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Pete Goss plans South Pole trek
Pete Goss
Pete Goss, with Team Philips behind him
Yachtsman and all-round adventurer Pete Goss MBE is on his travels again! Three years after the ill-fated Team Philips project, Devon-born Goss aims to follow in the footsteps of Captain Scott by walking to the South Pole.
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FACTS

Peter Goss first hit the headlines during the 1996-7 Vendee Globe round the world single handed yacht race.

During the race, he risked his own life to to rescue French sailor Raphael Dinelli in a Southern Ocean hurricane.

The Team Philips catamaran was a revolutionary design which suffered problems during its development.

Designed by Adrian Thompson and developed in a specially built riverside yard in Totnes, Team Philips eventually broke up in a storm in the Mid-Atlantic while undergoing trials.

The yacht was left to drift - and Pete Goss's dream of winning the no-holds-barred event The Race was over.

Like Pete Goss, Captain Robert Scott was also born in Devon.

He reached the South Pole on 18th January 1912, but on the way back, he and his party in March 1912 were hit by terrible weather.

When Captain Oates left the tent, he uttered the famous words: "I am just going outside, and I may be some time". He was never seen again. All five men in the party died.

Another part of the tragedy was that Norwegian Roald Amundsen had reached the South Pole on 14th December 1911 - a month before Scott.

Antarctica is completely surrounded by the Southern Ocean, half of which freezes in winter. It is high, windy and extremely cold. There is no indigenous human population.

It is the southernmost area of Earth and is 50 times the size of GB.

It contains 70% of the Earth's fresh water and 90% of all the ice in the world.

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Devon-born adventurer Pete Goss MBE is aiming to walk in the footsteps of fellow Devonian Captain Scott - by trekking to the South Pole and back.


Mr Goss, 41, is best known for his attempt three years ago to sail a £4m "super yacht" in The Race - a no-rules, round-the-world event.

The attempt was scuppered when the ill-fated 120ft catamaran Team Philips was severely damaged before the event started.

The revolutionary carbon fibre yacht - developed by designer Adrian Thompson in Totnes - broke up in severe conditions during a pre-race trial in the Atlantic in December 2000.

Team Philips
Team Philips in all her glory...before disaster struck
The seven-strong crew were rescued by a German container ship, but Team Philips - the world's biggest racing catamaran - was ripped apart and had to be left to drift in mid-Atlantic.


Three years on, and Pete Goss is ready for a new adventure. Yealmpton-born Mr Goss, who now lives in Torpoint, Cornwall, and polar explorer Alan Chambers, from Taunton in Somerset, aim to start the 1,611-mile trek in November 2003 and complete it in three months.

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They will be raising money for HopeHIV, a charity which helps children orphaned by Aids in Africa. Mr Goss said: "I have always considered myself an adventurer and sailing is the medium where I have done most of it.

"But the Antarctic has been scratching away for a long time. I have sailed round it twice and I have always wanted to go.

"I suppose from the outside it looks a bit strange, but it feels right to me. The parallels are there anyway. You have to look after yourself with planning, preparation, food and navigation."

Pete and Alan started training for the expedition in 2002, and in April 2003 they went to the North Pole - where Pete said he took to conditions "like a duck to water."

But when it comes to the real thing, they'll have to climb to heights of 10,000ft - where the wind factor can send temperatures down to -60 degrees.

The two former Royal Marines will travel from McMurdo on the coast of the Antarctic continent to the South Pole and back using a man-pulled sledge and kite system.

On July 4th 2003, they set off on a 17-day expedition to cross the Greenland ice cap as part of their training for the Antarctic expedition

While in Greenland, they will test two giant kites which they plan to use during their trek.

"This is a dry run for the Antarctic. We have to be at the top of our learning curve when we get there. We need to hit the ice running," said Goss.

Mr Chambers, 34, led the first successful British, unassisted walk to the geographical North Pole from the Canadian coastline. The South Pole trek will cost an estimated £360,000 and is part-sponsored by MAKO Global.

Plymouth-born Scott and his team attempted to be the first men to reach the South Pole in 1911. But they didn't arrive until January 1912, and they found Scott's rival, Norwegian Roald Amundsen, had got there a month before.

Their return journey ended in the loss of all five lives just 11 miles from their last depot.

Pete Goss said he will following the same route as Captain Scott - which has never successfully been completed because it's so tough: "Ninety-two years later, this challenge remains.

"It's one of the few things in the world which is still a first.

"We aim to complete his route and believe that, out of respect, a team flying the Union Jack should be the one to do so."


Send your good luck messages to Pete Goss

Article updated: 4th July 2003

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