Dutch adventurer drives tractor to South Pole

Dutch adventurer Manon Ossevoort can finally tick ‘crossing Antarctica by tractor’ off her bucket list.

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(Supplied)

Dutch adventurer Manon Ossevoort can finally tick ‘crossing Antarctica by tractor’ off her bucket list.

The 38-year-old made her first attempt at the mission nine years ago, driving the tractor from her home in the Netherlands through Europe and Africa.

She was forced to abandon the final, pivotal leg of her mission that time because she missed her boat to Antarctica.

There were no such setbacks this time. Ossevoort knelt in the snow and hugged the ceremonial South Pole to mark her success.

"It's quite emotional, I'm very happy," Ossevoort told AFP by satellite telephone shortly after arriving at the Pole.

"It feels quite magical really, to have made this happen and arrived here!"

The ebullient new mother of a 10-month-old baby said the the 16-day, 2,500 kilometre trip across the largest single mass of ice on earth from Russia's Novo base to the Pole had been tough.

Ossevoort said the worst part of the trip was "the day that I was driving for hours and hours and couldn't go faster than between 0.5 and five kilometres per hour".
   
"I really was worried then that the expedition could come to a halt if conditions would get just a little bit worse."

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(Supplied)
She’ll continue the journey by driving 2500 kilometres back to the Antarctic coast from the centre of the continent.

It will be a race to make it home to Holland for Christmas but the "return journey to the base will be faster because the tracks of the tractor will be frozen up and it will be easier to drive."

Ossevoort began her trip in 2005, taking four years to drive from her home village in Holland to Cape Town at the southern tip of Africa -- and then missed the boat that was due to take her to Antarctica for the final leg due to delays.
   
Frustrated, the former theatre actress spent the next four years back in Holland, writing a book, working as a motivational speaker and desperately trying to get back on a tractor.
   
With sponsorship from Massey-Ferguson and other companies, she finally made it.
   
Ossevoort travelled alone through Africa, but in Antarctica the tractor needed to creep forward day and night, so French mechanic Nicolas Bachelet shared the driving.
   
Asked whether this was the end of her crazy adventures on a tractor, Ossevoort's infectious laugh bubbled through the crackly satphone:
   
"Yes. I think this is the best adventure on a tractor that one can come up with."
   
She now plans to write a children's book and produce a movie of her journey.




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