 16.3 km/h. The speedometer topped out at 25 km/h. So
far we have travelled 109 km - 550 to go!
Cathy: Today started out beautifully, with blue skies and smooth untracked
snow glittering in the sunlight. The only sign of life was the tracks of an
Arctic fox. And running behind us the single sinuous line of our sled tracks
and paw prints.
However, having crossed a high plateau, we found ourselves in the teeth of
the wind. A ground storm whipped up, with spindrift scudding along the snow.
Hoods wrapped round our faces, we pressed on, sleds being pushed sideways by
the gusts, dogs trotting with heads tucked in.
In the bitter cold fingers and noses were going numb. Rona and Per-Thore
were only visible from the waist-up, their dogs vanished in the spindrift.
For a while we followed a river-course, the dogs' paws skittering on the
blue ice. And finally we approached the Reisa National Park, running along a
hard-packed snowmobile trail. The only breaks all day were to lift fallen
sleds (today Rona's, not mine), untangle dogs from each other and once from
a hidden fence, and once to gulp down luke-warm tea from thermoses while
huddled down beside our sleds.
We were glad to finally reach the cabin.
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Loassomuvra Cabin Day 2

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Rona getting odder by the day

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Groundstorm on day 3
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Doggie dinner time.
The logistics of keeping the dogs on the paw: We have 26
dogs, which we feed twice a day. They are burning up around 5000 kcalories a
day. To replace that we go through nearly a 20 kg pack dry food a day, and
20 kg meat. To make the food we mix hot water, chopped meat, and dry food in
vacuum boxes. 2 of our 3 sleds are filled with dog food.
Each dog gets a 2l bowl of food and water in the evening, and in the morning
a 1/2 bowl. For the dogs we need 45l of water each evening and 30 l each
morning, plus 10l for 3 people. We simply can't melt enough snow each day to
produce 85l. We need a liquid water source. We use an ice drill to drill
down through a metre of snow and ice to access the water in the many lakes
in the region. The dogs also eat snow as they run for water.
Hygiene is very important as we can easily contaminate our food with dog
food and get sick. Human food and dog food are always kept on different
sleds.
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Breakfast time.

Per-Thore feeding Shara breakfast.
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| Apr 12 - The going gets tough.
69° 12' N, 21° 00' E Cathy: It is the end of day 2 and
it has been a long tiring haul, covering 41 km. We are tucked up warmly
inside a cabin next to the Finnish border, at Loassomuvra. From 500 m we
pushed up over 800m, dropped down to cross the great lake of Gálggojávri at
500 m and climbed back up to 800 m. The ascents are hard work, mushing or
running by the sleds. And the descents demand constant concentration and
braking to stop the sleds running over the dogs.
Always the challenge is the weight of the sleds. As Per-Thore says, they are
shit-heavy (this being a technical mushing term, of course). Worst are
traverse descents with the sleds tipping over precariously to one side. I
went over 3 times in just 50 metres. The 3rd time a cliff above was echoing
the barking of my team and they were jumping about frantically in search of
the ghost dogs, starting to run each time I levered the sled a few inches
above the ground. At which point I would drop the sled and do a
superman-style dive for the sled bar andbthe snow anchor. Hopefully, better
luck tomorrow.
Except that tomorrow we lose the convenience of snowmobile trails and spend
2 days trail-breaking through soft snow. The challenge continues...
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April 11 - And we're off.
I'm tucked up in my sleeping bag on a snowy plateau close
to the three nations border (where Norway, Finland and Sweden meet). Outside
the wind is howling and snow is drifting over the 26 dogs curlrd up in a
long line outside. I can think of no other place that I'd rather be!
After a frantic final round of packing, we left Per-Thore's house this
morning for the two hour drive inland from Tromso to our start point at
Sygnaledan. We passed vast fjords and ever larger mountains until we came at
last to the valley that would give us access to the plateau.
Sleds were unloaded and packed, dogs unloaded and harnessed, barking wildly
in their excitement. The thrill of the start was soon tempered by the
reality of getting 120 kilogram sleds up 600 vertical metres on a narrow
track winding through trees. Dog-sledding can be far harder work than one
imagines, when mushing (keeping one foot on the sled runner while pushing on
the snow with the other) or worse running behind the sled to try and lighten
the load.
Both Rona and I flipped our sledges onto their sides at different points
(Per-Thore would never do something so unprofessional). Pushing a sled that
weighs nearly twice my body weight back onto its runners is no joke,
especially as the dogs start to pull as soon as they feel the sled moving.
We were accompanied on the first stretch by friends on a snowmobile, doing
some filming for us. Thereafter we passed skiers sled-hauling and other
snowmobile parties. But nothing beats dog-sleds for style! Roll on tomorrow,
we are ready for more...
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April 10 - 12 Hours and Counting...
After a morning spent shopping for food and other last
minute items, and an afternoon spent packing bags and boxes, we are ready to
move out first thing tomorrow.
The messiest job was packing the dog meat into containers. It comes in great
frozen slabs of reindeer meat and fat that have to be cut down into
managable chunks with a chainsaw.
Although it snowed for most of the afternoon where we are on the coast,
reports from inland promise excellent conditions. We may face some snow and
wind in the next few days, but on a long trip we can expect to meet every
kind of weather.
It is time for bed, one last night with the comfort of mattress, pillow and
duvet, and 10 hours to enjoy every moment of it.
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April 9 - Thanks for all the
e-mails!
Thanks to everyone for your emails of support. They are all
much appreciated.
Good luck with it, it sounds so exciting (I'm not so sure about the -20
degrees though!). Nicola Archer.
You are truly amazing. A little weird, but I like that in a person. Doug
Stevenson.
Let me know if you come
across any lost Vikings in the high North... Jeanne
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April 9 - Running the dogs
Cathy: this afternoon we took the dogs out for a practise
run, running empty sleds with six dogs each. It was one of the most romantic
experiences of my life. We were running across crisp fresh snow, with groves
of black trees standing stark under a grey-white sky. Flakes of snow were
drifting past, as plump as spring blossoms. The dogs were padding silently,
running hard and fast. Resisting all attempts to slow or brake. One of the
joys of mushing is that the dogs are clearly enjoying it as much as the
people. I can't wait to get started on the main event.
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April 9 - Final logistics in Norway
Our first day in Norway and the expedition is already
beginning to feel like a reality. The morning has been spent on logistical
chores - final touches to the sleds (which Per-Thore made from scratch),
including fitting brakes (a good idea given how energetic the dogs are),
fittting the sledbags on the sleds, pitching the tents to check everything
is in place, testing the Primus stoves, making insulating covers for the
food boxes, and finding the 1:50 000 maps that cover our route (some 20 in
all). This afternoon, if all goes well, we take the dogs for a spin. Then
things really get exciting!!
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