On 1 November
2011 I sailed from Newfoundland for Trinidad to paint Iron Bark. Making
a 4500nm round trip do a bit of painting seemed excessive, particularly as I
would have preferred to spend the winter in Newfoundland drinking screech with
the b’ys. But, drunk or sober, you cannot paint a steel boat in winter in
Newfoundland.
The passage south
took 24 days and was a rough one. First we (Iron Bark and I) ran before
a northerly gale, making 115nm in a day under bare poles, then later, ENE of
Bermuda, had a brush with tropical storm Sean. During this storm, a woman was
lost from a yacht nearby and two yachts were abandoned. In March 2012, after
three months in Trinidad refitting Iron Bark, I sailed north to meet
Annie Hill for a summer cruise of the Maritimes. March is early for that voyage
and it took 24 days, largely to windward.
Annie flew out
from New Zealand and through May and June we coasted along Nova Scotia and
southern Newfoundland, sailed 1281nm and anchored in 25 harbours before
returning to Halifax. Annie returned to New Zealand and I gathered the food and
gear for a solitary winter in Greenland. This was easy with only one person’s
taste to consider but provisions for 16 months without resupply is a bulky
load. Most of the gear necessary for a polar winter was already aboard, this
being Iron Bark’s third winter in the ice. I bought a new pair of
snowshoes and a few other oddments and sailed from Halifax on 14 July 2012.
My abiding memory
of the passage north is of fog. For ten days we dodged fishing boats in fog on
the Nova Scotia fishing banks and the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. The Labrador
Sea was just as foggy but there were no fishing boats or, I hoped, ice, making
it easier to get some sleep. The final 600nm up Davis Strait to Disko Bay took
eight cold, wet, weary days. There was enough ice to need a constant lookout so
I starred into the mank until I could stay awake no longer, then let Iron
Bark drift and slept. Scattered bergs loomed out of the murk as we entered
Disko Bay, no surprise as Disko’s glaciers produce them by the thousand. A line
of grounded bergs appeared ahead, then a rocky shoreline. I nosed around the
ice into Fortune Bay and anchored, 23 days out from Halifax.
The next day I
went on to Qeqertarsuaq (Godhavn) where the harbour master was welcoming and
blessedly uninterested in any formalities. A minke whale, one of the local
quota of four, was being butchered on the foreshore and I was given a chunk. I
did a bit of shopping, bought some fuel and went back to Fortune Bay then
sailed north on 14 August with a fair wind. A gale warning was issued as we
approached the north end of the Vaigat, which separates Disko Island from the
mainland. There is always a lot of ice in the Vaigat and it is no place to be
in a gale and fog. The only anchorage within reach, near the abandoned
settlement of Nuussuaq, is open to the southwest but would probably to do as
the gale was forecast to be from the south. As we approached Nuussuaq the fog
lifted revealing several hundred icebergs and, thankfully, the entrance to the
anchorage. The recommended anchorage was choked with ice but the next cove
north was open and I anchored there for two days waiting on weather. There is a
stone ruin ashore called Bjørnefælde, ‘the bear trap’, supposedly a thirteenth
century Norse chapel. It looks like a bear trap.
There was a strong, fair wind and no fog
as we continued north on 18 August, still dodging ice. When the wind failed I
motored up Sondre Upernavik to anchor in Uvijoq Uluâ. The chart of the area is
devoid of soundings and this cove has a narrow, rocky entrance that I had
lead-lined it in 2004. It was now high summer and I was glad to have an engine
as we continued in calm, sunny weather to the village of Kangersuatsiaq. I
bought fuel, entertained twenty exuberant children aboard then motored around
Kangeq Peninsula (Kangeq means peninsula) to the Nordre Sunds.
The Nordre Sunds
are a maze of protected channels between Laxefjord (72°30’N) and Upernaviks
Isfjord (73°00’N). They are uninhabited except for Upernavik, with a population
of 1000, perched on an island on their seaward side, and nearby the hamlet of
Augpilagtoq. The Sunds have spectacular scenery, several bays suitable for
winter quarters and are almost ice-free in summer. The most detailed chart of
the area has a scale of 1:400,000 with almost no soundings but I had sketch
charts from our 2004 visit.
