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Take one round-the-world yachtswoman, one high-altitude
mountaineer, and one Norwegian dog-racing expert, 24 dogs bred to run, add herds
of several thousand reindeer, mountains, lakes, lots of snow and place
deep in Europe's last wilderness, the Norwegian Arctic.
What do you have? The Nordkapp 2004 expedition, with
Rona Cant & Cathy O'Dowd.
This expedition has now been successfully completed.
71° 10' 21": At 13.50 Western
European time on Wed 21 April 2004 the Nordkapp expedition reached its
objective. Three tired mushers and 26 tired dogs (one so tired she was being
given a lift in a sled) arrived at the northern-most point of Europe, the
Nordkapp. We cracked open a bottle of champagne and celebrated the successful
conclusion to 11 days of travelling.
It has to be said that the wilderness is not what it once was and we were
greeted by a visitors centre and a coachload of tourists all frantically
photographing the dogs. Nevertheless we could look out over the deep blue sea,
lying calm under stormy grey skies, and know that nothing lay between us and the
North Pole.
All that remained was a line of sled tracks stretching across 528 kms of snow,
some 4 million paw prints from the dogs, gradually melting away in the spring
sunshine, and some terrific memories.
To find out what Cathy, Rona and Per-Thore have planned for the
future, please visit their respective websites: www.cathyodowd.com,
www.ronacant.com and
www.arcticadventuretours.no.
Goodbye and happy travels from the Nordkapp 2004 team.
For the dispatches from the trail,
click here.
Q:
So how do you run a website from the back of a dog-sled, on the move through the
Norwegian Arctic, in average temperatures of -20C?
A:
Click here.
We have been swamped with emails wishing us good luck and
god speed on our trip. Thanks to all of you who have emailed and phoned. Your
support means a lot to us.
- You have nothing but my complete and utter admiration. Go Girls. Rikki
Arundel.
- Sound awfully adventurous. Have fun. Roland Magg.
- I know you have
experience in cold climates but please keep your extremities warm. Mine
still bother me after 1944-45 in Europe. Ed O'Dowd.
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Will follow your journey with interest with children at school. Special
prayers of peace at this Easter time surround you. Take care. Shirley Cole
- Wow what a challenge. Kevin.
- I am sure there will be an abundance of marvelous vistas as well as
fulfilling experiences. I wish you and your team the Best of Luck. Alan Wade.
- sounds absolutely terrific . . . . Good Luck! Jenny.
-
keep my fingers crossed for you every time you go for an adventure: Sending
you all our love and support, Rebeca and little Sarah
- Sounds like a great adventure about to start! Safe Travels. Colin
- I do hope you have a wonderful trip - wish I was going too! Michele
Marriott
- Have a super journey. Enjoy the challenge. God Bless, Agnes Fitzgerald.
- Wishing you success and - a lot of pleasure. It will really be silent up
there! Apart from the dogs' noises, and even they can be very silent. Claudia
Shade.
- I wish you and Rona all the strength and powers of endurance you need for
this adventurous trip! Irina
- I wish you lots of success. With your track record and professionalism,
this adventure will become again a future reference on how to achieve great
challenges. Wim Mangodt
- Good luck, enjoy, it looks extremely exciting, Karen Ballantine
- I wish you a FANTASTIC adventure with lots of laughs, amazing sights and a
healthy, safe return!! Tracy Plaice
- Your dog sled adventure will be one of a kind, sounds great, good luck and
have fun. Ravi Chandran.
- wow thats great stuff, good luck. Don MacRobert. PS can I lend u a hot
water bottle
- the trip sounds amazing!! Margaret Gee
- you are in our prayers...all of you.... Bill Lauterbach
08 April: Picture below left: Rona and Cathy downing
the coffee to try and stay awake at Heathrow, waiting for the flight out to
Oslo.


07 April Cathy: Picture above right: Myself
trying to sort and pack all the communication equipment needed to run the
website. In fact it comes down to the Iridium satellite phone and the Ipaq PDA
that I am holding in my hands. But super-lightweight gear still comes with a
jungle of wires and batteries and extras.
07 April Rona: Having got over my panic attack on
Monday, when I was physically ill, we've got to the point where there is nothing
left to do but pack and go. It will be great just to get out there, away from
all the preparations. What isn't done now isn't done. We just have to go...
