Alaska Week

 
 

Cold Weather Travel

 

As a survivor in an arctic or subarctic region, you will face many obstacles. Your location and the time of year will determine the types of obstacles and the inherent dangers. You should —

    * Avoid traveling during a blizzard.
    * Take care when crossing thin ice. Distribute your weight by lying flat and crawling.
    * Cross streams when the water level is lowest. Normal freezing and thawing action may cause a stream level to vary as much as 2 to 2.5 meters per day. This variance may occur any time during the day, depending on the distance from a glacier, the temperature and the terrain. Consider this variation in water level when selecting a campsite near a stream.
    * Consider the clear arctic air. It makes estimating distance difficult. You more frequently underestimate, rather than overestimate, distances.
    * Do not travel in "whiteout" conditions. The lack of contrasting colors makes it impossible to judge the nature of the terrain.
    * Always cross a snow bridge at right angles to the obstacle it crosses. Find the strongest part of the bridge by poking ahead of you with a pole or ice ax. Distribute your weight by crawling or by wearing snowshoes or skis.
    * Make camp early so that you have plenty of time to build a shelter.
    * Consider frozen or unfrozen rivers as avenues of travel. However, some rivers that appear frozen may have soft, open areas that make travel very difficult or may not allow walking, skiing or sledding.
    * Use snowshoes if you are traveling over snow-covered terrain. Snow 30 or more centimeters deep makes traveling difficult. If you do not have snowshoes, make a pair using willow, strips of cloth, leather or other suitable material.

It is almost impossible to travel in deep snow without snowshoes or skis. Traveling by foot leaves a well-marked trail for any pursuers to follow. If you must travel in deep snow, avoid snow-covered streams. The snow, which acts as an insulator, may have prevented ice from forming over the water. In hilly terrain, avoid areas where avalanches appear possible. Travel in the early morning in areas where there is danger of avalanches. On ridges, snow gathers on the lee side in overhanging piles called cornices. These often extend far out from the ridge and may break loose if stepped on.

 
advertisement

Shop Discovery Store

 

On TV

May 27,
11:00 am
60 min(s)
MythBusters
Phone Book Friction
 
On this episode of Mythbusters, Adam and Jamie take a fan mail fi
May 27,
12:00 pm
60 min(s)
MythBusters
Prison Escape
 
In this hang-on-for-dear-life episode of MythBusters, there's thr
May 27,
1:00 pm
60 min(s)
MythBusters
Spy Car Escape
 
On this episode of MythBusters, it's "spy versus spy" as Adam and
May 27,
2:00 pm
60 min(s)
MythBusters
Alaska Special 2
 
On this blisteringly cold episode of Mythbusters, the team gets
May 27,
3:00 pm
60 min(s)
MythBusters
Swimming in Syrup
 
On this extra-sticky episode of MythBusters, we put a classic phy
 
newsletter
 
 

our sites

video

 

mobile

shop

stay connected

corporate