but then we should be in each other’s way all
day long; nor would it be a good plan to give up the
only room where we could sometimes find peace and
comfort to be a workshop. I know it is the usual
custom to do so, but I have always found it a bad
arrangement. Now, indeed, we were at our wits’
end, but circumstances once more came to our aid.
For we may just as well confess it: we had forgotten
to bring out a tool which is a commonplace necessity
on a Polar expedition — namely, a snow-shovel.
A well-equipped expedition, as ours was to a certain
extent, ought to have at least twelve strong, thick
iron spades. We had none. We had two remnants,
but they did not help us very far. Fortunately,
however, we had a very good, solid iron plate with
us, and now Bjaaland stepped into the breach, and made
a whole dozen of the very best spades. Stubberud
managed the handles, and they might all have been
turned out by a big factory. This circumstance
had very important results for our future well-being,
as will be seen. If we had had the shovels with
us from the start, we should have cleared the snow
away from our door every morning, like tidy people.
But as we had none, the snow had increased daily before
our door, and, before Bjaaland was ready with the spades,
had formed a drift extending from the entrance along
the western side of the house. This snow-drift,
which was as big as the house itself, naturally caused
some frowns, when one morning all hands turned out,
armed with the new shovels, to make a clearance.
As we stood there, afraid to begin, one of us —
it must have been Lindstrom, or Hanssen perhaps, or
was it myself? well, it doesn’t matter —
one of us had the bright idea of taking Nature in
hand, and working with her instead of against her.
The proposal was that we should dig out a carpenter’s
shop in the big snow-drift, and put it in direct communication
with the hut. This was no sooner suggested than
adopted unanimously. And now began a work of
tunnelling which lasted a good while, for one excavation
led to another, and we did not stop until we had a
whole underground village — probably one
of the most interesting works ever executed round
a Polar station. Let us begin with the morning
when we thrust the first spade into the drift; it was
Thursday, April 20. While three men went to work
to dig right into the drift from the hut door westward,
three more were busy connecting it with the hut.
This was done by stretching boards — the
same that we had used on the Fram as a false deck
for the dogs — from the drift up to the
roof of the pent-house. The open part between
the drift and the pent-house on the northern side
was filled up entirely into a solid wall, which went
up to join the roof that had just been put on.
The space between the pent-house and the drift on the
south wall was left open as an exit. But now
we had the building fever on us, and one ambitious
project succeeded another. Thus we agreed to dig
a passage the whole length of the drift, and terminate