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Mike O'Shea

Braving snow and seals: Irish adventurers retrace Ernest Shackleton's Antarctic expedition

The team sailed through iceberg-strewn waters to reach South Georgia, the scene of Shackleton’s legendary exploit.

FIVE IRISH EXPLORERS were recuperating this Christmas after a month-long expedition to the remote sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia.

Kerry men Mike O’Shea, Seanie Murphy and Aidan Forde, Cork woman Clare O’Leary and Keith McDonnell from Meath, along with New Yorker Tom Ruane, set off in mid-November on a 28-day mission to retrace the steps of Ernest Shackleton.

The journey was organised to mark the centenary of the Irish adventurer’s Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition, an ill-fated attempt to cross the Antarctica from sea to sea.

Shackleton’s plan didn’t quite work out, as you might have heard: the crew were forced to abandon their ship after it was crushed in the ice, and ended up setting up camp on Elephant Island, off the coast of Antarctica.

From there, Shackleton, fellow Irish explorer Tom Crean and four others then set out across open waters to seek help in South Georgia, some 1,300 kilometres away.

O’Shea, who also crossed the Greenland ice cap last year, said the group had planned to trek the same route taken by Shackleton to reach the Stromness Bay whaling station.

However, at 15 degrees Celsius, the weather was too warm to risk travelling through snow.

Capture2 Clare O'Leary

“It would usually be about minus 15 degrees,” O’Shea said.

The warm weather meant there was snow avalanching all around us, so we changed course to Possession Bay, a crossing that’s only been done once before.

The route was not without its challenges: as far as half a mile inland, they faced ankle-biting fur seals that could (and often did) chase them at high speeds.

“It was breeding season at the time, so they were very territorial,” O’Shea explained.

Capture3 One of the friendly seals

Ice cap challenges

When the team stopped off to take shelter at the Gritvyken settlement, where Shackleton was buried after his death in 1922, they bumped into a familiar face.

Without any introduction, Jonathan Shackleton, a great-nephew of Ernest, asked O’Shea if he was Irish.

I had never met him before but we had spoken over phone and email for over 20 years.

“I couldn’t believe we were finally getting to meet in South Georgia of all places,” O’Shea said.

Capture4 Setting up camp for the night

The expedition, for him, was the latest in a series of ice cap challenges, known as the Ice Project.

He and O’Leary have already climbed Kilimanjaro, crossed the frozen Lake Baikal in Siberia, completed the Greenland crossing, walked Antarctica and trekked the North Patagonian ice field in southern Chile.

But this last trip was among the most challenging, with stormy weathers tossing the group around almost constantly as they sailed through iceberg-strewn waters back to the Falkand Islands, their last stop before returning home, O’Shea said.

I’m not in any particular hurry to return.

Mike O’Shea is giving away a limited edition bottle of South Georgia whiskey, among other items, to raise money for the ISPCC and Childline. For more information, and to donate, click here

Read: How do you tackle a HR crisis 1,300km from civilisation? Ask Ernest Shackleton

Read: Here’s what Ernest Shackleton and his crew were having for dinner, inching through the ice 100 years ago

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6 Comments
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    Mute Robert Zombies
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    Oct 28th 2013, 5:49 PM

    I think this is Ireland’s first photograph I’m open to corrections though

    http://www.irishhistorylinks.net/pages/OldDublin/HardwickStreet_1848.jpg

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    Mute Robert Zombies
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    Oct 28th 2013, 5:50 PM

    Sorry it’s 1848

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    Mute Patrick Dunphy
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    Oct 29th 2013, 9:22 AM

    We are publishing a book in the coming weeks and has a picture of Ireland from 1843, the earliest we believe to be late 1830′.

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    Mute Robert Zombies
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:04 PM

    Any evidence?

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    Mute Robert Zombies
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    Oct 28th 2013, 5:54 PM

    Or this one from 1860 of O’Connell St again I think the long exposure gives the impression of no people / horses etc

    https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BTlzXjKCMAEFhMM.jpg

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    Mute Shane Ferguson
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    Oct 28th 2013, 7:08 PM

    Thanks for posting those Robert, fascinating photos.