Click here for a
farewell video from Rona (Broadband recommended)
07 April 20.10 Cathy: Rona and I are in her
flat in Oxford, doing the final packing. The entire floor of her living room is
covered with technical kit - batteries, chargers, leads, and fancy light-weight
gizmos. They may each be very dinky but when you put it all together there seems
to be a hell of a lot of stuff. With large numbers of people wanting to know
about the expedition, we alternate between taking phone calls, sending emails,
doing sporadic bits of packing, and remembering things we don't have and should
nip out and buy (actually that is just me - Rona seems more organised).
I have a scare yesterday when I realised we didn't have the lithium AA batteries
that are the source of power for the website technology - the PDA and the sat phone. I
couldn't find any in Andorra, so as I travelled today, Rona has been scouring
the countryside of Oxfordshire looking for batteries. Which she found, saving
the day for the entire communications challenge.
07 April 09.01 Cathy: At Barcelona airport, with
all of 21/2 hours sleep on the bus to here. I am not feeling at my brightest.
One day I will leave on an expedition beautifully organised, but this definitely
isn't that trip. But I love technology when it works, as I update this website,
standing outside the business class lounge using their unsecured wifi access.
I'm already getting strange looks from airport security as they examine the cold
weather battery packs that will power the video camera during the expedition.
06 April Cathy: 20:34 and counting. I should be
packing but I am keeping the time from 1am to 3am for that. For me this is the
final countdown. I catch a bus at 04.30 tomorrow morning to go first to the UK
to meet up with Rona, and then on to Norway the next day.
For complicated reasons, I only got the communications kit today. I am still
trying to get it all to work. Not a good thing to be doing when tired and in a
hurry. So far I have received some brilliant support from both
Altaire, who are
hosting this website, and from
ExplorersWeb, who have supplied the comms kit.
Sitting in Andorra, I have tech support people backing up this expedition in
London, Stockholm and New York. Truly an international enterprise.
I have a sinking feeling that I will be working right through until its time for
the bus. That gives me 7 good hours, as long as I can keep awake!
Daily Express - 5
April
Look out for an article about Cathy and Rona's trip in the Daily Express on
Monday 5 April. |
05 April Rona: Sky TV made it - they called to
say what they would be asking me and then over a very crackly line asked the
questions in such a roundabout way that it was quite difficult to realise that
these were the same questions. Anyway, the interview was done and went out
Sunday morning and they are sending me a tape of it. I kept hearing dogs barking
in the background which was a little distracting. But something we will get used
to no doubt. Why do they ask you questions that you can't possibly know the
answers to until you get there????
30 March Rona: Eureka! We have our first
sponsorship cheque. It is a light at the end of a very long tunnel. Today, quite
unsolicited I received a cheque for £25 it felt sooo good. We only have 9 days
and £24,975 to go.
I spoke to one company today and they may well be able to give us our passage
back from Nordkapp on the steamer as they own the steamer. He will let me know!
28th March Rona: Well it's been a kaleidoscope of
emotions as we come to the run up to the start of this expedition. Cathy and I
agreed that we had achieved a considerable amount on our training weekend and I
came back to England refreshed and ready to really go for the sponsorship and
follow up all the leads I could possibly find.
Interspersed with the sponsorship issue I had meetings and talks to deal with as
this was my career and I could not put it completely on hold. There were
telephone calls to Per-Thore's wife as last minute arrangements were made so
that we could organise the flights. I left this to Cathy as it had defeated me
and like the organised lady she is it was soon dealt with.
I had my speaking career to deal with which entailed going to Liverpool and
Manchester. It is certainly good that Cathy and Per-Thore are with me on the
expedition as I managed to get lost 4 times, once in Liverpool and 3 times in
Manchester. This trip meant that the telephone calls had to wait until the
following Monday when they all started off again. It is soul destroying to sit
on the telephone day after day contacting companies, following up contacts and
getting rejected time and time again. But we still have 2 weeks until we leave
so there's still time to find a sponsor.
26 March Cathy: Perhaps surprisingly, with our
departure for Norway only two weeks away, the expedition is the last thing on my
mind. Virtually all the organisation has been done. The only outstanding items
are some specialised communications equipment that is being sent from the USA.
But even that has been dispatched, and is somewhere in the air between America
and Europe. There is nothing more to be done until it arrives.
