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Out on the ice, most disasters do not start with drama. They start with a late departure, a frayed rope left for tomorrow, a half-heard weather update at the end of a long day. This book steps in beside the people whose calls, good and bad, decide whether a traverse finishes as a photograph, a near-miss, or a body recovery.
Through vivid, unsentimental portraits, it follows sled haulers, mechanics, medics, rescue planners, Indigenous guides, and kite-skiers who rarely make the headlines. Each chapter is a compact polar exploration biography, built around a single decision: a diverted route, an abandoned vehicle, a retreat that looked like failure at the time. Readers see how expedition leadership lessons are forged from doubt as much as confidence, how polar risk management grows from long memory, and how decision making under pressure is taught, not magically bestowed.
This is a book for armchair explorers, risk professionals, outdoor instructors, and anyone tired of heroic myths. It treats extreme cold survival as a craft shared across sled hauling teams, kite ski expeditions, and rescue crews, and shows what changes when women in polar science and holders of indigenous arctic knowledge shape the story. Along the way, it offers grounded crevasse rescue stories and field habits that travel far beyond ice, into any workplace where the cost of one rushed choice can echo for years.

Ice Footprints

SKU: 9789375367604
$25.99 Regular Price
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  • Selma Aarvik writes from the meeting point of cold places and human choice. She has long been fascinated by how ordinary people make life-and-death decisions far from help, where radios crackle unreliably and the nearest warm room may be a continent away. Years of listening to traverse leaders, mechanics, medics, local guides, and weather specialists have convinced her that sound judgement is the most important piece of expedition equipment. Growing up close to northern coasts, she heard stories of fishing crews, reindeer herders, and ice pilots who read snow and sea long before satellites. That cultural memory runs quietly through her work, linking today’s traverse teams with much older traditions of moving safely through hostile landscapes. Aarvik is drawn to the modest professionals who rarely feature in heroic tales: the quartermaster who over-orders fuel, the radio operator who keeps messages calm, the planner who quietly leaves room to turn back. Her mission on the page is to honour this invisible craft without romanticising it. By combining biography, field narrative, and careful reflection, she invites readers to see polar travel not as a spectacle for the fearless, but as a demanding, teachable discipline in which humility, preparation, and listening save more lives than bravado.

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