It has been a brisk day with gales and -30°C. The snow gets rough when it drifts and our skis meet much more resistance. We have also been obliged to keep a close watch on our faces and hands today because of the strong wind.

Lenin in 1965 gazing towards Moscow. Photo: Olav Orheim / Norwegian Polar Institute

One of our favorite articles of clothing is the “nose mitten” made especially for us by Glen Liston from Colorado. It stays on our noses from morning till night and protects against sun and cold.

We are heading for the South Pole – a place many others will also visit. But another and perhaps even more exotic pole for those in search of adventure is the Pole of Inaccessibility.

When the Americans built the Amundsen–Scott Station at the geographical South Pole in November 1956, they had occupied the most prominent place in Antarctica. The Soviet Union responded by building a station at the Pole of Inaccessibility in December 1958. This place is as far from the ocean as it is possible to get, and can therefore be viewed as the most inaccessible place in Antarctica. The two superpowers had shown off their muscles by establishing themselves each at their separate poles.

First the Russians flew reconnaissance missions (on an IL-12) during the third Soviet Antarctic Expedition in December 1957, as a part of the International Geophysical Year. The same month, they mounted an expedition from the coastal station Mirny. The expedition consisted of ten tractors and 32 men, a formidable convoy, in other words. But they didn’t make it to the Pole of Inaccessibility that year. A small party of four were left behind to spend the winter at the stopping point – undoubtedly a spartan overwintering, unplanned as it was.