National Geographic deemed our epic 1986 dogsled trek to the North Pole "a landmark in polar exploration" because we did it WITHOUT resupply. Everything needed to sustain our 50 dogs & 8 team members in temps that reached 75 bel
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It stemmed from a whimsical idea Will Steger & I had months before. While training with our team in Ely, MN, we took a 4" x 2' section of plastic plumbing pipe, painted it blaze orange, affixed screw caps to both ends, and invited each team member to place a memento in it. If we reached the Pole, we'd leave the capsule behind for posterity.
It's contents included a Boy Scout scarf, a beaded Indian belt, a letter to Santa Claus that a school child had given us, a small lace prayer circle, a 10 Kroner bill and a scroll with the story of our journey and the names of our team members and our hundreds of volunteer & sponsors.
On May 1, after a 2-month, 1,000-mile trek across the Arctic Ocean, we reached the Pole -- frostbitten and battered but giddy with excitement. Our celebrations included a little dance around the top of the world during which I ceremoniously pitched the time capsule over my shoulder into a jumbled heap of ice. "Well," laughed Will, "there's something we'll never see again!"
Upon our return home, our expedition sponsor, Du Pont company, had a whimsical idea as well. To capitalize on the international media fanfare prompted by our success, they posted a press release offering a $5,000 reward for recovery of the capsule. Considering that it been set adrift among 5 million square miles of ice at the most remote spot on the planet, it was a safe bet.
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But a funny thing happened. Nearly three years later, in February 1989, Irish carpenter Peadar Gallagher was on a Sunday stroll along the Atlantic Ocean beach in County Donegal. He spotted an odd bit of flotsam. Curious as to what it contained, he took it home and cracked it open. Unbeknownst to him, he'd found the time capsule. The one item inside that remained legible, was a Polaroid photo of our team bearing the words "National Geographic Society." He reported the find to the American Embassy in Dublin which in turn helped put in touch with NGS and Du Pont officials in Washington D.C. "We were shocked," said Du Pont's Robert Slavin upon learning that the capsule had survived a 2,100 mile ocean journey. "After three years, we had simply forgot about it."
Then expedition marketing wizard Jeff Blumenfeld had
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Despite Gallagher's recalcitrance, news of the capsule's recovery fascinated the country. The Associated Press story appeared in hundreds of newspaper, providing a huge return on Du Pont's $5,000 investment. And the time capsule was displayed at the Explorers Club in New York City -- where it presumably enjoyed it's visit to 'The Big Apple' more than Peadar Gallagher might have.
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