
After a perturbing delay of twelve days in the freight of their kayaks,
Marcus Demuth and Biff Wruszek set off yesterday from Punta Arenas on the Brunswick Peninsula of mainland Chile, changing their initial plan of launching by the Beagle Channel, from Ushuaia, on the Argentinian southern coast of the island of Tierra del Fuego.
Braving South, the
Tierra del Fuego Expedition will attempt the first circumnavigation of Isla Grande Tierra del Fuego, a journey of over 1,100 nautical miles and sixty days that will be undertaken counter-clockwise and take the expeditioners along the Cordillera Darwin, a long and wide mountain range mantled by an ice field, in the western and southern coasts, within the Chilean half of the island that reaches up to the Beagle Channel. After it, awaits the particularly hazardous Cape Horn, the northern boundary of the Drake Passage, so often lashed and whipped by strong wind, large swells and heavy gales.
The climate in Tierra del Fuego is a very inhospitable, ranging from subpolar oceanic and subantarctic to polar, which is fantastic for preserving the glaciers but hard on leisure camping.
During their worrying delay, Marcus and Biff who received the support of both the Argentinian and Chilean navies and were generously indulged by local paddlers, acclimatised splendidly to Fuegan costums, sipping mate, eating beef, drinking cerveza Fueguina, even considering undertaking the expedition in ruddered kayaks.
However, Cape Horn begged for a Nordkapp, and the expedition is sponsored by Valley Sea Kayaks, Werner Paddles, Kokatat, Outdoor Research, Exped, Globe Wireless, KayakPro, The Manhattan Kayak Company, The Kayak Centre of Rhode Island, Spot, Sigg, Princeton Tec, Shred Ready, and SeaPack.
So the last salute of the year goes to Marcus and Biff who camp now somewhere north of Dawson Island. May the wind be always at their backs.
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