Expedition Journal
March 7th, 2010
Audio Update - 07 Mar
A new remote audio post has been added to the blog...

The Save the Poles expedition is sponsored by bing and Terramar with major support from Goal0, MSR, Scream Agency, Sierra Designs, Stanley, Optic Nerve and Clif Bar.

Remember, it's cool to be cold. Save the Poles. Save the planet.

For more information, please visit www.ericlarsenexplore.com. For media inquiries, please contact lora@screamagency.com. For technical inquires, please contact webexpeditions.net. For lecture inquires, please contact smakmaria@yahoo.com.
Begin With One Step!
As if reducing global warming pollution weren't enough reason to buy Energy Star products, here's another: You save money. The more Energy Star products you buy, the more you shave off the $1,900 the average American household spends on electricity for appliances each year.
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March 7th, 2010
Day 5: Bacon Saved our Bacon
Scrambling up a 15-foot tall block of ice changes my perspective just enough to help with navigation. Yesterday AJ described the ice as a puzzle, but looking at the wide panorama below, I think maze.

For as far as I can see there are large 20-30 foot ice blocks scattered sporadically. In between, snow drifts roll, taper, begin and end with equal randomness. Some are rock hard. Others are soft. Massive winding jumbles of ice slabs diagnol forming the only recognizeable pattern. Somewhere in all that a few flat pans exist even though I can't seem them right now. I wish there were more. A couple of frozen flat lead means the difference between two hours struggle versus 30 minutes of leisurely travel.

We've had to remind ourselves several times that we are choosing to be here

We lost only 350 feet due to southward drift last night. After the usual freezing wake up and frost management chores, we were off - darcy's feet being unbearbly cold for only an hour. We spent much of the day meandering (if you can call back-breaking work that) back and forth, up and over drifts and ridges. Despite coming face to face with numerous ridges, we always seem to find some way through.

We spent most of the day deep in our own thoughts. Breaks are few and short as our margin of safety is unnervingly thin.

'When we first started, it was 90% survival and 10% travel,' commented Darcy. We are slowly pushing the odds in our favor.'

Because of our desire to stay warm, we lengthed our travel shift to two hours. Nearing the last few minutes, we were dangerously cold and tired. Luckily, it was our 'soup' break complete with three pieces of bacon. We all benefited from the additional energy. Our best mileage to date and bacon saved our bacon.

The Save the Poles expedition is sponsored by bing with major support from the University of Plymouth, terramar, Seventh Generation, Goal0, Atlas, Sierra Designs and Optic Nerve.

Remember, it's cool to be cold. Save the Poles. Save the planet.

For more information, please visit www.ericlarsenexplore.com

For information about guided Antarctic expeditions, please visit http://www.antarctic-logistics.com/

For media inquiries, please contact lora@screamagency.com

For technical inquires, please contact webexpeditions.net

The Save the Poles expedition is sponsored by bing and Terramar with major support from Goal0, MSR, Scream Agency, Sierra Designs, Stanley, Optic Nerve and Clif Bar.

Remember, it's cool to be cold. Save the Poles. Save the planet.

For more information, please visit www.ericlarsenexplore.com. For media inquiries, please contact lora@screamagency.com. For technical inquires, please contact webexpeditions.net. For lecture inquires, please contact smakmaria@yahoo.com.
Begin With One Step!
The concept of "food miles" and the carbon footprint of food is becoming more widely known. The basic concept is: as we have increasingly globalized our food supply, we use more petroleum flying food all over the world. Locally produced food doesn't bring this problem, and it also provides many additional benefits. So what is local food, and why is it so great? Instead of going to the supermarket and buying food that comes from another country, your money helps support your local community, where it stays within the local tax base, and provides local jobs. All while helping to stop climate change.

http://www.350.org/foodandfarm
March 6th, 2010
Audio Update - 06 Mar
A new remote audio post has been added to the blog...

The Save the Poles expedition is sponsored by bing and Terramar with major support from Goal0, MSR, Scream Agency, Sierra Designs, Stanley, Optic Nerve and Clif Bar.

Remember, it's cool to be cold. Save the Poles. Save the planet.