That night, or
the brief twilight that is night there in August, I anchored in Winter Cove,
where Annie and I had spent the winter eight years earlier. In this latitude,
73°N, the year divides into four nearly equal parts. In early August the
midnight sun sets for the first time in three months. Over the next three
months the days get rapidly shorter until in early November the sun does not
rise and 80 day long winter’s night begins. The sun reappears in early
February, the days lengthen until in May the sun rises and does not set again
until August.
After three days
poking around the Nordre Sunds, I sailed north to investigate Upernaviks
Isfjord. It was cluttered with ice ranging from large bergs to brash but it was
possible to weave and barge through it. The bleak shore had nothing that looked
promising as winter quarters. This was burning more fuel and knocking off more
paint than seemed worthwhile so I turned back to the Nordre Sunds.
In the Sunds my first choice for winter
quarters was a bay that we named Capelin Cove in 2005. I shuttled fuel from
Kangersuatsiaq and Upernavik until by 25 August I had eight hundred litres
cached in Capelin Cove, enough for the winter. So far no one had asked me what
my intentions were in Greenland so it seemed easiest to lay low and say
nothing. Rather than advertise my presence in Capelin Cove, I moved on.
I spent September
pottered around the Nordre Sunds expanding the sketch charts we had drawn in
2004/2005. The days got shorter, the dwarf willows turned brown, puddles froze
and snow advanced down the hillsides. On 1 October, I returned to Capelin Cove
and ran mooring lines ashore. There were hundreds of moulting, flightless eider
ducks in the bay as well as cormorants and gulls and ashore there were still a
few redpolls, snow buntings and ravens. By mid October there was ice around the
boat most mornings, the eiders had fledged and were leaving and the only birds
left ashore were ravens. An arctic fox began visiting after I fed it some cod.
Autumn colours |
On 15 October a
man and his son arrived in Capelin Cove in a small motorboat and came aboard Iron
Bark for coffee. They were from Augpilagtoq out shooting eiders. No one in
Augpilagtoq would mind me being in Capelin Cove, but it would only take a day
or two for word of my presence to get to Upernavik where there were various
authorities that might preferred me to be under their eye. It seemed simpler to
shift camp than discuss the matter. I reloaded everything stored ashore,
retrieved the mooring lines and retreated to Winter Cove on Nako Island where I
knew I would not be disturbed.
Winter Cove was
covered with eight or ten centimetres of hard freshwater fast ice. This is the
maximum that Iron Bark’s eighteen horsepower engine can break and then
only if rammed at speed. Turning meant backing into the ice using the rudder as
a battering ram. The fourth or fifth time I did this the tiller’s relieving
tackle parted allowing the tiller to slam into the cockpit coaming, breaking
the tiller. I made a temporary repair and limped off to anchor.
It took a week to
run mooring lines, land the deck cargo of winter fuel and establish a dump with
camping gear and food to give me a chance of survival if anything happened to Barky.
It was slow work: the lanolin on shackle pins was frozen immovably and mooring
lines were stiff with ice. I installed the double-glazing, bulkheaded the fore
cabin and aft peak off from the saloon with foam and let the ends of the boat
freeze. The engine is keel cooled with a dry exhaust so I left it in commission
but shut down the domestic electrical system to prevent discharging the
batteries. A flat battery is will freeze and spit its case.
I let the ends of the boat freeze. Looking aft from the galley with the foam barrier removed. |
On 21 October
there was thick snow on deck and the sun shone through the portholes for the
last time that year. On 4 November I climbed a hill for a final glimpse of the
sun. The lakes were frozen but the sea ice was still thin enough to break a
path ashore by hauling the dinghy down a mooring line and chopping away with an
ice axe. After burning the last of my firewood, I dismantled the wood burning
heater and installed the oil fired one. There is little driftwood in northwest
Greenland and dwarf willow is too scarce to use for heating, hence my reluctant
reliance on oil.
