Forums > Sailing General

Who wants to go too Antarctica? (Help)

Reply
Created by ArcherHeath > 9 months ago, 6 Jul 2019
ArcherHeath
13 posts
6 Jul 2019 6:42PM
Thumbs Up

Hi everyone, this is probably the weirdest post you are going to see on this forum but I am deadset serious about this.

I was wondering if anyone had ever considered sailing to Antarctica or any outlying arctic islands. I have been eager to see to the Scott Coast or basically anywhere in Antarctica. I was hoping if anyone was ever going if they could help me get there, I am an explorer based in the Sydney region with limited experience at sea, and was wanting someone to help with my Arctic expedition in which I hope to finish at the South Pole. This is really brief and I doubt anyone will be going to Antarctica but please email me. Once again I am serious about this.

Feel free to email me with any help,

VinkovicS01@dowstu.catholic.edu.au

andy59
QLD, 1153 posts
6 Jul 2019 8:51PM
Thumbs Up

Tony Mowbray is your man. He sailed his Cole 43 down there and then bought a 65.- 79 foot schooner and has been chartering around scale horn and Antartica for a while.

Jolene
WA, 1558 posts
6 Jul 2019 7:01PM
Thumbs Up

Not the correct answer to your post but if you would consider sailing down there, get a hold of Matt Tuckers dvd "Snow Petrel-Down Under" its well worth watching.

Busybee
21 posts
6 Jul 2019 7:48PM
Thumbs Up

Try Cath Hew on Icebird out of Ushuaia.

Take the sea sickness tablets.. The Drake Passage is rough as guts.

ArcherHeath
13 posts
6 Jul 2019 8:29PM
Thumbs Up

Would you be able to get to Antarctica in a 19 foot Trailer Sailer? Just wondering they are pretty cheap and I have never been sailing before so it could be fun. Leaving from Sydney?

Bananabender
QLD, 1540 posts
6 Jul 2019 10:50PM
Thumbs Up

So Archer how old are you.
You sound to me more like an adventurer than an explorer.
Its a mighty adventure your looking at doing and perhaps a bit more research is needed .
My doctor goes to the Antarctic every eighteen months as the resident doctor and says one never gets tired of the scenery and there is always something new to discover.. As a young man he crewed on the yacht that won the second Sydney/Hobart race , but not in that race. See if you can find the name of the yacht.

Some years ago on one trip he noticed two Swedish sailors who worked in the freezing cold on the foredeck of the icebreaker twenty minutes at a time only in shirts. He asked how they could do such and not freeze and they introduced him to a then new drug that open up the veins allowing the blood to flow freely to the hands and feet etc.
I now use that drug for Reynards syndrome when it gets below 12c.
I think a trailer sailer might be a bit small and fragile .

ArcherHeath
13 posts
7 Jul 2019 12:16AM
Thumbs Up

Would anyone be able to help get me there? I was hoping by the end of the year around the Ross ice shelf. This seems really weird but I am not joking. If you want to help or know the actual details about who I am and the record I am going to attempt to break contact me via email.

Busybee
21 posts
7 Jul 2019 5:43AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
ArcherHeath said..
Would you be able to get to Antarctica in a 19 foot Trailer Sailer? Just wondering they are pretty cheap and I have never been sailing before so it could be fun. Leaving from Sydney?


If your trailer is a low loader and your sailer is a 30-40 yacht designed for southern Southern Ocean conditions, sure.

shaggybaxter
QLD, 2495 posts
7 Jul 2019 8:38AM
Thumbs Up

Hi Archer,
You could do it on a Hobie Cat if you really put your mind to it, the fact it would be horrific and you wouldn't want to is another matter entirely. So yes, a 19' could theoretically do it if all the stars align. But I would suggest that kinda jumping to the cool part and shopping/looking for the boat first is not an optimal approach.

Look at the route. Plot the distances involved. Estimated your speeds and produce a time plan. Plan your boltholes and options for shelter in the time plan too.
Plan for weather along the route. Get expert advice for long passages, weather can kill you.
Plan your provisions, plan medical , plan comms,
Plan crew management, including fatigue and safety.
Train on system maintenance, electrical, fluids, engine, comms, rigging, sails.
(We do the above checklist before every offshore race, so it's not unrealistic to expect this as a minimum for a trip of this size)
Learn to sail.
Read any book you can find near to the subject at hand, reach out to people that have done it before.
Then go looking for a suitable boat.
I'd then go sail around Tassie first to get in the groove and see what breaks.

Or go looking for work that involves Antarctica and get some first hand experience using other peoples money. They only announced a big job push a few months ago for the next cycle at Murdo.

Good luck in your endeavours, sailing to Antarctica and back sounds really cool.
Doing it on a shoestring and with naff all planning or training isn't, that's the exact opposite of cool.
Regards,
SB

ArcherHeath
13 posts
7 Jul 2019 7:13AM
Thumbs Up

Could you tow a smaller boat for provisions behind a Hobie Cat?

shaggybaxter
QLD, 2495 posts
7 Jul 2019 9:16AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
ArcherHeath said..
Could you tow a smaller boat for provisions behind a Hobie Cat?