First priority now is to organise the rest of my life, to get everything in
order so that it runs smoothly during my absence on expedition. Together with
team-mates, I have already begun the preparation for a big 2005 expedition, and
all sorts of information needs to be sent out before I leave. Similarly, all the
organisation for my corporate clients in late April and in May needs to be done
now, before I vanish for most of April.
The running saga of getting footage onto Sky
News....
Taken from emails by Rona:
11 March: As to Sky they are going to film
me in the gym and then I shall go into the Studio Saturday morning. The idea is
that they will put together photos/film from training weekend, etc.
12 March: So I waited at the gym - standing very erect! at 2.30 I called
Sky they had decided that the Spanish bomb was more important scrubbed me but
not told me! We love them. Apparently they will do a live interview here
with a cable van outside - should be interesting - or we may be outside!
13 March: guy from the News Desk called saying that yes they would
come here on Saturday to
film me. It was to go out live at 9.45. by 9.15 no sign. I called and they
were near but were sitting on one side of a bollard waiting for the baker's van
on the other side to move - why was the only question that came to mind.
So they duly arrived and set up - first time they had used that particular van
and lots of techie problems which were gradually sorted out. I spoke with the
studio in London and eventually we were ready to
roll. Then the girl comes rushing over to say that they (we in Oxford) were
transmitting pictures which were getting to the satellite on the roof of the
studio but they could not download them. So that was the end of that interview.
14 March: have got back to Sky on interview they will call ...
The saga continues... Watch
this space!
07 March Pictures from the
training weekend:


Rona: Well, I
have just returned from our Andorra training weekend. It takes a whole day of
travelling to get there, so we were up at 4 on Friday morning to catch the 7.20
from Luton. From Barcelona to Cathy's house is a 4 hr coach drive, she lives in
a lovely house in the old part of La Massana. The mountains are incredible. They
are all crowded one on top of the other, the roads twist and turn through them
giving great views at every bend. It had not dawned on me how high it was above
sea level, training at 1800 metres. For Cathy, as an high-altitude mountaineer
and being born in Johannesburg, this was of no consequence. For this
round-the-world sailor, being born and bred in Essex and slightly asthmatic, it
was of some concern.
However, I need not have worried, I could breathe and it was simply great being
back in the snow and with the dogs, who are of such diverse character.
There is a lot of work to be done but I can't wait to start on this expedition.
Cathy: Rona and I have spent
the weekend in Andorra, getting to work with some local dogs and sledders. It
has been partly to get photographs and video footage to give to our media
partners before we leave for the main event, but also to learn a few skills (for
me) and brush up on a few skills (for Rona) to give us a head start when we
arrive in the Norwegian Arctic.
The last week has been a bit dispiriting as we chased hot sponsorship leads that
then fizzled into nothing, and this weekend has been a huge boost to our morale
- in beautiful landscapes with glorious weather, and handsome dogs just dieing
to run. It is a reminder that it is worth all the effort to get this project off
the ground.
Thanks to David and the
Pal ski
resort in Andorra for allowing us to use their dogs.
29 Feb Rona: Cathy has been
over here partly for work and partly to take part in a number of interviews that
we have been having with various media contacts. The last few days have been
interesting and very exciting as we have been interviewed by Bloomberg TV, LBC
with Sandi Toksvig and just this morning Central News came to film and interview
us. It has also been an opportunity for us to get to know each other better.
Cathy has now gone off working on her speaking career whilst I have been
exploring more avenues for sponsorship. It certainly gets the emotions working
as you think you have a hot lead only to have your hopes dashed but persistency
will pay off, it is just a question of numbers!
Early Friday morning we are heading to Andorra – for Cathy this is going home,
for me it is a new adventure. It is our training weekend when we make sure all
the communication and camera equipment is working and try out our skills with
dog-sleds. It will be a very effective training as the temperature at the moment
is –11 deg C.
It is just 5 weeks now until we head off to the last wilderness
Bloomberg TV - weekend of 28 and 29
Feb
Look out for an interview with Cathy and Rona on Bloomberg Sport over the
weekend. |
26 Feb Cathy: It suddenly
dawned on me that this expedition is only six weeks away and we really are
going. For so many months it is simply a dream that you are trying to wish into
reality, and suddenly it is a reality that is approaching much too fast. There
is still so much to do!
The bad news is that the cameraman that we hoped would be joining us has pulled
out, so we are hunting around to replace him at short notice. There are no
concessions for the cameraman, no snowmobiles to film from, or sleds for him to
relax on. He (or she), like everyone else, has to drive an 8-dog team every day,
and film in addition.
