Houndoc
Registered User
- Location
- Grantsville
Did not become a survival situation due to being with very well prepared group but had a heck of an experience camped on the tundra in northern Canada (about 100 miles north of Churchill). Difficult travel conditions turned an 8 hour trip by ancient snow coach (keep in mind the nearest roads other than in town are 100 miles south of Churchill) into a 42 hour adventure- but that is another story.
We were camped in tents (Canadian military tent with wood stove) at an abandoned Hudson Bay Company outpost. Temps averaged about -15F. Wood stove kept it feeling warm inside, but water bottle kept under our cots still took 30-45 minutes on the stove to thaw enough to drink.
Then had a blizzard blow in. Lasted about 36 hours, temps still below zero, winds over 60 mph and dropped around 2 feet of new snow. I was responsible for the well being of about 100 sled dogs in camp, so still had to go outside frequently, except for the second night when the conditions where so severe it was agreed no one would leave the tents for any reason.
When the snow blew out and skies cleared before dawn, temps dropped to -30F but winds still in 50-70 mph range. Rough conditions to dig out camp!
Once winds died down helicoptered in additional supplies (and I hitched a ride on it back to Churchill since my flight home left the next day.) Took the rest of the group about 5 more days to travel the 100 miles to the town of Arviat were the race was scheduled to end. Normally would have covered the distance in one.
Learned great lessons in being prepared and keeping calm when things go wrong. The trip was problem after problem, all of it out of our control but the leaders took everything in stride, did not get upset and just dealt with it. Very impressive!
We were camped in tents (Canadian military tent with wood stove) at an abandoned Hudson Bay Company outpost. Temps averaged about -15F. Wood stove kept it feeling warm inside, but water bottle kept under our cots still took 30-45 minutes on the stove to thaw enough to drink.
Then had a blizzard blow in. Lasted about 36 hours, temps still below zero, winds over 60 mph and dropped around 2 feet of new snow. I was responsible for the well being of about 100 sled dogs in camp, so still had to go outside frequently, except for the second night when the conditions where so severe it was agreed no one would leave the tents for any reason.
When the snow blew out and skies cleared before dawn, temps dropped to -30F but winds still in 50-70 mph range. Rough conditions to dig out camp!
Once winds died down helicoptered in additional supplies (and I hitched a ride on it back to Churchill since my flight home left the next day.) Took the rest of the group about 5 more days to travel the 100 miles to the town of Arviat were the race was scheduled to end. Normally would have covered the distance in one.
Learned great lessons in being prepared and keeping calm when things go wrong. The trip was problem after problem, all of it out of our control but the leaders took everything in stride, did not get upset and just dealt with it. Very impressive!