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    Mute Sarah Hill
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    Oct 28th 2013, 10:32 PM

    Fantastic pictures Robert!

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    Mute Fiona Canavan
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    Oct 28th 2013, 5:47 PM

    What about the two men sitting at a table on the right??

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    Mute Art Vandelay
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    Oct 28th 2013, 6:33 PM

    How do you know they are men? Women didn’t have much rights back then but they were allowed sit at tables.

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    Mute Fiona Canavan
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    Oct 28th 2013, 7:17 PM

    I imagine them sitting at a table playing cards or dominoes, this would’ve been a predominantly male pastime. Then again there’s no mention of these people so it’s likely my eyes are playing tricks on me!

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    Mute frank
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    Oct 28th 2013, 11:53 PM

    Where what pic ?

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    Mute John O'Neill
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    Oct 29th 2013, 9:38 AM

    Very well spotted Fiona!!

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    Mute Colm nolan
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    Oct 28th 2013, 8:52 PM

    How about some of the very first colour photos from the Albert Kahn Collection. http://www.albertkahn.co.uk/photos/Europe/Ireland_1.jpg

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    Mute Eric Duffy
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    Oct 28th 2013, 11:55 PM

    They did a collectors edition book called the wonderful world of Albert Kahn, it has a whole bunch of photos from all over the world, amazing to see the cultures preserved in it. The time period is just before the world wars and the collection of photos is worth checking out.

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    Mute Cowenwatch
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    Oct 28th 2013, 6:29 PM

    How about the first ever photograph: View from the Window at Le Gras, Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, ca. 1826

    http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/exhibitions/permanent/windows/southeast/joseph_nicephore_niepce.html

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    Mute Art Vandelay
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    Oct 28th 2013, 10:24 PM

    So apparently, there was a massive jump in quality from inception in 1826 to 1860 and then no discernible improvements until the introduction of colour in the 1960s-1970s.

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    Mute Rehabmeerkat
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    Oct 28th 2013, 10:39 PM

    Incorrect … The exposure & development processes dramatically changed and speeded up…

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    Mute Art Vandelay
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    Oct 28th 2013, 10:52 PM

    I was on about the end product more than the process.

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    Mute Alangb
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    Oct 28th 2013, 8:17 PM

    I hate the way that the Americans have hijacked this term but this is AWESOME dude

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    Mute Noel Wade
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    Oct 28th 2013, 7:28 PM

    This was taken just six years after the events depicted in Hugo’s Les Miserables.

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    Mute Simon Reynolds
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    Oct 28th 2013, 8:06 PM

    Very interesting photos thanks for posting. I follow Historical Pics on Twitter which is usually very good as well.

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    Mute Sarah Hill
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    Oct 28th 2013, 10:35 PM

    Thanks for the tip Simon
    Just followed it and looked at the all their photos very interesting !

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    Mute Conal Prendergast
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    Oct 29th 2013, 6:58 AM

    So the first ever photo of people came 12 years after the first ever photo?
    What did everyone do in the pub for those 12 years, if they weren’t Instagramming the shite out of each other’s cocktails/food or takin selfies every 3 mins?

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    Mute Susan Whelan
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    Oct 28th 2013, 11:35 PM

    And to think photography has come so far that we now filter pictures of our dinner….

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    Mute Rehabmeerkat
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    Oct 28th 2013, 10:36 PM

    This was shown on QI ages ago….

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    Mute Dexter Gordon
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:09 AM

    So?

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    Mute Neil Burke
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    Oct 29th 2013, 10:53 AM

    This photograph has been known for a very long time. It is written about in ‘The Photograph’ by Graham Clarke, published in 1997. And I’m sure I have seen it in earlier texts.

    So it seems this isn’t really news. Or perhaps the news is that someone has tweeted about an old, famous, photograph.

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    Mute Brian Donohoe
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    Oct 29th 2013, 12:18 PM

    Save the Bah Humbug for Christmas , Neil. It isn’t even Halloween yet, mate.

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