Exercises
Visions
on Ice
Walley
Herbert is the greatest pioneering polar explorer alive today.
Here is a man who led the British Trans-Arctic Expedition,
a 16-month, pioneering journey of 3 800 miles, much of it
in the pitch darkness, over a moving ice ocean that was constantly
shifting and breaking up, with three men and a team of four
dogs. This journey, it is now universally agreed, was the "last great journey left on the face of the
earth." A journey
that no one since has even dared attempt. This was a geographical
first that ranked alongside climbing Everest and the first
surface crossing of the Southern and Northern icecaps of the
Earth.
Thirty years on from this journey Walley Herbert
is the last link between the explorers from the heroic age
of exploration and our modern day adventures. Yet he has never
been honored for his outstanding achievement in Polar exploration.
This is despite the fact that Prime Minister Harold Wilson
claimed the Trans-Arctic journey as "a feat of endurance and
courage which ranks with any in polar history", Shackleton
called it a "phenomenon" and HRH Prince Philip, the
expedition's
patron, hailed it as "an achievement which ranks among the
greatest triumphs of human skill and endurance."
Today,
among his contemporaries in polar exploration Herbert is a
and Sir Ranulph Fiennes
says: "I've grown up thinking he's the greatest
of the polar travelers of today. His
navigation, fieldcraft and
are superb and his awareness of what dogs can and can't do
unparalleled. Wally is very genuine and if I had
to pick out of all the travelers who are alive today, Wally
is the greatest by a big head." Herbert has helped many a
young adventurer on his way, with crucial advice on equipment,
mapping and contacts. None of these men have retraced his
pioneering journeys in the Antarctic or the Arctic.
To mark the anniversary of Herbert's expedition
reaching the North Pole on the 60th anniversary of Robert
E Peary's discredited claim to have done so first, an exhibition
of Herbert's polar paintings will be showing at the Atlas
Studio Gallery in London. For nowadays, Herbert, aged 64,
has become a polar painter, etching out the most detailed,
intense and moving scenes from polar history and the present
that have influenced his life.
At Inverness
airport, Wally and his wife Marie are waiting to meet me.
I get a good look at him before he does me. He is diminutive,
5 foot 8 inches, not the usual macho image of a great explorer—but he has on a coat designed for the Arctic weather, with
a fur-lined hood, framing a grizly beard and small sparkling
eyes. His posture is unimposing and his shoulders a little
hunched. Marie gives me a warm welcome.
The Herberts have never owned a house of their own and they
are presently renting a doll-size white washed "bothy", overlooking
the Spey valley. The view of the rolling hills is impressive
but the noise from the small, occasionally busy road aggravates
Wally. He craves silence.
"See me in my environment," he urges before
we start the interview proper. He shows me a film of his life
in the Arctic and past journeys that is currently in post-production.
When he is in the Arctic, the shackles and difficulty that
he finds with life in Britain are shaken off and he visibly
relaxes.
In
his environment, Herbert is the of all James Bonds. He is softly
spoken, glowing and confident. On film, he reminisces passionately
of the fear he felt before setting out on his Trans-Arctic
journey. Looking ahead at the journey was psychologically
very frightening because while he had traveled in the footsteps
of Shackleton, Scott and Amundsen, no one had ever attempted
this journey.
Finding the North Pole was "rather like stepping
on the shadow of a bird hovering overhead." This was because
the ice was constantly moving and the sun only intermittently
appearing to let them take their reading. Like Robert E Peary
before them had done, they nearly missed it. The story is
an amazing one: On 5 April 1969 Herbert messaged Her Majesty
the Queen, "I have the honor to inform your Majesty that on
the 5th April by dead reckoning we reached the North Pole."
However, once the sun had come out he realized that the group
had drifted off course and in order to get that all important
proof they struggled on. It was not until the next day that
they actually reached the North Pole and by amazing coincidence
this was the very same day that Pearsy had claimed to have
done so too on 6th April 1909.
Herbert places a lot of emphasis on some very
strange coincidences which lead him to believe that there
is a "soul connection" with explorers of that region and discovery
of the world and its environment as a whole. As the expedition
headed home they photographed their first siting of land for
16 months. It
was precisely the moment that the Astronaut Jack Young took
the famous photograph of the "Earthrise" from the moon. Strangely
too, at the end of journey they touched land at the exact
moment, that 16 years earlier Hillary and Tensing had reached
the summit of Mount Everest.
"For me this first sight of land meant so
much. The earth was like a precious jewel and that moment
changed my life. It was from then that I began searching for
the Third Pole." Herbert's spiritual quest has, he says, been
as tough and demanding as his physical one.
His childhood was spent with his mother and
sister on a ranch in the Drankensberg mountains, in South
Africa with his father absent in World War II. Herbert has
few memories of this time. "I remember almost nothing until
the age of twelve. A
physiotherapist would probably tell me that I didn't want
to be a child, which is probably true. I was not
close to either of my parents or my sister and the moment
that my voice broke was a great relief."
