Shackleton: a Lesson in Leadership

Ernest Shackleton (1874-1922)

I notice this morning a short item about a museum in Athy about explorer Ernest Shackleton, who was born in Kilkea which is near Athy. There was a museum there before, but it has been much expanded and renovated. I must make an expedition there one day to see it, as Athy is in County Kildare only about 60km to the south of Maynooth.

Seeing this article reminded me that some months ago I watched a documentary series called Shackleton: Death or Glory. It’s not a new series, but I hadn’t seen it before, and found it gripping and inspiring. You can see the entire series (3 episodes) on Youtube here. The idea was to reproduce the situation that Shackleton and his crew faced in 1916 when they had to abandon their expedition to cross Antarctica when their ship, Endurance, was trapped in the ice. The courage and leadership he showed in saving all their lives is awe-inspiring.

To cut a long and amazing story short, in 1914 Shackleton led an expedition to cross Antarctica on foot for the first time. But disaster struck before even reaching the continent. His ship Endurance was trapped in sea ice and he and his 27 men were marooned. Realising that the ship would be crushed, he ordered the crew to take everything they could, including the (two) life boats. They made a camp on the ice and stayed there several months, but it was clear they could not remain there indefinitely, so they set off with their provisions in the lifeboats towards Elephant Island, a perilous journey of almost 300 km, through freezing water thick with blocks of ice.

Elephant Island was safer that the ice shelf from which they had escaped but it was nowhere near any trade route so chance of being rescued by a passing ship was zero. The outlook was grim. A slow death from starvation and exposure seemed inevitable.

Shackleton could see only one (remote) possibility of rescue, which was to take one of the boats and try to find help. That meant travelling across the open sea to South Georgia, a journey of some 1500 km. Not just any sea, mind you: the notoriously stormy and treacherous South Atlantice. It was a very tall order but in his diary he calmy recorded his thought process, which was basically that if they all stayed put they would certainly die and if the rescue party perished those left behind would be no worse off. He had to take the chance.

Shackelton picked five men and set off in one of the lifeboats – a 22ft wooden vessel – across the merciless ocean, in an apparently desperate attempt to reach the only possible help at the Stromness Whaling station in South Georgia. The rest of the crew – 22 men – were left on Elephant Island.

Almost unbelievably, Shackleton and his five men survived 16 days at sea and made the crossing. But his gruelling mission didn’t end there, because they arrived on the wrong side of the island of South Georgia. The boat and two of the crew were in poor shape by then so they could not continue by sea. Shackleton, taking two men with him, had to traverse about 40km of an unchartered mountain range, without any mountaineering equipment in order to reach the safety of Stromness. Shackleton successfully raised the alarm, but the story was still far from over. The first thing Shackleton had to do was collect the two men he had left on the other side of South Georgia. All six were safe.

Now he had to think about the other 22 still at Elephant Island. In search of more appropriate ships, Shackleton went first to the Falkland Islands and then to Chile. Several rescue attempts failed, because of the pack ice and, once because of a fire onboard. Eventually he persuaded the Chilean Navy to lend him a steam tug, the Yelcho, which made it to Elephant Island. The men there were in poor shape, hungry and demoralised, almost but they were all alive. Against all the odds, Shackleton, saved every single one of his men from what must have seemed like certain death.

Aside from his physical courage and endurance, two things exemplify Ernest Shackleton’s leadership qualities: one is that he would never ask any of his men to do anything he wouldn’t do himself, and the other is that he put the wellbeing of his men at the centre of all his decisions. Can you say those things about your “Leader”?

These days we hear a lot of talk, in various contexts, about leadership but most of the people who claim to show leadership don’t know the meaning of the word. Next time hear some useless twit claiming to be a leader, think about Ernest Shackleton and judge them by his standards.

#Antarctica #Athy #CountyKildare #ElephantIsland #Endurance #ErnestShackleton #SouthGeorgia

CEO of South Ga. college placed on administrative leave following fight at baseball complex - MLB

WALB is working to produce a video for this story. In the meantime, we encourage you to watch our livestream.

MLB
2 arrested after fight at baseball field - MLB

WALB is working to produce a video for this story. In the meantime, we encourage you to watch our livestream.

MLB
The largest #iceberg in the world #A23a has broken free of the South Georgia sea bed having been grounded there, we take a look and search for the possible storm that released it. #YouStormOutlook #A23 #SouthGeorgia https://youtu.be/aD9NPz-bbiM
Iceberg A23a Breaks Free!!! of the South Georgia sea bed

YouTube

South Georgia sees significant scale-up of marine protected areas https://oceanographicmagazine.com/news/south-georgia-sees-significant-scale-up-of-marine-protected-areas/

"Enhanced measures to significantly scale up areas of protected marine space across some 500,000-square kilometres of #SouthGeorgia and the #SouthSandwichIslands have come into force... The MPA now covers some 1.24 million-square km of ocean, encompassing an array of habitats and ecosystems including hydrothermal vents and sea ice zones. Around 38% of the MPA is now completely closed off to all fishing"

South Georgia sees significant scale-up of marine protected areas - Oceanographic

South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands now see some 1.24 million-square kilometres of marine space come under enhanced protection.

Oceanographic
'Lost Place' #FotoVorschlag @FotoVorschlag
Grytviken, Südgeorgien (Januar 2023)
Die Natur erobert sich die riesige alte Walfang-Station zurück. Jetzt leben hier Pelzrobben, Seeelefanten und Königspinguine (ein paar wenige Menschen leben auch noch hier). Besonders faszinierend ist wie gleichgültig bis neugierig die Tiere dem Menschen an diesem doch eher feindseligen Ort begegnen.
#fotografie #photography #SouthGeorgia

Douglas, Georgia. South Georgia tobacco sharecropper during the tobacco auction

#Douglas #Georgia #SouthGeorgia #undefined #photography #DorotheaLange

World's largest iceberg, A23a, has struck the continental shelf 73km from South Georgia 🇬🇸 island, after detaching from Antarctica 🇦🇶 in 1986.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/a23a-iceberg-south-georgia-1.7475767
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Le plus gros iceberg du monde, A23a, s'est échoué sur le plateau continental à 73km de l'île de la Géorgie du Sud 🇬🇸, après s'être détaché de l’Antarctique 🇦🇶 en 1986.

https://ici.radio-canada.ca/nouvelle/2145225/antarctique-plus-grand-iceberg-monde-immobilise

#Antarctica #Antarctique #SouthGeorgia #GéorgieDuSud #Iceberg

World's biggest iceberg appears to have run aground near remote British island | CBC News

The world's largest iceberg appears to have run aground off the coast of a remote British island home to millions of penguins and seals — potentially threatening local wildlife, but also providing an opportunity for research into such rare "megabergs." 

CBC
Feniks Island (#Bulgarian: остров Феникс, #romanized: ostrov Feniks, IPA: [ˈɔstrof ˈfɛniks]) is the 230 m long in west–east direction and 170 m wide in south–north direction rocky island lying off #SpertIsland on the southwest side of #TrinityIsland in the #PalmerArchipelago, #Antarctica. It is “named after the ocean #fishingTrawler Feniks of the Bulgarian company #OceanFisheriesBurgas whose ships operated in the waters of #SouthGeorgia, #Kerguelen, the #SouthOrkneyIslands.