On 9 November
the ice was thick enough for a fox to walk out to the boat. The next day I
walked ashore - winter had arrived. Although Upernavik was only 45nm away,
there was too much open water to walk there and too much ice to row. I was
isolated for the winter. I do not carry long-distance communications or a
distress beacon because I believe that anyone setting out on this type of
venture has an obligation to succeed or fail without asking for help. If I
spend another polar winter I will build a survival craft that can be pulled
over sea ice and paddled across sheltered water. A 2.1m pulk with a watertight
fabric cover with on hoops, the cover having a manhole with an apron like a
kayak, should let me manhaul and paddle my way to safety.
As the sun sank
lower below the horizon and the twilight around noon got shorter, my mood
became gloomier. This happened when I spent a winter alone in Antarctica but
not during the winter Annie and I spent in Greenland. Having a companion makes
a huge difference mentally. The food is better and the bed warmer, too. Although Saturn
and the six brightest stars were visible at noon in midwinter, it was enough
light to work outside for two hours each day without using a lamp.
Self portrait |
Each morning
after breakfast I put windproofs on over three layers of wool and fleece, then
gloves, mittens, hat and snowshoes and went out into the gloom to empty the
slops bucket, clear the mooring lines of ice and feed the fox, who answered to
Blue. Blue waited curled up in a snow hole in the cockpit for breakfast. When I
came out she stretched, yawned and trotted after me to get a portion of rice
and beans put aside from my evening meal. Most days I made an excursion. I
snowshoed along the coast, skied down the lake in the centre of the island and
made forays on the sea ice. These were curtailed after I broke through the sea
ice twice in a week. Each time I was able to throw myself on to firm ice and
only got wet to the thighs, but I know from experience how difficult it is to
scramble out on rotten ice and how quickly clothes freeze once you do.
Blue waiting for breakfast |
I spent the
evenings cleaning, doing domestic chores and reading. It is difficult to clean
things properly by candlelight and the candles themselves made the deckhead
sooty. The cabin became grubby despite my best efforts. Once a week I spent
four hours with pick, shovel and ice auger digging a water hole through a 1.5m
of ice in the nearest lake and hauling water to the boat. Not having to melt
snow for water saved a lot of fuel.
Once completed, the igloo kept the boat a lot warmer |
In November I
started shovelling an insulating snow cover over the boat. This part of
Greenland is a near desert and there was little snow around the boat. I only had the job half done by Christmas
when we had the strongest gale of the winter. The gale broke the fast ice into
floes but thankfully they did not raft and drive us ashore. This gale packed
the snow ashore into drifts firm enough for igloo building. I hauled snow
blocks cut from them across the ice, converting Barky to a
gaff-rigged igloo. After building the igloo the inside temperature rose 5°C and
there was seldom ice in the water bucket or frost flowers on the deckhead.
Sunrise is the
big event of winter and long anticipated. I calculated I would see the sun on
31 January if I were higher than 200m. The day was clear and from a hilltop I
briefly saw half the sun’s disk over the mountains to the south. You probably
need to spend a polar night alone to understand the feeling of joy the first
sunlight brings. I found the eighty days of polar night hard on mind and body.
Sunrise after 80 days of darkness |
Spring |
The sun rose
perceptibly higher each day and on 21 February shone into the galley. In early
March, although temperature was still below –20°C, there were signs of the
approach of spring. Six strange foxes visited us and they, along with Blue,
yelped mating calls from the ridge tops. Blue was a grumpy, mangy old fox but
counted as a friend so I was worried about territorial conflict when another
fox took up residence near Barky in March. Blue and the new fox took to
arriving together to be fed and did not fight if I fed Blue first. They
exchanged low clucking noises and were probably mates.
An igloo with a fox sunning itself in a porthole |
Blue's mate, Imp |
One March morning they
arrived together as usual but Blue was acting strangely. She repeatedly
attacked me as I walked across the sea ice. This astonished me as Arctic foxes
are about the size of a rabbit and usually as timid. I belted Blue a couple of
times with the bucket I was carrying and drove her off. Both foxes then set off
across the ice, Blue zigzagging behind, and neither ever returned. Fortunately
Blue was unable to bite through the multiple layers of my outdoor clothing as
she almost certainly had rabies, which is endemic through much of the Arctic.