No.

twodogs1969
NSW, 1000 posts
7 Jul 2019 10:07AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
andy59 said..
Tony Mowbray is your man. He sailed his Cole 43 down there and then bought a 65.- 79 foot schooner and has been chartering around scale horn and Antartica for a while.


He has sold that boat

Sectorsteve
QLD, 2195 posts
7 Jul 2019 11:05AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
ArcherHeath said..
Would you be able to get to Antarctica in a 19 foot Trailer Sailer? Just wondering they are pretty cheap and I have never been sailing before so it could be fun. Leaving from Sydney?



If you need to ask that question this trip is a dream for you. Nothing more

Toph
WA, 1802 posts
7 Jul 2019 9:24AM
Thumbs Up

I think Shaggy must've had a few reds when he wrote his reply. The correct answer should've been "you can depart for Antarctica in a Hobie, but your life expectancy would be measured in days if not hours"..

Same said for any trailer sailer

sunycoastguy
QLD, 222 posts
7 Jul 2019 11:54AM
Thumbs Up

Maybe he's related to chopesbro

Bananabender
QLD, 1540 posts
7 Jul 2019 12:13PM
Thumbs Up

Judging by his email address either a student or teacher. nuf said

ArcherHeath
13 posts
7 Jul 2019 10:39AM
Thumbs Up

Teacher

UncleBob
NSW, 1200 posts
7 Jul 2019 1:15PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
ArcherHeath said..
Teacher


Somewhat bored I'm guessing.

Craig66
NSW, 2440 posts
7 Jul 2019 2:51PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
sunycoastguy said..
Maybe he's related to chopesbro



I thought maybe Shanty had returned from sin bin

andy59
QLD, 1153 posts
7 Jul 2019 3:29PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
twodogs1969 said..

andy59 said..
Tony Mowbray is your man. He sailed his Cole 43 down there and then bought a 65.- 79 foot schooner and has been chartering around scale horn and Antartica for a while.



He has sold that boat


That's was a nice boat.

southace
SA, 4760 posts
7 Jul 2019 3:24PM
Thumbs Up

There's some great blow up rubber dinghys on eBay that would make a good tender for your hobbie cat. ??

spongeblob
NSW, 218 posts
7 Jul 2019 4:00PM
Thumbs Up


Im heading off in 10 mins in 44 gallon drum cut in half.
Whos with me then ?

ArcherHeath
13 posts
7 Jul 2019 2:19PM
Thumbs Up

Sounds fun

TopHat 25 Mk2
ACT, 91 posts
7 Jul 2019 4:33PM
Thumbs Up

Too bloody cold

UncleBob
NSW, 1200 posts
7 Jul 2019 5:08PM
Thumbs Up

Put a bloody jacket on!

senile67
10 posts
7 Jul 2019 3:50PM
Thumbs Up

nah th, it,s a mild minus 49 degrees with a breeze up to 100 kph.good sailing weather.
btw teacher it,s to not too.

saintpeter
VIC, 122 posts
7 Jul 2019 5:57PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
Busybee said..
Try Cath Hew on Icebird out of Ushuaia.


I met Cath in an anchorage on Ilas Hornos in 2016. She had just returned from a charter to the Peninsular.
'Icebird' is an aero-rig , very interesting but I never could really work out the un-stayed rotating mast with jib on a fore-boom. Must be totally seaworthy though.

And, to the original poster, you cannot just arrive in Antarctica - there are serious permit requirements, and you have no hope of getting there other than on a fully supported charter. Sorry to pour cold water on your plans - but there is a lot of cold water down there!

FabulousPhill
VIC, 266 posts
7 Jul 2019 7:30PM
Thumbs Up

It's too cold here in Melbourne, let alone Antarctica.
However, notwithstanding the serious permit requirements and permissions, and the peril of getting there in such a small boat with zero experience, you could read this book about Berserk:
www.bookdepository.com/Berserk-David-Mercy/9781592282777
and a similar story was by Dr David Lewis in his Ice Bird story in the '70's.
This video was filmed by the crew of Berserk, a 27 foot yacht. It is in English/Norwegian/and one of the Yugoslav languages. www.dailymotion.com/video/x31k80d

Not recommended. The first chapter of the above book is difficult enough reading, let alone trying to do it yourself

ArcherHeath
13 posts
7 Jul 2019 6:04PM
Thumbs Up

I don't have much time to preparer. I'm giving myself 3 months but am taking time off to prepare. The reason due to the lack of a larger boat is the fact I'm planning to go solo and don't have enough funds for the boat.

tired
134 posts
7 Jul 2019 6:08PM
Thumbs Up

Good golly...
How will you be able to afford macca's etc etc on the way then?

SandS
VIC, 5904 posts
7 Jul 2019 8:15PM
Thumbs Up

offs



Subscribe
Reply

Forums > Sailing General


"Who wants to go too Antarctica? (Help)" started by ArcherHeath