Ben Saunders: Three things to know before you ski to the North Pole

56,878 views ・ 2007-01-12

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Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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This is me. My name is Ben Saunders.
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I specialize in dragging heavy things
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around cold places.
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On May 11th last year,
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I stood alone at the North geographic Pole.
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I was the only human being in an area
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one-and-a-half times the size of America,
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five-and-a-half thousand square miles.
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More than 2,000 people have climbed Everest.
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12 people have stood on the moon.
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Including me, only four people
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have skied solo to the North Pole.
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And I think the reason for that --
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(Applause)
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-- thank you -- I think the reason for that is that it's -- it's --
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well, it's as Chris said, bonkers.
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It's a journey that is right at the limit
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of human capability.
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I skied the equivalent of 31 marathons
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back to back. 800 miles in 10 weeks.
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And I was dragging all the food I needed,
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the supplies, the equipment, sleeping bag,
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one change of underwear -- everything I needed for nearly three months.
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(Laughter)
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What we're going to try and do today, in the 16 and a bit minutes I've got left,
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is to try and answer three questions. The first one is, why?
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The second one is,
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how do you go to the loo at minus 40?
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"Ben, I've read somewhere that at minus 40,
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exposed skin becomes frostbitten in less than a minute, so how do you answer the call of nature?"
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I don't want to answer these now. I'll come on to them at the end.
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Third one: how do you top that? What's next?
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It all started back in 2001.
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My first expedition was with a guy called Pen Hadow -- enormously experienced chap.
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This was like my polar apprenticeship.
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We were trying to ski from this group of islands up here,
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Severnaya Zemlya, to the North Pole.
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And the thing that fascinates me about the North Pole,
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geographic North Pole, is that it's slap bang in the middle of the sea.
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This is about as good as maps get,
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and to reach it you've got to ski literally
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over the frozen crust,
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the floating skin of ice on the Artic Ocean.
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I'd spoken to all the experts.
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I'd read lots of books. I studied maps and charts.
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But I realized on the morning of day one
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that I had no idea exactly
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what I'd let myself in for.
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I was 23 years old. No one my age
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had attempted anything like this,
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and pretty quickly, almost everything
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that could have gone wrong did go wrong.
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We were attacked by a polar bear on day two.
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I had frostbite in my left big toe.
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We started running very low on food. We were both pretty hungry, losing lots of weight.
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Some very unusual weather conditions, very difficult ice conditions.
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We had
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decidedly low-tech communications.
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We couldn't afford a satellite phone, so we had HF radio.
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You can see two ski poles sticking out of the roof of the tent.
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There's a wire dangling down either side.
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That was our HF radio antenna.
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We had less than two hours
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two-way communication with the outside world in two months.
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Ultimately, we ran out of time.
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We'd skied 400 miles. We were just over 200 miles left
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to go to the Pole, and we'd run out of time.
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We were too late into the summer; the ice was starting to melt;
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we spoke to the Russian helicopter pilots on the radio,
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and they said, "Look boys, you've run out of time.
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We've got to pick you up."
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And I felt that I had failed, wholeheartedly.
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I was a failure.
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The one goal, the one dream I'd had
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for as long as I could remember -- I hadn't even come close.
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And skiing along that first trip, I had two
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imaginary video clips that I'd replay over and over again in my mind
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when the going got tough, just to keep my motivation going.
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The first one was reaching the Pole itself.
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I could see vividly, I suppose,
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being filmed out of the door of a helicopter, there was, kind of, rock music playing in the background,
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and I had a ski pole with a Union Jack, you know, flying in the wind.
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I could see myself sticking the flag in a pole, you know --
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ah, glorious moment -- the music kind of reaching a crescendo.
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The second video clip
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that I imagined was getting back to Heathrow airport,
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and I could see again, vividly,
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the camera flashbulbs going off,
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the paparazzi, the autograph hunters,
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the book agents coming to sign me up for a deal.
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And of course, neither of these things happened.
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We didn't get to the Pole, and we didn't have any money
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to pay anyone to do the PR, so no one had heard
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of this expedition.
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And I got back to Heathrow. My mum was there; my brother was there;
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my granddad was there -- had a little Union Jack --
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(Laughter)
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-- and that was about it. I went back to live with my mum.
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I was physically exhausted,
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mentally an absolute wreck, considered myself a failure.
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In a huge amount of debt personally to this expedition,
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and lying on my mum's sofa,
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day in day out, watching daytime TV.
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My brother sent me a text message, an SMS --
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it was a quote from the "Simpsons." It said,
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"You tried your hardest and failed miserably.
