Son 2’s adventure
In order to graduate from High School and continue on to university, Swiss students must present a research paper (at least 20 pages long) or project and then give a public defense. Son 2 turned in his 35 pages of research on the history of polar survival techniques.
His counselor suggested that for the public defense he build an igloo high in the mountains and spend the night in it, so he and Arnaud, a buddy from the Geneva church, waited for the first heavy snow (2 feet) and I drove them up to a jumping off point at about 4500 feet.
Risk of avalanche was terribly high, so they followed a snowed-in road up a couple of miles and, within sight of deserted chalets (chalets aren’t normally built in avalanche corridors) they made camp. It was just below freezing, yet they managed to get a fire going but had less luck with the igloo for, as expected, you cannot construct an igloo out of fresh-powdered snow. (Actually, that’s an old Inuit proverb that comes in handy in many situations.)
They had packed in a tent (polar explorers NEVER count on good luck, only good preparation) and set out to drink gallons of hot tea (in order to stay awake all night). After a couple of pounds of sausage and some cooked apples, they burned the rest of their wood supply and crawled into the icy tent.
Wife and I picked them up this morning at the bottom of the hill. I suggested they stay another night, just to see if they could survive it. It would give them a chance to build an igloo with the now-compacted snow. But no go. They were out of food and Son 2 had used up all the memory in his camera.
Plus, graduating from High School is not THAT important.
His counselor suggested that for the public defense he build an igloo high in the mountains and spend the night in it, so he and Arnaud, a buddy from the Geneva church, waited for the first heavy snow (2 feet) and I drove them up to a jumping off point at about 4500 feet.
Risk of avalanche was terribly high, so they followed a snowed-in road up a couple of miles and, within sight of deserted chalets (chalets aren’t normally built in avalanche corridors) they made camp. It was just below freezing, yet they managed to get a fire going but had less luck with the igloo for, as expected, you cannot construct an igloo out of fresh-powdered snow. (Actually, that’s an old Inuit proverb that comes in handy in many situations.)
They had packed in a tent (polar explorers NEVER count on good luck, only good preparation) and set out to drink gallons of hot tea (in order to stay awake all night). After a couple of pounds of sausage and some cooked apples, they burned the rest of their wood supply and crawled into the icy tent.
Wife and I picked them up this morning at the bottom of the hill. I suggested they stay another night, just to see if they could survive it. It would give them a chance to build an igloo with the now-compacted snow. But no go. They were out of food and Son 2 had used up all the memory in his camera.
Plus, graduating from High School is not THAT important.
January 4th, 2007 at 1:58 pm
I would have said, “Dad, if you want an igloo built out of now-compacted snow, YOU stay and build it!”
Hey, I like that “you can’t construct an igloo out of fresh-powdered snow.” Reminds me of something a national bank examiner I once knew used to say………..
January 4th, 2007 at 8:16 pm
Wow…I don’t think I would have graduated! Very adventurous spirit that son of yours has…
Glad they came out of it safely.
January 5th, 2007 at 7:54 am
Geez! Here, for the longest time, one need not be able to read or write or do math to gradeate from high school!
January 5th, 2007 at 6:01 pm
So the time to cut short the expedition is when you run out of memory for your camera?