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AN EXTREME ENCOUNTER: ANTARCTICA: Adventure Without Limits

Frosty Wooldridge

 FormatISBN Price  
This Book is Available Electronic Book (E-book Instructions)9781425909949 $ 4.95  
This Book is Available Paperback (5x8)9781425909963 $ 11.70  
About the Book

If a plunger and mop gave him a ticket to the ice continent, so be it. Nothing short of a seat in the cargo hold of a Star Lifter transport plane would stop Frosty Wooldridge and his appointment with destiny in Antarctica. Resolved that taking a job as a house keeper was the only way to reach the bottom of the world, Wooldridge set off on an adventure that even Walter Mitty couldn’t have imagined. Following in the footsteps of Amundsen, Scott and Shackleton, Wooldridge steps into the Antarctic landscape, culture and environment with the keen eyes of an explorer in a benignly cruel, frozen land.

Within days of landing at McMurdo Station, Wooldridge sets off on the first of many assignments as the Antarctic Sun’s sole reporter. Trudging across the polar plateau, Wooldridge shares his authentic wit, wisdom and perspective through the lens of a man entranced by an unforgiving frozen desert.

He carries readers into the vagaries of people living on the ice—their foibles, personalities and dreams. “An Extreme Encounter” transports readers into the bowels of million year old glaciers, katabatic winds, to the tops of smoking volcanoes, scuba diving under the ice, wacky people, death, outlaw activities and rare moments where he meets penguins, whales, seals and Skua birds. Hang on to your seatbelts—you’re in for a wild ride where the bolt goes into the bottom of the globe.

A world class explorer whose bicycle journeys are unrivaled in the world of extreme cycling, Wooldridge brings a quest for adventure and genuine love for both hardship and challenges on the road of life. Armchair travelers are forewarned: This tale will leave you lost in dreams of following the footsteps of explorers throughout the ages. Sandy Colhoun, former editor-in-chief, The Antarctic Sun

About the Author

Living in Colorado, Frosty Wooldridge is an environmentalist, mountain climber, triathlete, dancer, Scuba diver, skier, writer and photographer. His features articles have appeared in national and international magazines including...BICYCLING, ADVENTURE CYLIST, FREEWHEELING and many more. He is the author of “HANDBOOK FOR TOURING BICYCLISTS”; “STRIKE THREE! TAKE YOUR BASE”; “MOTORCYCLING ADVENTURE TO ALASKA”; “BICYCLING AROUND THE WORLD”; “SALTY TIGHTS: SLICE OF HEAVEN, TASTE OF HELL-BICYCLING THE CONTINENTAL DIVIDE”. Website: www.frostvwooldridqe.com

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Far below us on this planet awaits an adventure as intriguing and almost as inaccessible as outer space.  Antarctica is a place where the bolt goes into the bottom of the globe.  It’s a land of extremes that defy imagination.   At temperatures of 126 degrees below zero Fahrenheit, nothing can possibly live, yet life finds a way.   It is a place where a person can run around the world in twenty seconds.  It’s where anyone can die in 20 minutes by standing still. This “Ice Continent” forms nacreous clouds described as ‘Mother of Pearl’ that create unfathomable milky, opalescent glows across the evening sky.  It’s where the sun hovers at 12 noon for five months but temperatures remain below freezing.  It’s a continent with ice three miles thick.  Twenty-five foot long skeletons of dinosaurs remain from 65 million years ago when those beasts once romped across the land.  It’s home to 180 million penguins and millions of seals.  Whales by the tens of thousands feed in the food-rich waters around the continent.  Yet, not a tree grows anywhere on 5.4 million square miles of land.  Averaging 7,000 feet above sea level, Antarctica is our highest continent with 90 percent of the world’s fresh water locked up in glaciers hundreds of miles long and as much as 58 miles wide when they pour into the Southern Oceans.

Yet, it’s the lowest point of the world not only physically, but also within our minds.  In 1773, Captain Cook, aboard the “Endeavor,” was the first to ply its dangerous waters—only to be turned back by deadly icebergs.  Later, British explorers Robert F. Scott and Ernest Shackleton attempted to reach the South Pole by land.  Shackleton came within 97 miles before he retreated for lack of food.  In 1912, the Norwegian, Roald Amundsen, mushing sled dogs over 800 miles of snow, succeeded in reaching the South Pole.  A month later, arriving in second place, Scott and his men died on the return from the Pole.  The Australian Mawson succeeded in his quests but suffered horrible consequences.  Later, Shackleton and his men lived through one of the greatest epic survival stories of all time.  What they survived in polar exploration defies reality.  Their story, in the pages of Alfred Lansing’s “ENDURANCE” will never be duplicated in the history of the universe.

This is my story about Antarctica.  It’s about the little guy whose name never reaches the spotlight, but it’s the little guy whose struggle makes the hero’s feats possible.  Without those of us who swab the decks or peel the potatoes, the ‘big’ guys would not succeed.  This is about my struggle at the bottom of the world. It’s a story of intense adventure with men and women who came to the “Ice Continent” determined to experience it for themselves.  Yes, life and death happened while I was there.  I tempted death myself and lived to tell about it.  More than that, it’s a tale of the drama of people working under extreme conditions at a tiny scientific outpost at the bottom of the world--and what I learned from them.  What I experienced with them and that frozen continent, I share with you.  It is a MOST fascinating journey.


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