August 13, 2004
CamBay landlubbers join German sailor
The Dagmar Aaen sails
east again after wintering on Victoria Island
SARA MINOGUE
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The Dagmar Aaen is
sailing east again on a quest to cross the Northwest Passage after wintering
in Cambridge Bay. This was the third winter the ship was locked in sea ice since
she was built in Denmark in 1931. (PHOTOS BY DOUG STERN)
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In the summer of 2003, residents of Gjoa Haven celebrated the 100th anniversary
of Roald Amundsens historic journey through the Northwest Passage, even
though Amundsen had only departed in 1903, and spent two winters in the Arctic
before completing the trip in 1906.
A German adventurer who hoped to celebrate the anniversary by making his own
passage last year found his trip became even more historically accurate when
ice forced his ship to winter in Cambridge Bay.
Arved Fuchs, 51, is preparing to launch the second part of his journey east
as captain of the Dagmar Aaen, a 24-metre wooden fishing boat built in Denmark
in 1931.
Hes also picked up two new crew members from Cambridge Bay who will join
him on a three-month voyage through Queen Maud Gulf and up to Lancaster Sound
on a route that will vary depending on ice conditions and then
to Greenland, Iceland, the Faroe Islands and eventually, northern Germany.
Doug Stern, a Kitikmeot resident of 22 years, first met Fuchs when he noticed
a wooden boat at the end of the dock in Cambridge Bay last September. After
a short conversation he learned that Fuchs had just come in from the Aleutian
Islands and was on his way east.
Below: Captain Arved Fuchs and deckhand Wolfgang Reetz on board the Dagmar Aaen
in Cambridge Bay last week. (PHOTOS BY DOUG STERN)
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A few weeks later, Stern noticed that the ship was back. Ice had forced the
ship to turn around just north of Taloyoak.
It was touch and go, Stern says. They were worried about
losing the ship for a while.
After a quick discussion, involving the RCMP, who expressed some reservations
about leaving an unattended ship in port all winter, Stern offered to look after
the boat with the help of Brent Boddy, another long-term Cambridge Bay resident.
Right away I said, gee, so if we keep the three stoves going and look
after the boat and look after the bilge and make sure the boat doesnt
sink, do you guys have a set crew for next year? Stern recalls.
He thought about it for a few seconds, and then said yes.
For 10 months, Stern, a trapper and seasonal Parks Canada employee, and Boddy,
the GNs superintendent of public works, took turns making sure the ships
three stove heaters were burning, and pumping out the water that inevitably
leaks into the bilges of a wooden ship.
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Last week, the ships nine other crew members and a camera crew returned
to Cambridge Bay, only to find there was still solid ice through Dease Strait,
between Victoria Island and the mainland.
As the crew waited for the ice to break, and for a strong wind to push it out
of the bay, they planned a 10-day trial run into Bathurst Inlet and the outpost
camps in the area.
The only sailing experience I have is three months on a 250-foot-long
coast guard ship in Hudsons Bay in 1975, Stern says. Ive
got my sea legs, but no experience with sailboats or sails. For Brent and myself
its going to be a pretty big learning curve.
Intense winter experiences and isolated traveling conditions arent entirely
new to Stern. For the past four years, he has worked with Parks Canada at remote
Quttinirpaaq national park on Ellesmere Island. Three years ago, he spent three
months as a guide in the Antarctic.
Boddy has his own expedition experience. In 1986, he was part of a six-man
team that made the first unsupported dog sled trip to the North Pole. The trip
took 57 days and Boddy was given the Order of Canada for his achievement.
Both men are avid explorers of the Cambridge Bay area and will serve as advisors
on ice and snow conditions.
Journeying with Arved Fuchs will be an experience in itself. Fuchs has been
exploring both ends of the earth for years and is world famous for his extreme
adventures.
In 2000, Fuchs recreated the journey that Earnest Shackleton undertook to save
his crew after his ship, the Endurance, was destroyed by ice in the Antarctic
in 1914. Fuchs built a replica of the James Caird, a small, open boat with no
engine and no radar, and set off from Esperanza Bay on the Antarctic peninsula
for Elephant Island, where Shackeltons crew spent four months waiting
for help before deciding to try the 800 mile journey to safety themselves.
Thirteen days later, Fuchs made it to Elephant Island, and then set off for
South Georgia, a British Island southeast of South America. The crew lived to
tell the tale of wind, fog, and 10 meter high waves that continually threatened
to capsize the boat.
He is crazy but when you meet him, hes just like talking to you
or me, Stern says of Fuchs. Youd never know he did any of
this stuff unless you asked him.
Stern isnt sure whether or not the latest expedition will be successful,
but hes looking forward to the chance of a lifetime.
Were gonna have to be lucky and were gonna have to have some
good strong windstorms to break up some ice and get rid of it so that we can
head over towards Gjoa haven and Taloyoak in late August or early September
and work our way up the coast to Boothia Peninsula.
If ice conditions dont improve, Stern and Boddy will still be on board
as the ship makes its way westwards around Alaska, to Hawaii, and through the
Panama Canal to Germany.
Either way, Stern says he and Boddy will be good ambassadors for Nunavut.
I took the Nunavut flag to the South Pole a few years ago when I was
working as a guide. Im gonna take it with me, and if we ever got to Germany
like who knows, right? were going to go possibly through
Europe, across Africa, then we might go to India, end up in Australia and New
Zealand and then come back to Canada. I hope to have the Nunavut flag with me
all over the place.
Stern is also packing a sealskin bone and peg game for long nights on board
the Dagmar Aaen, although he expects that getting to know the other crew members
will be entertainment enough.
Among the crew are a Danish boat builder, a retired air traffic controller,
a German geographer, and an Australian from Tasmania
There should be some interesting conversations when youre sitting
around the table in the galley.
The Dagmar Aaen is also working with WWF Deutschland to document evidence of
climate change observed on the trip.
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