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Explorers match Shackleton trek | Explorers match Shackleton trek |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Three descendants of Sir Ernest Shackleton and his team have reached the point their ancestors abandoned an attempt to reach the South Pole. | |
Lt Col Henry Worsley, from Hereford, Will Gow, from Kent, and Henry Adams, from Suffolk, are trying to complete Shackleton's failed expedition. | Lt Col Henry Worsley, from Hereford, Will Gow, from Kent, and Henry Adams, from Suffolk, are trying to complete Shackleton's failed expedition. |
They have made it to the point 97 miles (156km) from the pole, where he was forced to turn back on 9 January 1909. | They have made it to the point 97 miles (156km) from the pole, where he was forced to turn back on 9 January 1909. |
The men are 57 days into their 80-day Matrix Shackleton Centenary Expedition. | The men are 57 days into their 80-day Matrix Shackleton Centenary Expedition. |
So far they have walked 800 miles across Antarctica, hauling 300lb (136kg) sledges for up to 10 hours a day in temperatures that have dropped as low as -52C. | So far they have walked 800 miles across Antarctica, hauling 300lb (136kg) sledges for up to 10 hours a day in temperatures that have dropped as low as -52C. |
'Physically shattering' | 'Physically shattering' |
Lt Col Worsley, 47, is the expedition leader and a descendant of Shackleton's skipper Frank Worsley. | Lt Col Worsley, 47, is the expedition leader and a descendant of Shackleton's skipper Frank Worsley. |
He said: "The past 57 days have been phenomenally challenging and physically shattering. | He said: "The past 57 days have been phenomenally challenging and physically shattering. |
"But to stand at Shackleton's 'furthest south' exactly 100 years later and mark his extraordinary feat of endurance and leadership has motivated all of us. | "But to stand at Shackleton's 'furthest south' exactly 100 years later and mark his extraordinary feat of endurance and leadership has motivated all of us. |
"It's onwards to the pole now." | "It's onwards to the pole now." |
Shackleton set out on his Nimrod expedition in October 1908, hoping to become the first person to reach the South Pole. | Shackleton set out on his Nimrod expedition in October 1908, hoping to become the first person to reach the South Pole. |
But icy blizzards and dwindling rations forced him to turn back 97 miles from his goal on 9 January 1909. | But icy blizzards and dwindling rations forced him to turn back 97 miles from his goal on 9 January 1909. |
Bad weather | Bad weather |
The trio celebrated Christmas Day as their forebears did 100 years before, with cigars and a spoonful of creme de menthe. | The trio celebrated Christmas Day as their forebears did 100 years before, with cigars and a spoonful of creme de menthe. |
Mr Gow, 35, a City worker, from Ashford, is related to Shackleton by marriage. | Mr Gow, 35, a City worker, from Ashford, is related to Shackleton by marriage. |
Mr Adams, 33, a shipping lawyer from Snape, near Woodbridge, is a great-grandson of Jameson Boyd-Adams, Shackleton's number two on the unsuccessful expedition. | Mr Adams, 33, a shipping lawyer from Snape, near Woodbridge, is a great-grandson of Jameson Boyd-Adams, Shackleton's number two on the unsuccessful expedition. |
Andrew Ledger, 23, from Derbyshire, Tim Fright, 24, from West Sussex and David Cornell, 38, from Hampshire, were due to meet the trio at the 97-mile point on Friday but have been delayed by bad weather. | Andrew Ledger, 23, from Derbyshire, Tim Fright, 24, from West Sussex and David Cornell, 38, from Hampshire, were due to meet the trio at the 97-mile point on Friday but have been delayed by bad weather. |
The expedition is being used to launch a £10m Shackleton Foundation, which will fund projects that capture the "explorer's spirit" and hunger for "calculated risk". | The expedition is being used to launch a £10m Shackleton Foundation, which will fund projects that capture the "explorer's spirit" and hunger for "calculated risk". |
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