Enjoy fast and reliable shipping to any location across Australia.

SKU: PR622794

The Sea and The Snow

$10.95 AUD
Discover the thrilling adventure of climbing Heard Island, a rugged and isolated gem in the Southern Ocean, with Philip Temple's captivating narrative. This compelling paperback book details the 1964 expedition led by Warwick Deacock to conquer the 9000-foot volcanic peak known as 'Big Ben'. Brimming with rich insights into mountaineering, exploration, and the challenges of remote travel, this account beautifully combines elements of adventure writing and natural history. With 232 pages filled with previously unpublished photographs, readers can immerse themselves in the gripping journey of a team skilled in mountaineering, medicine, and science, all expertly guided by veteran sailor H. W. ‘Bill’ Tilman. Ideal for lovers of exploration narratives, outdoor adventures, and stunning photography, this book transports you to places where few have ventured. Get your copy today to experience the exhilaration of the wild and the resilient spirit of exploration! Perfect for anyone searching for outdoor adventure stories, tales of expedition to remote locations, and inspiring accounts of human endurance and adventure literature. This book is perfect for gift-giving to explorers, mountain climbers, and avid readers eager to learn about the world’s undiscovered fronts.

Author: Philip Temple Publisher: Lodestar Books
Bind: paperback
Dimensions: 216 x 216 mm
Pages: 232
Publication Date: 01-08-2016

HEARD ISLAND, an improbably remote speck in the far Southern Ocean, lies four thousand kilometres to the south-west of Australia—with Antarctica its nearest continent. By 1964 it had been the object of a number of expeditions, but none reaching the summit of its 9000-foot volcanic peak ‘Big Ben’. In that year Warwick Deacock resolved to rectify this omission, and as-sembled a party of nine with impressive credentials embracing mountaineering, exploration, science and medicine, plus his own organisation and leadership skills as a former Major in the British Army. But first they had to get there. Heard had no airstrip and was on no steamer route; the only way was by sea in their own vessel. Approached from Australia, the island lay in the teeth of the prevailing westerlies of the ‘Roar-ing Forties’and ‘Furious Fifties’. One name, only, came to mind as the skipper to navigate them safely to their destination, and safely home—the veteran mountaineer turned high-latitude sailor H. W. ‘Bill’ Tilman, already renowned for his ‘sailing to climb’ expeditions to Patagonia, Greenland and Arctic Canada, and the sub-Antarctic archipelagos of Crozet and Kerguelen, to the north-west of Heard Island. He readily ‘signed on’ to Warwick Deacock’s team of proven individuals and their well-found sailing vessel Patanela. In this first-hand account, as fresh today as on its first publication fifty years ago, Philip Temple invites us all on this superbly conducted, happy and successful expedition, aided by many previously unpublished photographs by Warwick Deacock. ‘The Skipper’—a man not free with his praise—described the enterprise as ‘a complete thing’. PHILIP TEMPLE was born in Yorkshire in 1939, educated in London, and emigrated to New Zealand in 1957. Prior to this expedition he had climbed extensively in New Zealand and West New Guinea. Since 1972 he has followed a career as an author of both fiction and non-fiction, often writing books about mountains and exploration. He was made an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit in 2005 for ‘services to literature’ and gained a LittD degree in 2007. He lives in Dunedin, New Zealand.

Delivery Information

Delivery takes 3-12 business days after dispatch from our fulfillment center, unless stated otherwise. In most cases, your order will arrive before the 12-day mark; however, some items may take up to the full 12 working days.

Payment & Security

Payment methods

  • American Express
  • Apple Pay
  • Google Pay
  • Mastercard
  • Shop Pay
  • Union Pay
  • Visa

Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.

NATIONWIDE BOOKS

The Sea and The Snow

$10.95 AUD
Discover the thrilling adventure of climbing Heard Island, a rugged and isolated gem in the Southern Ocean, with Philip Temple's captivating narrative. This compelling paperback book details the 1964 expedition led by Warwick Deacock to conquer the 9000-foot volcanic peak known as 'Big Ben'. Brimming with rich insights into mountaineering, exploration, and the challenges of remote travel, this account beautifully combines elements of adventure writing and natural history. With 232 pages filled with previously unpublished photographs, readers can immerse themselves in the gripping journey of a team skilled in mountaineering, medicine, and science, all expertly guided by veteran sailor H. W. ‘Bill’ Tilman. Ideal for lovers of exploration narratives, outdoor adventures, and stunning photography, this book transports you to places where few have ventured. Get your copy today to experience the exhilaration of the wild and the resilient spirit of exploration! Perfect for anyone searching for outdoor adventure stories, tales of expedition to remote locations, and inspiring accounts of human endurance and adventure literature. This book is perfect for gift-giving to explorers, mountain climbers, and avid readers eager to learn about the world’s undiscovered fronts.

Author: Philip Temple Publisher: Lodestar Books
Bind: paperback
Dimensions: 216 x 216 mm
Pages: 232
Publication Date: 01-08-2016

HEARD ISLAND, an improbably remote speck in the far Southern Ocean, lies four thousand kilometres to the south-west of Australia—with Antarctica its nearest continent. By 1964 it had been the object of a number of expeditions, but none reaching the summit of its 9000-foot volcanic peak ‘Big Ben’. In that year Warwick Deacock resolved to rectify this omission, and as-sembled a party of nine with impressive credentials embracing mountaineering, exploration, science and medicine, plus his own organisation and leadership skills as a former Major in the British Army. But first they had to get there. Heard had no airstrip and was on no steamer route; the only way was by sea in their own vessel. Approached from Australia, the island lay in the teeth of the prevailing westerlies of the ‘Roar-ing Forties’and ‘Furious Fifties’. One name, only, came to mind as the skipper to navigate them safely to their destination, and safely home—the veteran mountaineer turned high-latitude sailor H. W. ‘Bill’ Tilman, already renowned for his ‘sailing to climb’ expeditions to Patagonia, Greenland and Arctic Canada, and the sub-Antarctic archipelagos of Crozet and Kerguelen, to the north-west of Heard Island. He readily ‘signed on’ to Warwick Deacock’s team of proven individuals and their well-found sailing vessel Patanela. In this first-hand account, as fresh today as on its first publication fifty years ago, Philip Temple invites us all on this superbly conducted, happy and successful expedition, aided by many previously unpublished photographs by Warwick Deacock. ‘The Skipper’—a man not free with his praise—described the enterprise as ‘a complete thing’. PHILIP TEMPLE was born in Yorkshire in 1939, educated in London, and emigrated to New Zealand in 1957. Prior to this expedition he had climbed extensively in New Zealand and West New Guinea. Since 1972 he has followed a career as an author of both fiction and non-fiction, often writing books about mountains and exploration. He was made an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit in 2005 for ‘services to literature’ and gained a LittD degree in 2007. He lives in Dunedin, New Zealand.

Default

  • Default
View product