Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - February 27, 2022, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A8
● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COMA8 ARTS ● LIFE I ADVENTURE SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2022
PUSHING
BOUNDARIES
THE elusive White Continent has been the fascination of many explorers since it was
discovered in 1820. The majority of
people who have explored Antarc-
tica have been white, starting with
Norwegian explorer Roald Amund-
sen, who completed the first recorded
expedition to the South Pole in 1911.
Now, a 32-year-old British-Indi-
an army officer Preet Chandi has
become the first woman of colour on
record to complete a solo expedition
to the South Pole.
“Antarctica was more than just a
dream expedition for me. It was about
showing that anyone can do anything,
irrespective of their gender, back-
ground or the community they belong
to,” she says. “The colour of my skin is
important; it’s a big part of who I am.
But it isn’t the only thing that defines
me.”
Chandi completed the 1,200-kilome-
tre expedition in January in 40 days,
eight days ahead of her goal, but the
journey to get there and break barriers
was long.
Chandi has wanted to push boundar-
ies, both physically and metaphorically,
since she ran her first half-marathon
at 20. Since then, she has completed
several ultramarathons, including the
gruelling 250-kilometre Marathon des
Sables across the Sahara.
She can’t recall exactly when or how
she set out on the idea of a solo expedi-
tion to Antarctica, but it had something
to do with setting an example for her
10-year-old niece.
“I didn’t want my niece to grow up
with the same boundaries that I did,”
she says.
She chose Antarctica purely because
she knew nothing about it, and that in
itself was a challenge. She had been on
Nordic skiing trips with the army as
well as on numerous hiking and climb-
ing adventures in Kenya, Morocco,
Mexico, the Alps, Bolivia, Peru, Nepal
and more.
In early 2020, she began preparing
for Antarctica, starting with a polar
training course in Norway that taught
her the survival basics — how to set up
a tent, melt snow and cook in extreme
conditions. Back in the United King-
dom, she trained six days a week,
dragging tires, “which was the closest
to pulling a sled.”
Her first real expedition took her
to Greenland in August 2020, which
showed her what to expect in Antarc-
tica. She put her life savings into the
trip. When she did reach the ice cap,
she was stuck in a storm for six days,
shovelling snow on her hands and
knees and rationing fuel.
“Those 27 days in Greenland were
physically and mentally exhausting,
but it prepared me for Antarctica and
gave me a real taste of what it meant to
organize and embark on an expedition
on my own,” she says.
C HANDI was born to Indian parents in Derby, England. Her father moved to the country as a
20-something from the state of Uttar
Pradesh in northern India. Her mother
is a second-generation immigrant
whose parents came to England from
Punjab. Chandi’s was a childhood
moulded by the ethos and expectations
that come with belonging to a minority
ethnic community.
Chandi wasn’t always comfortable
using the term “person of colour.”
She remembers her first brush with
racism in her early teens, when she
was walking home with her uncle who
was wearing a kurta; they had eggs
thrown at them from a rooftop. At 15,
while traveling in Eastern Europe with
a Black female friend, a person walked
up and spat at them.
“I knew it was important to talk
about discrimination, but I wasn’t
the person who’d speak up about it,”
Chandi says.
As she got older, she began to em-
brace the term as well as her identity.
“Not only do I feel proud now of my
culture, my heritage, where I’m from
and the colour of my skin, but I stand
up and own it, too,” she said.
The pandemic had dampened her
progress, but on Nov. 24, 2021, Chandi
found herself at the Union Glacier
camp in Antarctica, ready to embark
on her solo expedition.
When she began the journey to the
South Pole, her sled weighed 87 kg.
It carried her tent, tools, repair kits,
spare parts, medical supplies, and most
importantly, food and fuel for 48 days
— the goal she had set for herself. She
also had skis on and placed her satellite
phone, GPS, compass, Leatherman
multitool and a few other items in her
pockets.
Chandi averaged a distance of 17
miles per day, while pulling her sled
and tackling 95 km/h winds. Some-
where beyond the midway point, she
was greeted with wave-shaped icy
ridges bigger than her.
“When they were together in patches,
you could kind of avoid them. But at
other times when visibility wasn’t
great, I ended up sliding down the
ridges a few times,” she recalls.
“I remember telling myself to take
one step at a time, to concentrate on
just that and not even think of the day
as a whole,” she says.
Audiobooks, written messages inside
her tent, and voice notes from friends
and family downloaded on her phone
kept her going throughout the journey.
“When I had really tough days, I’d
listen to their voices and feel like they
were there with me. All these seem-
ingly small things are huge back there,
when you’re on your own.”
She also spoke to her partner over
satellite phone once daily.
Chandi was physically exhausted and
mentally drained toward the end of the
journey. Her sled had gotten lighter,
and so had she — by 22 pounds. But
she reached the South Pole in 40 days,
with eight days’ worth of food and fuel
to spare. Making it to the South Pole at
2:30 a.m., she remembers the day being
bright and beautiful.
“It felt surreal to finally get to the
place that I had been training for two-
and-a-half years,” she says. “More than
anything else, I felt glad that I didn’t
listen to the people who wanted me to
stick to conventions.”
Chandi plans to set up an adventure
grant for women with half of the funds
she received through the GoFundMe
for her expedition.
“It can be any unique adventure and
doesn’t have to do with Antarctica at
all,” she says. Besides that, she will
start working toward gaining her
weight and muscles back, and most
importantly, planning the second
phase of her Antarctica expedition — a
crossing.
“It’ll be much longer in both distance
and days and a lot harder too. But after
this, it doesn’t seem as daunting,” she
says.
There’s one lesson she wants people,
especially women of colour, to take
away from her experience: “Every-
body starts somewhere. There may
be a lot of people, especially from our
backgrounds, who’ll not want you to,
but you just have to be inspired to take
that first step. The rest will all fall into
place on their own.”
— The Washington Post
Preet Chandi is the first woman of colour to make a solo trek to the South Pole
SATARUPA PAUL
PREET CHANDI
Preet Chandi takes a selfie on the Ceremonial South Pole after reaching the station in 40 days, having shaved eight days off her planned expedition time.
PREET CHANDI
Chandi tries to stay warm in her tent during her gruelling Antarctic trek.
PREET CHANDI
A view during Chandi’s solo expedition to the South Pole; at times she navigated ice ridges taller than her.
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