One of Herbert's earliest memories is aptly
a journey on ice. At the age of twelve, for a bet of five
shillings, he walked across the River Severn on extremely
thin ice, for which he was promptly beaten by his father.
The first man to fire Herbert's imagination was The Reverend
Norman Gurney, who had sailed as the boatswain on the Penola,
the last expedition which had ventured under sail to the Antarctica
in 1932. As a choirboy, Herbert would sit enthralled at the
curate's sermons which would be full of tales of Arctic adventure
rather than the more conventional biblical stories. This was
when Herbert resolved to become a District Officer somewhere
in Colonial Africa or failing that, an explorer.
However, his family had other ambitions for
their dreaming son. To serve Queen and country was every man's
destiny in the Herbert family, as it had been for the past
four hundred years. At the age of 17, he was frog-marched
to the nearest recruiting office and signed up for 22 years.
Luckily for him he discovered a clause in his contract that
gave him the option to quit after three years. Meanwhile,
he hated every moment. "I am not a team player, I hated doing
these pointless things which I felt were an insult to our
intelligence. I was brutalized in the army."
When Herbert left the army in 1955 he hitch-hiked
home from Egypt, through Turkey, Greece and Italy, drawing
portraits for his food and shelter, and as often, sleeping
rough. "My father did not speak to me for three years but
by the time I returned home from the Antarctic, having hitch-hiked
15 000 miles from Uruguay, he was proud of me and we became
friends. He would take me to the pub and being an army man
would always march in step with me which I would always purposefully
break."
"What I deeply regret is that I never told
my father that I wanted to have his scrapbook of sporting
and military achievements. When I was doing my Arctic journey
he made a huge scrap book with all the international clippings.
But when it had grown to two large volumes, he burnt his own
book. I was so sad about that." With his mother, he says, "I had little contact. We spoke politely to each other but
I felt embarrassed when she was concerned for me. She was
very gentle."
So where did he get his sense of mission?
Was it driven by ego and arrogance? "My sense of mission was
always historical," he explains. "It was not so much the physical
prowess and the macho thing, although I have come to recognise
the value of ego and arrogance in an explorer because without
them I simply would not have attempted any of these journeys.
I believed totally that we would succeed and would not have
gone if I had thought otherwise. For the first two years I
was in the Antarctic I was in awe of many explorers but then
I began to have the authority to challenge them."
One day in 1955 he spotted two advertisements
in the Telegraph for jobs in the Antarctic. He was selected
at the age of 22 to join the Falkland Islands Dependencies
Survey, based at Hope Bay on the northern tip of the Antarctic
Peninsula.
Gradually
Herbert achieved historic journeys, mapping some 38 000 square
miles of previously unexplored country in the Nimrod Glacier
region and the Queen Maud Range from 1960-62 and retracing
Amundsen's route on the Axel Hiberg Glacier on the fiftieth
anniversary of his descent of those icefalls in 1952.
Between 1962 and 1963, Herbert worked frantically for a year
in New Zealand to draw and publish this map before the Americans
did. And
then with soaring ambitions he returned to England to gather
the support of distinguished polar explorers so that the Royal
Geographical Society would approve his expedition to cross
the Arctic Ocean. In 1966 he wintered with the
Polar Eskimos of North West Greenland in order to learn their
ways and techniques on the ice. Herbert set out from Greenland
the following spring re-tracing the 1908 outward route of
Dr Freerick Cook, a journey of 1 500 miles.
Although the journey across the top of the
world roundly was applauded it was badly timed because the
eyes of the world were fixed on an event of larger historical
significance, man's first landing on the moon. And so Wally
Herbert returned from the Arctic with a huge financial debt
and sense of failure. Married on Christmas Eve 1969 to Marie,
he settled down to write two books but soon he needed another
journey. In
1971 he set out with his wife and baby daughter, Kari for
north-west Greenland to live with the Polar Eskimos.
Then came a period of reflection and inner-struggle as Herbert
set out to write Peary's biography and reluctantly disprove
his hero's claim to be the first man to the North Pole. "This
was the blackest cross-roads of my entire life," he says.
But worse was still to come. His
youngest daughter Pascale was killed in a freak electrical
accident four years ago which the whole family are struggling
to come to terms with.
Having diced with death more than most men
on earth, he now believes in reincarnation. "When I'm awake
I am never, and never have been, afraid of death. I've always
been afraid of death through nightmares. For example during
my Polar days, if I fell down a crevasse or into the sea through
thin ice, I had already done it so many times in my dreams
that I knew what to do. So when it happened for real, I had
gone through the agony of dying in these situations already
and I picked the method in which I lived happily ever after."
(1 990 words)
(From Geographical, May 1999 )
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