the plateau. We stubbornly continued our march;
we would not give in until we had the plain itself
before us. Our hope was that the ridge projecting
from Mount Don Pedro Christophersen would be the last;
we now had it before us. The going changed at
once up here; the loose snow disappeared, and a few
wind-waves (sastrugi) began to show themselves.
These were specially unpleasant to deal with on this
last ridge; they lay from south-east to north-west,
and were as hard as flints and as sharp as knives.
A fall among them might have had very serious consequences.
One would have thought the dogs had had enough work
that day to tire them, but this last ridge, with its
unpleasant snow-waves, did not seem to trouble them
in the least. We all drove up gaily, towed by
the sledges, on to what looked to us like the final
plateau, and halted at 8 p.m. The weather had
held fine, and we could apparently see a very long
way. In the far distance, extending to the north-west,
rose peak after peak; this was the chain of mountains
running to the south-east, which we now saw from the
other side. In our own vicinity, on the other
band, we saw nothing but the backs of the mountains
so frequently mentioned. We afterwards learned
how deceptive the light can be. I consulted the
aneroid immediately on our arrival at the camping-ground,
and it showed 10,920 feet above the sea, which the
hypsometer afterwards confirmed. All the sledge-meters
gave seventeen geographical miles, or thirty-one kilometres
(nineteen and a quarter statute miles). This
day’s work — nineteen and a quarter
miles, with an ascent of 5,750 feet — gives
us some idea of what can be performed by dogs in good
training. Our sledges still had what might be
considered heavy loads; it seems superfluous to give
the animals any other testimonial than the bare fact.
It was difficult to find a place for the tent, so
hard was the snow up here. We found one, however,
and set the tent. Sleeping-bags and kit-bags
were handed in to me, as usual, through the tent-door,
and I arranged everything inside. The cooking-case
and the necessary provisions for that evening and
the next morning were also passed in; but the part
of my work that went more quickly than usual that night
was getting the Primus started, and pumping it up to
high-pressure. I was hoping thereby to produce
enough noise to deaden the shots that I knew would
soon be heard — twenty-four of our brave
companions and faithful helpers were marked out for
death. It was hard — but it had to
be so. We had agreed to shrink from nothing in
order to reach our goal. Each man was to kill
his own dogs to the number that had been fixed.