Sunday, November 27, 2011

Raise a glass for old Frank Wild

Today there's a bit the great Age of Exploration being laid to rest anew, as Frank Wild is being buried at Grytviken next to his travel companion of old, Sir Ernest Shackleton. Those of us headed south this season can look forward to toasting them both in January! Great story, eh?

http://www.wanderlust.co.uk/magazine/news/antarctic-explorer-gets-polar-burial-frank-wild
Antarctic explorer gets polar burial (full story below)


Also, here's the most recent South Georgia Association newsletter
http://www.sgisland.gs/index.php/(h)South_Georgia_News_and_Events --- highlight being a story about glacier retreat and one about fur seals. Glaciers: "...smaller glaciers are also experiencing huge collapses. An example is the Harker Glacier, at the head of Moraine Fjord, which is estimated to have lost a half kilometre of glacial tongue in the past year alone."

And fur seals: "Research conducted at Bird Island has shown the remarkable ability of female fur seals to return to breed in almost exactly the same spot where they were born.....most of them get within 12-metres of their birth place. Researchers do not know how the seals find their way back."

Happy holidays all,
Ted



http://www.wanderlust.co.uk/magazine/news/antarctic-explorer-gets-polar-burial-frank-wild
Antarctic explorer gets polar burial
27th November 2011

Today, Antarctic explorer Frank Wild will finally have his last wish granted 72 years after his death, as his ashes will be laid to rest in a polar graveyard

A commemorative polar expedition is under-way to grant Antarctic explorer Frank Wild his final wish, to be buried on South Georgia Island alongside fellow pioneer Sir Ernest Shackleton. His ashes will be buried on the 27 November, 72 years after his death.

Wild was one of the great, yet unsung, Antarctic explorers and the right-hand man to Sir Ernest Shackleton. He had more experience in Antarctica than any of the other famed explorers, and although he came close to death many times on polar expeditions, his peaceful death may be the reason he did not get the same glorification as the others.

He met his death in 1939 in South Africa, and his final wish to be buried on South Georgia Island was never fulfilled because of the out-break of World War II. His body was presumed lost, and his name disappeared from the pages of history.

However, his adventurous lifestyle and relationship with South Africa caught the attention of polar historian and author Angie Butler, who became fascinated with his life, and made it her duty to find his ashes and commemorate his wish.

Angie told Wanderlust, “The story was that he was buried in Brixton cemetery in Johannesburg. There was hardly anyone at the funeral and a lone sea cadet playedThe Last Post. It sounded like this awful desultory affair.”

But early in her research Angie discovered that his funeral actually took place at Braamfontein cemetery, and that his wife had him cremated, not buried, so that his ashes could go to South Georgia. It was at this point that the trail went cold.

“I kept going though, for several years. Then I found an old paper cutting that had been written in 1966 that said Frank Wild's ashes were kept in an old chapel. It didn't say which chapel, but I just knew that it was the chapel in Braamfontein cemetery,” Angie continued.

“And they were there, in a wooden box, quite banged and scraped, so it looks like it has travelled around a bit. It hasn’t just been sitting on the shelf. It’s a greeny-gold colour that has been stippled and a little bronze plaque with his name and date of birth and death. So it’s definitely him."

The commemorative expedition set out on the 20 November, and will take his remains back to South Georgia, where his ashes will be buried today, on the 27 November, in a small intimate graveyard on Grytviken hill.....

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