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The lesson is: don't even try."
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(Laughter)
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Fast forward three years. I did eventually get off the sofa,
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and start planning another expedition. This time,
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I wanted to go right across, on my own this time,
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from Russia, at the top of the map,
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to the North Pole, where the sort of kink in the middle is,
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and then on to Canada.
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No one has made a complete crossing of the Arctic Ocean on their own.
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Two Norwegians did it as a team in 2000. No one's done it solo.
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Very famous, very accomplished Italian mountaineer,
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Reinhold Messner, tried it in 1995,
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and he was rescued after a week.
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He described this expedition as 10 times
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as dangerous as Everest.
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So for some reason, this was what I wanted to have a crack at,
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but I knew that even to stand a chance of getting home in one piece,
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let alone make it across to Canada,
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I had to take a radical approach.
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This meant everything from perfecting the
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sawn-off, sub-two-gram toothbrush,
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to working with one of the world's leading nutritionists
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in developing a completely new,
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revolutionary nutritional strategy from scratch:
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6,000 calories a day.
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And the expedition started in February last year.
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Big support team. We had a film crew,
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a couple of logistics people with us,
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my girlfriend, a photographer.
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At first it was pretty sensible. We flew British Airways to Moscow.
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The next bit in Siberia to Krasnoyarsk,
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on a Russian internal airline called KrasAir,
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spelled K-R-A-S.
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The next bit, we'd chartered a pretty elderly Russian plane
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to fly us up to a town called Khatanga,
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which was the sort of last bit of civilization.
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Our cameraman, who it turned out was a pretty nervous flier at the best of times,
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actually asked the pilot, before we got on the plane, how long this flight would take,
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and the pilot -- Russian pilot -- completely deadpan, replied,
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"Six hours -- if we live."
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(Laughter)
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We got to Khatanga.
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I think the joke is that Khatanga isn't the end of the world,
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but you can see it from there.
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(Laughter)
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It was supposed to be an overnight stay. We were stuck there for 10 days.
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There was a kind of vodka-fueled pay dispute between
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the helicopter pilots and the people that owned the helicopter,
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so we were stuck. We couldn't move.
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Finally, morning of day 11, we got the all-clear,
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loaded up the helicopters -- two helicopters flying in tandem --
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dropped me off at the edge of the pack ice.
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We had a frantic sort of 45 minutes of filming,
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photography; while the helicopter was still there,
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I did an interview on the satellite phone;
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and then everyone else climbed back into the helicopter,
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wham, the door closed, and I was alone.
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And I don't know if words will ever quite do that moment justice.
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All I could think about was running back up to the door,
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banging on the door, and saying, "Look guys,
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I haven't quite thought this through."
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(Laughter)
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To make things worse, you can just see the white dot
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up at the top right hand side of the screen; that's a full moon.
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Because we'd been held up in Russia, of course,
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the full moon brings the highest and lowest tides;
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when you're standing on the frozen surface of the sea,
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high and low tides generally mean
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that interesting things are going to happen -- the ice is going to start moving around a bit.
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I was, you can see there, pulling two sledges.
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Grand total in all, 95 days of food and fuel,
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180 kilos -- that's almost exactly 400 pounds.
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When the ice was flat or flattish,
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I could just about pull both.
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When the ice wasn't flat, I didn't have a hope in hell.
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I had to pull one, leave it, and go back and get the other one.
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Literally scrambling through what's called pressure ice --
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the ice had been smashed up under the pressure of the currents of the ocean,
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the wind and the tides.
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NASA described the ice conditions last year as the worst since records began.
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And it's always drifting. The pack ice is always drifting.
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I was skiing into headwinds for nine
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out of the 10 weeks I was alone last year,
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and I was drifting backwards most of the time.
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My record was minus 2.5 miles.
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I got up in the morning, took the tent down, skied north for seven-and-a-half hours,
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put the tent up, and I was two and a half miles further back
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than when I'd started.
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I literally couldn't keep up with the drift of the ice.
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(Video): So it's day 22.
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I'm lying in the tent, getting ready to go.
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The weather is just appalling --
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oh, drifted back about five miles
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in the last -- last night.
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Later in the expedition, the problem was no longer the ice.
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It was a lack of ice -- open water.
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I knew this was happening. I knew the Artic was warming.
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I knew there was more open water. And I had a secret weapon up my sleeve.
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This was my little bit of bio-mimicry.
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Polar bears on the Artic Ocean move in dead straight lines.
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If they come to water, they'll climb in, swim across it.
