Our drift westward in the latter half of June and the greater part of July was, on the whole, satisfactory. I give the following observations:

DateLatitudeLongitudeDirection of Wind
° ′° ′
June 22d84 3280 58N.
June 27th84 4479 35N. by E.
June 29th84 3379 50E.N.E.
July 5th84 4875 3S.E.
July 7th84 4874 7W.S.W.
July 12th84 4176 20W.S.W.
July 22d84 3672 56N.N.W.
July 27th84 2973 49S.W. by S.
July 31st84 2776 10S.W.
August 8th84 3877 36N.W.
August 22d84 978 47S.W.
August 25th84 1779 2E. by N.
September 2d84 4777 17S.E.
September 6th84 4379 52S.W.

As will be seen from the above, there were comparatively small deviations towards the south and the north in the line of the drift, whereas the deviations to east and west were much greater.

From June 22d to the 29th it bore rapidly westward, then back some distance in the beginning of July; again for a couple of days quickly towards the west, and then a rapid return till July 12th. From this day until the 22d we again drifted well to the west, to 72° 56′, but from that time the backward drift predominated, placing us at 79° 52′ on September 6th, or about the same longitude as we started from on June 29th.

During this period the weather was, on the whole, fair and mild. Occasionally we had some bad weather, with drift-snow and sleet, compelling us to stay indoors. However, the bad weather did not worry us much; on the contrary, we looked rather eagerly for changes in the weather, especially if they revived our hopes of a good drift westward, with a prospect of soon getting out of our prison. It must not be understood that we dreaded another winter in the ice before getting home. We had provisions enough, and everything else needful to get over some two or three polar winters, if necessary, and we had a ship in which we all placed the fullest confidence, in view of the many tests she had been put to. We were all sound and healthy, and had learned to stick ever closer to one another for better and for worse.

With regard to Nansen and Johansen, hardly any of us entertained serious fears; however dangerous their trip was, we were not afraid that they would succumb to their hardships on the way, and be prevented from reaching Franz Josef Land, and thence getting back to Norway before the year was out. On the contrary, we rejoiced at the thought that they would soon be home, telling our friends that we were getting on all right, and that there was every prospect of our return in the autumn of 1896. It is no wonder, however, that we were impatient, and that both body and soul suffered when the drift was slow, or when a protracted contrary wind and back-drift seemed to make it highly improbable that we should be able to reach home by the time we were expected.

Observation with Sextant and Artificial Horizon. July, 1895

Scott-Hansen Nordahl