re-adjusted their load they came on in fine style,
and, passing us, took the lead. Starting about
11, by 3 o’clock we were clear of the pressure,
and I camped the dogs, discharged our loads, and we
put them on our sledges. It was a very anxious
business when we started after lunch, about 4.30.
Could we pull our full loads or not? My own party
got away first, and, to my joy, I found we could make
fairly good headway. Every now and again the
sledge sank in a soft patch, which brought us up,
but we learned to treat such occasions with patience.
We got sideways to the sledge and hauled it out, Evans
(P.O.) getting out of his ski to get better purchase.
The great thing is to keep the sledge moving, and
for an hour or more there were dozens of critical
moments when it all but stopped, and not a few in
it brought up altogether. The latter were very
trying and tiring. But suddenly the surface grew
more uniform and we more accustomed to the game, for
after a long stop to let the other parties come up,
I started at 6 and ran on till 7, pulling easily without
a halt at the rate of about 2 miles an hour.
I was very jubilant; all difficulties seemed to be
vanishing; but unfortunately our history was not repeated
with the other parties. Bowers came up about
half an hour after us. They also had done well
at the last, and I’m pretty sure they will get
on all right. Keohane is the only weak spot, and
he only, I think, because blind (temporarily).
But Evans’ party didn’t get up till 10.
They started quite well, but got into difficulties,
did just the wrong thing by straining again and again,
and so, tiring themselves, went from bad to worse.
Their ski shoes, too, are out of trim.
Just as I thought we were in for making a great score,
this difficulty overtakes us—it is dreadfully
trying. The snow around us to-night is terribly
soft, one sinks to the knee at every step; it would
be impossible to drag sledges on foot and very difficult
for dogs. Ski are the thing, and here are my
tiresome fellow-countrymen too prejudiced to have
prepared themselves for the event. The dogs should
get back quite easily; there is food all along the
line. The glacier wind sprang up about 7; the
morning was very fine and warm. To-night there
is some stratus cloud forming—a hint no
more bad weather in sight. A plentiful crop of
snow blindness due to incaution—the sufferers
Evans, Bowers, Keohane, Lashly, Oates—in
various degrees.
This forenoon Wilson went over to a boulder poised
on the glacier. It proved to be a very coarse
granite with large crystals of quartz in it.
Evidently the rock of which the pillars of the Gateway
and other neighbouring hills are formed.