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So we had a dry suit developed -- I worked with a team in Norway --
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based on a sort of survival suit --
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I suppose, that helicopter pilots would wear --
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that I could climb into. It would go on over my boots, over my mittens,
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it would pull up around my face, and seal pretty tightly around my face.
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And this meant I could ski
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over very thin ice,
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and if I fell through, it wasn't the end of the world.
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It also meant, if the worst came to the worst,
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I could actually jump in and swim across
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and drag the sledge over after me.
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Some pretty radical technology,
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a radical approach --but it worked perfectly.
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Another exciting thing we did last year
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was with communications technology.
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In 1912, Shackleton's Endurance expedition --
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there was -- one of his crew, a guy called Thomas Orde-Lees.
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He said, "The explorers of 2012,
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if there is anything left to explore,
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will no doubt carry pocket wireless telephones
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fitted with wireless telescopes."
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Well, Orde-Lees guessed wrong by about eight years. This is my pocket wireless telephone,
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Iridium satellite phone.
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The wireless telescope was a digital camera I had tucked in my pocket.
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And every single day of the 72 days I was alone on the ice,
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I was blogging live from my tent,
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sending back a little diary piece,
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sending back information on the distance I'd covered --
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the ice conditions, the temperature --
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and a daily photo.
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Remember, 2001,
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we had less than two hours radio contact with the outside world.
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Last year, blogging live from an expedition
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that's been described as 10 times as dangerous as Everest.
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It wasn't all high-tech. This is navigating
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in what's called a whiteout.
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When you get lots of mist, low cloud, the wind starts blowing the snow up.
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You can't see an awful lot. You can just see, there's a yellow
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ribbon tied to one of my ski poles.
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I'd navigate using the direction of the wind.
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So, kind of a weird combination of high-tech and low-tech.
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I got to the Pole on the 11th of May.
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It took me 68 days to get there from Russia,
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and there is nothing there.
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(Laughter).
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There isn't even a pole at the Pole. There's nothing there,
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purely because it's sea ice. It's drifting.
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Stick a flag there, leave it there, pretty soon it will drift off, usually towards Canada or Greenland.
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I knew this, but I was expecting something.
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Strange mixture of feelings: it was extremely warm by this stage,
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a lot of open water around, and
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of course, elated that I'd got there under my own steam,
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but starting to really realize
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that my chances of making it all the way across to Canada,
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which was still 400 miles away,
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were slim at best.
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The only proof I've got that I was there
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is a blurry photo of my GPS, the little satellite navigation gadget.
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You can just see --
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there's a nine and a string of zeros here.
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Ninety degrees north -- that is slap bang in the North Pole.
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I took a photo of that. Sat down on my sledge. Did a sort of video diary piece.
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Took a few photos. I got my satellite phone out.
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I warmed the battery up in my armpit.
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I dialed three numbers. I dialed my mum.
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I dialed my girlfriend. I dialed the CEO of my sponsor.
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And I got three voicemails.
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(Laughter)
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(Video): Ninety.
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It's a special feeling.
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The entire planet
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is rotating
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beneath my feet.
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The -- the whole world underneath me.
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I finally got through to my mum. She was at the queue of the supermarket.
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She started crying. She asked me to call her back.
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(Laughter)
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I skied on for a week past the Pole.
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I wanted to get as close to Canada as I could
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before conditions just got too dangerous to continue.
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This was the last day I had on the ice.
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When I spoke to the -- my project management team,
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they said, "Look, Ben, conditions are getting too dangerous.
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There are huge areas of open water just south of your position.
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We'd like to pick you up.
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Ben, could you please look for an airstrip?"
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This was the view outside my tent
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when I had this fateful phone call.
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I'd never tried to build an airstrip before. Tony, the expedition manager, he said,
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"Look Ben, you've got to find 500 meters of
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flat, thick safe ice."
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The only bit of ice I could find --
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it took me 36 hours of skiing around trying to find an airstrip --
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was exactly 473 meters. I could measure it with my skis.
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I didn't tell Tony that. I didn't tell the pilots that.
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I thought, it'll have to do.
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(Video): Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
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It just about worked. A pretty dramatic landing --
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the plane actually passed over four times,
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and I was a bit worried it wasn't going to land at all.
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The pilot, I knew, was called Troy. I was expecting someone called Troy
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that did this for a living to be a pretty tough kind of guy.
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I was bawling my eyes out by the time the plane landed -- a pretty emotional moment.
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So I thought, I've got to compose myself for Troy.
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I'm supposed to be the roughty toughty explorer type.