A misty spring morning |
In the last days
of April the temperature briefly reached freezing and on 2 May the first snow
buntings arrived. With the return of the midnight sun on 6 May I began turning Iron
Bark back into an ocean going vessel. I demolished the igloo, overhauled
the rigging and bent on the sails.
All dressed up and no where to go |
A couple of days after I finished removing
the igloo the bow jumped up 25cm. The rudder was still frozen in,
pulling the stern down a similar amount. I ran the engine to get water flowing
across the rudder and hacked away at the ice until the stern bounced free. The
propeller hit the ice and stalled the engine, mercifully without damaging the
shaft or propeller. We floated with a narrow moat all round.
In late May I
excavated steel and wood from the ice in the aft peak to repair the tiller and
some rot in a hatch. The bilge pump thawed in early June, saving me the
hand-chilling daily task of bailing meltwater. The first trickles of water
appeared ashore on south-facing rocks. Then an ice dam in the valley above
Winter Cove burst, sending a torrent down the valley and breaking the ice
around the shore. This allowed the floe in Winter Cove to drift out, carrying Barky
with it until the mooring lines were twanging taunt. I did not want to use her
keel to stop a floe weighting over 1000 tonnes from drifting ashore so hung on
to the lines. They dragged the bow up on the ice until it cracked under the
boat’s weight, allowing the floe to move out a little, forcing the bow up on
the ice again. This repeated for ten hours until we eventually broke clear of
the floe. I used the dinghy to get ashore for the first time in seven months.
On midsummer’s
day we headed north from Winter Cove. There was a lot of ice outside the
coastal islands, but not enough to stop us. After plugging north for 63nm
miles, a fog bank rolled in. There was too much ice to heave-to for sleep so I
turned back to the shelter of Nordre Sunds where I anchored after 30 hours at
the tiller. On 26 June I set out to see if there was an inshore route northward
with safe anchorages where I could rest. I threaded north through islands and
ice across Upernaviks Isfjord to Gieseckes Isfjord and on to Sugar Loaf Bight.
None of the bays I looked into were safe from all winds. The best prospect had
a narrow entrance obstructed by boulders. I hit several trying to get in. North
of Gieseckes Isfjord the weather looked threatening so I turned back. By the
time we reached Upernaviks Isfjord we were dodging ice in thick fog under
staysail and motor, making little headway into a F7 headwind. An engine failure
in these conditions would be disastrous so I bore away for open water. Four
hours later we were clear of the coastal islands but there was still plenty of
ice to worry about. The wind then veered allowing me to fetch Upernavik, but I
kept the engine running for manoeuvrability. With visibility of 100m there was
about a minute between seeing one of the numerous bergs and hitting it. When I
eventually anchored I had been 37 hours without sleep.
There was clearly
too much ice north of Upernavik for single-handing so I started south and three
days later reached Kangersuatsiaq. No one there spoke English so my first
conversation after eight months alone was in sign language. I bought fuel and
sailed to the nearest safe anchorage to await a fair wind. On 3 July I
continued south with the wind in the north and fog that froze to the sails,
sending sheets of ice sliding to deck. For the next six days, until south of
the Arctic Circle, I hove-to for sleep. Thereafter there was little enough ice
to leave the sails drawing while I slept. Apart from two days hove-to in a
gale, the rest of the passage to the Labrador coast was uneventful.
We were 25nm off
the Labrador coast beating into SSE4 under full lowers and had just seen the
first ice since the Arctic Circle when a blast from a clear sky laid us nearly
on our beam ends. Within a minute it was blowing NW9 and was Barky would
not pay off until I got the main down. I got everything down and secured
without losing a sail at the cost of torn fingernails, fragile after a year
without fresh vegetables, and bloody sails. I had had enough of this so
motor-sailed in to anchor at the abandoned outport of Bateau Harbour on the
Island of Ponds, 18 days out from Greenland. After resting there for a day, I
coasted 150nm south to St Anthony. St Anthony, Newfoundland’s northernmost port
with a population of 3000, was a bit overwhelming and I got a sore throat from
talking. Lack of practice probably.