2002 #3 September 5th Our Furthest North
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From John:

We last wrote from
the west coast of Spitsbergen. From there we continued north visiting
several anchorages, the most interesting being Virgohamna from
where André left on his fatal attempt to reach the North Pole
in a balloon. The dry Svalbard climate has preserved the
remains of this expedition, and the slightly later Wellman
attempt, so that it looks as if they left ten years ago,
rather than a hundred.
After three days exploring Virgohamna and the close by
Smeerenburg (Blubber town), which had been a Dutch whaling
station in the 1600s, a fair west wind gave us the best sail
of the cruise under main and poled out jib boiling along
toward the east with the barren snow-streaked north coast of
Spitsbergen to starboard and nothing but the ice pack and a
low sand bank called Moffen Island between us and the North
Pole to port.
Moffen is usually where most boats turn back toward the south,
having reached 80°N latitude, but the goal of our
cruise was to transit Hinlopen Strait between Spitsbergen and
Nordaustlandet (Northeast Land). This Strait's evil reputation
for ice, unpredictable weather, and lack of anchorages means
that few yachts venture there. However, in recent years much of
the strait has been charted to modern standards making things
easier than they were when Bill Tillman made the first yacht
transit in the 70s.
That evening, running before a near gale, we reached Murchison
Fjord on Nordaustlandet at the north entrance to Hinlopen
where the bleak surroundings, seen through scudding fog and
rain as we anchored, brought home our isolation.
We spent the next week exploring Hinlopen—including finding
several uncharted anchorages—south to Barentsøya where we
transited Heleysundet with its fearsome reputation for strong
currents approaching 10 knots that have sucked sailing ships
to their doom, crushed in the ice that crashes back and forth
through the channel for most of the year.
Our transit of Heleysundet was benign since there was little
ice around and, through pure luck (there are no tidal current
tables), our arrival coincided with the few minutes of slack
water at tide change.
By now it was still only early August so instead of returning
to Norway from south Hinlopen as originally intended, we
decided to retrace our steps through Hinlopen and see how far
north and east along the coast of Nordaustlandet the ice would
let us go. In the end it transpired that we reached our
furthest north of this cruise, or probably any other for that
matter, at 80°35' North, just south of Parryøya,
named after a British explorer who was there on one of the
early attempts to reach the North Pole.
We had hoped to circumnavigate the Sjuøyane group, of which
Parryøya is a part, as it is one of the northernmost pieces of
land in the world—only a bit of northern Greenland, some of
Ellesmere and a few Russian Islands are closer to the
Pole—but we found the pack ice six miles south of Parry.
Since the ice was fairly loose, we threaded through it
twisting and turning to take a few photographs of Parryøya's
cliffs looming out of the fog and then beat a hasty retreat,
since even open pack in a flat calm sea is no place to tarry.
We found the pack an eerie place to be, particularly in the
light fog we had; quiet except for the cracking of the ice and
the grinding when two floes moved together. But it was not a
dead place; on the contrary, it teemed with life: Every few
hundred yards there was a seal hauled out on the ice, but our
most special encounter was with a huge bull walrus asleep on a
floe. As we approached he sleepily lifted his head, scratched
and posed for a photograph. In the 15 minutes we spent with
him, sometimes as close as 30 feet, he would occasionally open
one eye to see what we were doing, but aside from that seemed
totally unconcerned. And why should he be? After the terrible
slaughter of the last few hundred years walrus are now
protected and have no predators, since they are powerful
enough to see off a polar bear.
The time we spent in Hinlopen and at Nordaustlandet after
leaving the "frequented" areas of Spitsbergen was some of the
best we have experienced in 10 years of coming to the north:
We found and explored new anchorages that are not mentioned in
the sailing directions; walked ashore in a landscape that at
first appeared as barren as the moon, but, once we looked
carefully, amazed us with its subtle beauty; held Morgan's
Cloud close under towering cliffs and watched as young
guillemots left the teeming rookery where they were born. The
young birds stand in crowded rows on every ledge, facing in
toward the cliff as if afraid to look out over the drop. Every
so often one commits itself to its stubby wings for the first
time and half flies, half falls, with much fluttering and
squawking, landing in the water with an undignified splash.
However, once in the water they seem immediately at home and
are soon swimming and diving with the same confidence as their
parents.
In mid-August we returned to Longyearbyen to refuel and pick
up a friend from Tromsø, before heading south across the
Barents Sea to North Norway. The crossing was uneventful,
although made uncomfortable by almost constant head winds. But
the morning of the third day at sea dawned sunny with a fair
wind that gave us a lovely reach as the mountains of Norway
emerged over the horizon looking impossibly green after our
summer in the arctic desert of Svalbard.
We have decided to winter once again at our "northern home" of
Tromsø. Plans for next summer are still tentative but, since
we must be back in Bermuda in the fall of 2003 when the
renters of our house leave, we are thinking of returning to North
America via Shetland, Faeroe, North Iceland and Greenland. The
first three will be new destinations for us, completing the
symmetry of our four year cruise of the north.

The
Norwegian Cruising Guide is a mine of
information on sailing in Norway and Svalbard. See
www.norwegiancruisingguide.com.

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Last
edited on
Saturday December 01, 2007
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mean or imply that the high latitudes are anything other than a
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Decisions to cruise the high latitudes, where you go, and how
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