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The plane taxied up to where I was standing.
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The door opened. This guy jumped out. He's about that tall. He said, "Hi, my name is Troy."
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(Laughter).
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The co-pilot was a lady called Monica.
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She sat there in a sort of hand-knitted jumper.
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They were the least macho people I've ever met, but they made my day.
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Troy was smoking a cigarette on the ice;
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we took a few photos. He
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climbed up the ladder. He said, "Just -- just get in the back."
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He threw his cigarette out as he got on the front,
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and I climbed in the back.
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(Laughter)
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Taxied up and down the runway a few times,
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just to flatten it out a bit, and he said, "Right, I'm going to --
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I'm going to give it a go." And he --
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I've now learned that this is standard practice, but it had me worried at the time.
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He put his hand on the throttle.
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You can see the control for the engines is actually on the roof of the cockpit.
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It's that little bar there. He put his hand on the throttle.
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Monica very gently put her hand sort of on top of his.
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I thought, "God, here we go. We're, we're -- this is all or nothing."
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Rammed it forwards. Bounced down the runway. Just took off.
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One of the skis just clipped a pressure ridge at the end of the runway,
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banking. I could see into the cockpit, Troy battling the controls,
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and he just took one hand off, reached back,
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flipped a switch on the roof of the cockpit,
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and it was the "fasten seat belt" sign you can see on the wall.
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(Laughter)
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And only from the air did I see the big picture.
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Of course, when you're on the ice, you only ever see one obstacle at a time,
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whether it's a pressure ridge or there's a bit of water.
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This is probably why I didn't get into trouble about the length of my airstrip.
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I mean, it really was starting to break up.
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Why? I'm not an explorer in the traditional sense.
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I'm not skiing along drawing maps;
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everyone knows where the North Pole is.
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At the South Pole there's a big scientific base. There's an airstrip.
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There's a cafe and there's a tourist shop.
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For me, this is about exploring human limits,
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about exploring the limits of physiology, of psychology
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and of technology. They're the things that excite me.
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And it's also about potential, on a personal level.
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This, for me, is a chance to explore the limits --
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really push the limits of my own potential, see how far they stretch.
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And on a wider scale, it amazes me how people go through life
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just scratching the surface of their potential,
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just doing three or four or five percent
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of what they're truly capable of. So,
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on a wider scale, I hope that this journey
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was a chance to inspire other people
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to think about what they want to do
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with their potential, and what they want to do with the tiny amount of time
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we each have on this planet.
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That's as close as I can come to summing that up.
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The next question is, how do you answer the call of nature at minus 40?
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The answer, of course, to which is a trade secret --
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and the last question,
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what's next? As quickly as possible,
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if I have a minute left at the end, I'll go into more detail.
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What's next:
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Antarctica.
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It's the coldest, highest,
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windiest and driest continent on Earth.
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Late 1911, early 1912,
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there was a race to be the first
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to the South Pole: the heart of the Antarctic continent.
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If you include the coastal ice shelves, you can see that the Ross Ice Shelf --
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it's the big one down here -- the Ross Ice Shelf is the size of France.
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Antarctica, if you include the ice shelves,
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is twice the size of Australia -- it's a big place.
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And there's a race to get to the Pole between Amundsen,
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the Norwegian -- Amundsen had dog sleds and huskies --
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and Scott, the British guy, Captain Scott.
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Scott had sort of ponies and some tractors
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and a few dogs, all of which went wrong,
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and Scott and his team of four people ended up on foot.
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They got to the Pole late January 1912
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to find a Norwegian flag already there.
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There was a tent, a letter to the Norwegian king.
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And they turned around, headed back to the coast,
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and all five of them died on the return journey.
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Since then, no one has ever skied --
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this was 93 years ago -- since then, no one has ever skied
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from the coast of Antarctica to the Pole and back.
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Every South Pole expedition you may have heard about
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is either flown out from the Pole or has used vehicles
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or dogs or kites to do some kind of crossing --
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no one has ever made a return journey. So that's the plan.
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Two of us are doing it.
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That's pretty much it.
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One final thought before I get to the toilet bit, is --
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is, I have a -- and I meant to scan this and I've forgotten --
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but I have a -- I have a school report. I was 13 years old,
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and it's framed above my desk at home. It says,
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"Ben lacks sufficient impetus
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to achieve anything worthwhile."
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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I think if I've learned anything, it's this: that no one else
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is the authority on your potential.
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You're the only person that decides how far you go and what you're capable of.
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Ladies and gentlemen, that's my story.
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Thank you very much.
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