it specially thick, medium, and quite light.
It took a long time to get these skin clothes prepared.
First the reindeer-skins had to be bought in a raw
state, and this was done for me by Mr. Zappfe at Tromso,
Karasjok, and Kaatokeino. Let me take the opportunity
of thanking this man for the many and great services
he has rendered me, not only during my preparations
for the third voyage of the Fram, but in the fitting
out of the Gjoa expedition as well. With his help
I have succeeded in obtaining things that I should
otherwise never have been able to get. He shrank
from no amount of work, but went on till he had found
what I wanted. This time he procured nearly two
hundred and fifty good reindeer-skins, dressed by the
Lapps, and sent them to Christiania. Here I had
great trouble in finding a man who could sew skins,
but at last I found one. We then went to work
to make clothes after the pattern of the Netchelli
Eskimo, and the sewing went on early and late —
thick anoraks and thin ones, heavy breeches and light,
winter stockings and summer stockings. We also
had a dozen thin sleeping-bags, which I thought of
using inside the big thick ones if the cold should
be too severe. Everything was finished, but not
until the last moment. The outer sleeping-bags
were made by Mr. Brandt, furrier, of Bergen, and they
were so excellent, both in material and making-up,
that no one in the world could have done better; it
was a model piece of work. To save this outer
sleeping-bag, we had it provided with a cover of the
lightest canvas, which was a good deal longer than
the bag itself. It was easy to tie the end of
the cover together like the mouth of the sack, and
this kept the snow out of the bag during the day’s
march. In this way we always kept ourselves free
from the annoyance of drifting snow. We attached
great importance to having the bags made of the very
best sort of skin, and took care that the thin skin
of the belly was removed. I have seen sleeping-bags
of the finest reindeer-skin spoilt in a comparatively
short time if they contained a few patches of this
thin skin, as of course the cold penetrates more easily
through the thin skin, and gives rise to dampness
in the form of rime on meeting the warmth of the body.
These thin patches remain damp whenever one is in the
bag, and in a short time they lose their hair.
The damp spreads, like decay in wood, and continually
attacks the surrounding skin, with the result that
one fine day you find yourself with a hairless sleeping-bag.
One cannot be too careful in the choice of skins.
For the sake of economy, the makers of reindeer-skin
sleeping-bags are in the habit of sewing them in such
a way that the direction of the hair is towards the
opening of the bag. Of course this suits the shape
of the skins best, but it does not suit the man who
is going to use the bag. For it is no easy matter
to crawl into a sleeping-bag which is only just wide
enough to allow one to get in, and if the way of the
hair is against one it is doubly difficult. I
had them all made as one-man bags, with lacing round
the neck; this did not, of course, meet with the approval
of all, as will be seen later. The upper part
of this thick sleeping-bag was made of thinner reindeer-skin,
so that we might be able to tie it closely round the
neck; the thick skin will not draw so well and fit
so closely as the thin.