Wednesday, August 29, 2012

WORLD RECORD DATED 20120829 - CAPTAIN DAVID COWPER IN M/V POLAR BOUND is the first to navigate the original Northwest Passage since discovery in 1851


File:Cowper stromness.jpg
Date: 20120829 1200hrs - Position 74 21 62N -124 57 36W

(GBR) Captain David Scott Cowper, age 70, aboard M/V POLAR BOUND has become the first in history to successfully navigate solo through McClure Strait over the top of Banks Island on the original Northwest Passage route discovered by Captain Robert McClure in 1851 aboard HMS INVESTIGATOR.


Captain David Scott Cowper has done what no one else in the last 161 years could - not even the 1,005 foot, 43,000hp Icebreaker SS MANHATTAN could not transit through the sea ice - she had to turn around in McClure Strait - Captain Cowper achieved his accomplishment with his specially built aluminum 48 foot M/V POLAR BOUND powered with a single 170hp Gardner 8LXB engine carrying 10 tons of diesel fuel.

Captain David Scott Cowper now becomes the only person to complete four solo Northwest Passages and is on his seventh(?) world solo circumnavigation. Might this be a Polar circumnavigation?  Time will tell...

My hat goes off to you!!! A job well done!!!


GOD SPEED POLAR BOUND AND HER GOOD CAPTAIN!




File:Cowper fortross 2004.jpg

Friday, August 10, 2012

2013 Northwest Passage Expedition - hurry for an open crew berth



The original Northwest Passage was discovered in October 1851 by Captain Robert McClure while standing on Banks Island - he could see a mountain peak on the northeast horizon - using a chronometer he was able to determine longitude by observing local apparent noon against his watch set to London GMT knowing it was zero longitude, a simple calculation knowing there are 24 hours in the earth's 360 degree rotation so 15 degrees each hour (360/24=15) or one degree every 4 minutes (60/15=4). Using celestial sightings they determined their position as 73°10′ N, 117°10′ W. 

He knew from reading Captain John Ross's second arctic voyage log from 1829 that the VICTORY was stuck in the ice four years in Prince Regent. Ross's nephew James Clark Ross found the magnetic north pole on the Boothia Peninsula during this encampment. In 1832, Ross and his crew abandoned their ship and walked to the wreck of HMS Fury off Sumerset Island which had been abandoned by William Edward Parry's 1824-1825 Arctic expedition, seven years earlier. A year went by before a break in the ice allowed them to leave, on that ship's longboats. They were eventually picked up by a British vessel, HMS Isabella (which Ross had commanded on his 1818 expedition), and taken home.

Captain McClure remembered reading that from May 1819 until December 1820 Hecla was commanded by Parry. She and her companion ship, the gun Brig Griper, reached a longitude 112°51' W before backtracking to winter off Melville Island at Winter Harbour. No ship to that date was able to travel so far west in search of a Northwest Passage. 

Captain McClure's local apparent longitude by sun observation confirmed they were within the immediate position of Melville Island and the mountain peak on the northeastern horizon across the sea strait had to be Melville Island where Captain Parry stayed in Winter Harbor. 

He had found the Northwest Passage!







On October 21st, Captain McClure crossed the frozen sea strait, later named after him as McClure Strait, and found Winter Harbor along with a cache of supplies from previous explorers. He placed a written note in a stone carin should anyone find it telling of his crew's position at Mercy Bay on Banks Island.


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http://www.hull.ac.uk/mhsc/FarHorizons/Frames/melville_island.htm
This is Parry's Rock, a Canadian landmark located at Winter Harbour on Melville Island. It was where William Parry and his ships, Hecla and Griper spent the winter of 1819/1820 on the first recorded voyage into the Arctic islands. The rock is engraved by his expedition. In 1909, the Canadian Joseph-Elzéar Bernier visited the rock and claimed the Arctic in the name of Canada. There is also a plaque on the side of the rock commemorating the event.

Captain McClure returned to Mercy Bay on Banks Island on October 31st.

"October 31st, the Captain returned at 8.30. A.M., and at 11.30. A.M., the remainder of the parting, having, upon the 26th instant, ascertained that the waters we are now in communicate with those of Barrow Strait, the north-eastern limit being in latitude 73°31′, N. longitude 114°39′, W. thus establishing the existence of a NORTH-WEST PASSAGE between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans."

Halloween on October 31st will always have a new meaning for me - The first discovery of a Northwest Passage. And hopefully in 2013 the anniversary of the first boat to navigate it from Atlantic Arctic Circle to Pacific Arctic Circle.

McClure and his crew were also the first to both circumnavigate the Americas, and to transit the Northwest Passage!

Since the discovery in 1851 I have not been able to document another surface vessel who has made a "Northwest Passage" from Atlantic Arctic Circle to Pacific Arctic Circle "Over-The-Top" of Banks Island through McClure Strait.

Who would like to go and retrace the original 1851 Northwest Passage during a 2013 attempt aboard M/V GREY GOOSE?

A deadline of November 2012 has been set - email me if you are interested in more information.

Departure would be May 2013 from Mobile Alabama.
Arrival in Astoria Oregon October 2013.

Announcement on October 31, 2013 that the original 1851 Northwest Passage was navigated by the M/V GREY GOOSE and crew.

Crew berths are limited - don't wait much longer to sign on.

Email: mvgreygoose (at) clear.net



When will the ice be open around Banks Island? About a week more - August 20th - Check back.