The good news is that we have a sponsorship prospect simmering, although nothing
is certain until the money is banked. And the publicity portfolio - which is an
essential part of the sponsorship raising - is developing nicely. Yesterday Rona
and I did the Bloomberg interview that will air over the weekend. Today we did a
live interview on LBC. Everybody wants more information, to follow our progress
and hear the tales afterwards.
Meet the team in London - Wednesday 25 February 2004
The Explorers Club British Chapter and Boisdale Bishopsgate
Present the second in their series of an Evening with Explorers |
17 Feb Per-Thore: Looks
like that we are going to be famouse on or "little" dogsled trip.
I have used the weekend to pack most of the dog food for the expedition + I have
been training the dogs quite hard. Yesterday I did drive a 12 dogteam on a 35k
trip, it was a fast on..... I only used 1 1/2 houre on it.
But we won't be going that fast because of the weight of the sleds. Right now it
looks like that we will have a depot in Kautokeino. It will mostly be dog food
in the depot.
I will try to rent a cabin from the Norwegian gouverment some kilometres from
kautokeino - that could be the only time on those 10 days we will be in a house.
We will stay in tent, and we will have 2 of them. The tents are expeditions tent
(simmular to those that is used on Northpol expeditions)
14 Feb Cathy: Our
sponsorship director has slipped on an icy London pavement and broken his
collarbone very badly. And we thought the dangerous bit was the expeditioning!
The team is doing a quick reorganisation as we work out how to fill Neil's role,
while still keeping the rest of our lives on track.
Although it is always the expedition itself that gets the attention, in fact it
is little more than a great finale to months of planning and preparation.
10 Feb Per-Thore: Right now
it's just to few houres in the day, it should have been 72 insted of 24. Im just
finiched whit the last sled for the expedition ( 4 of them ).
I had a meeting whit my friend (Tom Frode Johansen) who has done this trip
before, and the planning on how far we shall drive every day - where it's good
place to put up the tents - how much dog food we need etc.. are going well..
There will be a lot of weight on the sleds - we ned for example 20 kilo of meat
for the dogs every day + dry food. But thats the easy things to find out. what
takes time to put to gether is all the bits and pieces that we need to repear
the sleds on the trail.
All the camp equitment is ok, I still had to order the tents and the sled bags.
29 Jan Cathy:
Getting our web window open to the world has been a
great achievement. It has taken shape in the strangest places, on aeroplanes, in
hotels, right now at Barcelona airport, as I try to balance making a living,
keeping the expedition moving, and spending some time in my new house in
Andorra.
I am on my way home from a good few days in London with Rona and Alex - the
expedition publicist. It all seemed a little more real in the middle of London's
Big Freeze, with snow blanketing the ground, and chaos on the streets and the
train lines. On days like that, we can only wish for the simplicity of a
dog-sled. Might cause something of a stir, though, sledding down Oxford Street.
We are chasing all the accessories of a modern expedition: publicity, contacts,
a television documentary, above all SPONSORSHIP. The path through the Norwegian
Arctic begins in the corporate head offices of London.
28 Jan Rona: I'm excited about
this - I have the T-Shirt -
Some people wish it would happen, others sit and wait for it to happen,
successful people make it happen!
The latter fits us all!
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Meet the team & hear the tale
at the inaugural Johnnie Walker Black
Label/GQ lecture...
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Venue:
Travellers Club in Pall Mall
Date: Thursday 13 May 2004
Time: 18.30 to 21.00
To obtain tickets write to:
GQ, Vogue House, 1 Hanover Square, London, W1S 1JU before 5 May. |
Snow, Sleds and Silence
Reserve a hot-off-the-press, first edition,
autographed copy of Rona Cant's forthcoming book about this
expedition:
Email Rona at rona @ ronacant.com.
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Follow the team in the media....
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Expedition updates are featured
on:
▫ Sky TV
▫ Bloomberg TV
▫ Central TV
▫ Channel 6 TV (Oxford area)
▫ BBC Radio 5 Live with Eammon Holmes
▫ LBC Radio with Sandi Toksvig
▫ Saga Radio
▫ BBC Radio Oxford Breakfast Programme
▫ Radio Fox FM
▫ Oxford Star (daily print)
▫ Daily Express
▫ Geographical magazine (May issue)
▫ ExpeditionZone website
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