Ice with Everything

by H. W. Tilman

On This Page

Description

H.W. `Bill¿ Tilman¿s fourteenth book describes three more of those voyages, `the first comparatively humdrum, the second totally disastrous, and the third exceedingly troublesome¿. The first voyage describes Tilman¿s 1971 attempt to reach East Greenland¿s remote and ice-bound Scoresby Sound. The largest fjord system in the world was named after the father of Whitby whaling captain, William Scoresby, who first charted the coastline in 1822. Scoresby¿s two-volume Account of the Arctic show more Regions provided much of the historical inspiration for Tilman¿s northern voyages and fuelled his fascination with Scoresby Sound and the unclimbed mountains at its head. Tilman¿s first attempt to reach the fjord had already cost him his first boat, Mischief, in 1968. The following year, a `polite mutiny¿ aboard Sea Breeze had forced him to turn back within sight of the entrance, so with a good crew aboard in 1971, it was particularly frustrating for Tilman to find the fjord blocked once more, this time by impenetrable sea ice at the entrance. Refusing to give up, Tilman¿s obsession with Scoresby Sound continued in 1972 when a series of unfortunate events led to the loss of Sea Breeze, crushed between a rock and an ice floe. Safely back home in Wales, the inevitable search for a new boat began. `One cannot buy a biggish boat as if buying a piece of soap. The act is almost as irrevocable as marriage and should be given as much thought.¿ The 1902 pilot cutter Baroque, was acquired and after not inconsiderable expense, proved equal to the challenge. Tilman¿s first troublesome voyage aboard her to West Greenland in 1973 completes this collection. show less

Tags

Recommendations

Member Recommendations

Member Reviews

1 review
For those of us who ”cut our teeth” on Slocum, were brought up on Nelson and Drake – perhaps even trained by the navy – grew up “mucking about in boats”, reading and devouring everything we could lay our hands on from the pens of “MG”, Hiscock, Smeeton or even the Pardys, this is a most un-seaman-like account.

With just enough experience of my own sea-going and boating to react with horror and concern at the casualness of this mountain-climber turned sailor, I was not surprised that Tilman loses three ships in his endeavors – partly because of the seas and coasts he selects – those covered by ice.

I did take away from my reading a slight interest in the actual travel.

Members

Recently Added By

Author Information

Picture of author.
20+ Works 456 Members

Work Relationships

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Ice with Everything

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, Travel, General Nonfiction, Sports and Leisure, Biography & Memoir
DDC/MDS
910.45History & geographyGeography & travelmodified standard subdivisions of Geography and travelPirates & ShipwrecksOcean voyages, pirates
LCC
G743 .T54Geography, Anthropology and RecreationGeography (General)Arctic and Antarctic regions

Statistics

Members
30
Popularity
929,645
Reviews
1
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
4
ASINs
2