[Scott’s Last Expedition Volume I by Captain R. F. Scott]@TWC D-Link bookScott’s Last Expedition Volume I CHAPTER III 26/53
This spot seems to have all the local advantages (which I must detail later) for a winter station, and we realised that at length our luck had turned.
The most favourable circumstance of all is the stronge chance of communication with Cape Armitage being established at an early date. It was in connection with this fact that I had had such a strong desire to go to Mount Terror, and such misgivings if we had been forced to go to Cape Royds.
It is quite evident that the ice south of Cape Royds does not become secure till late in the season, probably in May.
Before that, all evidence seems to show that the part between Cape Royds and Cape Barne is continually going out.
How, I ask myself, was our depot party to get back to home quarters? I feel confident we can get to the new spot we have chosen at a comparatively early date; it will probably only be necessary to cross the sea ice in the deep bays north and south of the Glacier Tongue, and the ice rarely goes out of there after it has first formed.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|