For more information, please visit www.ericlarsenexplore.com. For media inquiries, please contact lora@screamagency.com. For technical inquires, please contact webexpeditions.net. For lecture inquires, please contact smakmaria@yahoo.com.
Begin With One Step!
Factory farms require huge carbon inputs and produce huge carbon outputs in the form of methane. It takes more than a calorie of fuel to produce every calorie we eat and, in industrial meat production, the ratio of calories-in to calories-out can be as high as 58:1. Eating livestock from your local community lessens this problem, but it still has a higher carbon output than a vegetarian diet.

http://www.350.org/foodandfarm
March 6th, 2010
Day 4: A Good Day
We seem to be slowly finding a our rhythm. It has not been easy. The extreme cold is unforgiving and small mistakes have big consequences. We have learned to cope and modify because we have no other choice.

Despite a chilly morning, the calm air made traveling manageable - if not a little too warm. At -40 any moisture leaving your body quickly turns to a thick coating of frost. So much in fact that we have to brush the ice off the inside of our parkas and pants at each day's end.

AJ described the day like, 'figuring out a puzzle. There are so many different ice conditions to contend with that we are constantly reassesing our route.'

We managed to wiggle our way through several tight jams. Scouting our route in the afternoon, we stood where three enormous ice pans collided and ground up against one another. Car-sized blocks of ice seemingly blocked our path. Luckily, we found a narrow rift to the west that eventually (after 30 minutes of hard work) led us to another pan. By all accounts, it was a good day.

Image: Darcy and AJ in the rift.

The Save the Poles expedition is sponsored by bing with major support from the University of Plymouth, terramar, Seventh Generation, Goal0, Atlas, Sierra Designs and Optic Nerve.

Remember, it's cool to be cold. Save the Poles. Save the planet.

For more information, please visit www.ericlarsenexplore.com

For information about guided Antarctic expeditions, please visit http://www.antarctic-logistics.com/

For media inquiries, please contact lora@screamagency.com

For technical inquires, please contact webexpeditions.net

The Save the Poles expedition is sponsored by bing and Terramar with major support from Goal0, MSR, Scream Agency, Sierra Designs, Stanley, Optic Nerve and Clif Bar.

Remember, it's cool to be cold. Save the Poles. Save the planet.

For more information, please visit www.ericlarsenexplore.com. For media inquiries, please contact lora@screamagency.com. For technical inquires, please contact webexpeditions.net. For lecture inquires, please contact smakmaria@yahoo.com.
Begin With One Step!
Factory farms require huge carbon inputs and produce huge carbon outputs in the form of methane. It takes more than a calorie of fuel to produce every calorie we eat and, in industrial meat production, the ratio of calories-in to calories-out can be as high as 58:1. Eating livestock from your local community lessens this problem, but it still has a higher carbon output than a vegetarian diet.

http://www.350.org/foodandfarm
March 5th, 2010
Day 3: Not Easy
One half mile of hard won forward progress was effortlessly erased while we slept. A stiff wind pushed the very small pan of ice we were camped on 2.5 nautical miles from where we went to sleep - mostly west but also a bit south.

Still our spirits our high. After all, we are choosing to be here - a fact which we also question routinely. Darcy says, 'getting out of the sleeping bag is the worst.' AJ and I can't really blame him. We feel the same way. -40, everything covered in frost crystals, it is the eptomy of 'not fun'.

The ice was somewhat kind to us today. We managed to find several newly frozen leads that made for nice travel. Of course, we also pulled our small sleds through an assortment of rubble, slabs, drifts, ridges, drops, inclines, soft snow and more. Today was not easy.

On a positive note, we saw the sun poke above the horizon for nearly 20 minutes. It was chillingly beautiful.

Image: AJ coming through some rubble.

The Save the Poles expedition is sponsored by bing with major support from the University of Plymouth, terramar, Seventh Generation, Goal0, Atlas, Sierra Designs and Optic Nerve.

Remember, it's cool to be cold. Save the Poles. Save the planet.

For more information, please visit www.ericlarsenexplore.com

For information about guided Antarctic expeditions, please visit http://www.antarctic-logistics.com/

For media inquiries, please contact lora@screamagency.com

For technical inquires, please contact webexpeditions.net

The Save the Poles expedition is sponsored by bing and Terramar with major support from Goal0, MSR, Scream Agency, Sierra Designs, Stanley, Optic Nerve and Clif Bar.

Remember, it's cool to be cold. Save the Poles. Save the planet.

For more information, please visit www.ericlarsenexplore.com. For media inquiries, please contact lora@screamagency.com. For technical inquires, please contact webexpeditions.net. For lecture inquires, please contact smakmaria@yahoo.com.
Begin With One Step!
The manufacturer recycles used Crocs into new shoes and donates them to underprivileged families. Mail them to: Crocs Recycling West, 3375 Enterprise Avenue, Bloomington CA 92316.
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