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Let's All Chill There are easy ways to reach the North Poleby plane, helicopter, or icebreaker. And then there's the Børge Ousland way. A super-tough son of Norway and the greatest living Arctic explorer, he likes fellow adventurers who ski hard, pull their own weight, and can take a touch of frostbiteno whimpering allowed. By Stuart
Børge was Børge Ousland, the Norwegian polar adventurer who would lead the trip. Just 40, he'd already made a name for himself as one of the all-time greats of polar endurance, with feats that were nothing short of staggering. Børge (pronounced "BORE-gay") was the first person to ski solo to the North Pole (in 1994), the first to ski solo across Antarctica (1997), and the first to ski solo across the entire Arctic ice pack, from Siberia to Canada through the North Polea 2001 feat that put him on the ice for an astounding 82 days. He almost always did it without resupply, eating and wearing and burning only what he could drag. Just him, alone on the ice. With one big mother of a sled. "When I started from Siberia," Børge said, "my sled weighed 170 kilos." One hundred seventy kilos? That's nearly 375 pounds. I couldn't drag that much across a hockey rink. "But for this trip, the sleds are only 35 kilos or so. Not so bad." Seventy-seven pounds. That was probably enough to be really annoying by the end of a day, but still manageable. Which seemed to be in keeping with the spirit of this trip. It was Børge's idea to lead a small group to the pole, making the journey just hard enough to give people a taste of what he goes through, but not so hard as to terrorize everyone who might sign up. "I suppose it's a good idea to train for this," I said. Børge laughed. "I go hiking with tires. I drag them behind me." "You hike dragging a tire?" "Three tires, usually. All in a row. That way the tires get better traction and it's harder. I like tractor tires. I do it for several hours a day. You should try it." "Sure," I promised, knowing hell would freeze over before I hit the trail with three tractor tires scraping behind me. Still, I did need to get a feel for this towing-a-sled stuff. So I went to the place I ski every season, the Trapp Family Lodge in Stowe, Vermont, and borrowed one of those kiddie sleds parents use to pull their tots around. Where the kid is supposed to go, I strapped in a very cold 45-pound weight. The sled was attached to my waist with a padded beltjust like Børge does it, but where he uses ropes to drag his sled, this one had long metal bars, intended to make the whole arrangement more stable. Which worked, sort of. Going uphill was fine, but when I turned around, the weight of the sled started pushing me downhill like a big hand. In a heartbeat, I was flying, desperately trying to hang on. I blew past an astounded family, who scrambled for their lives, and then I wiped out in a sharp turn. I felt the sled roll and I was jerked and twisted in a jumbled, snow-flying-everywhere mess. I got up, cursing. "What are you doing?" A woman was screaming at me from down the trail. Doing? I was falling on my ass. Wasn't it obvious? I jerked the sled upright. "Be careful with that baby!" the woman yelled. I gave the sled a good whack with my pole. "Stop that!"
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