True adventure stories

  • Sails Over Ice

    Creator

    Bartlett, Captain Robert A.

    Abstract

    Sails Over Ice picks up where The Log of Bob Bartlett left off. Between the years 1925–1933, Captain Bob Bartlett and the Morrissey explored coastal Greenland and much of Northern Canada, harvesting scientific specimens and Inuit artifacts for North American societies and museums and collecting Arctic mammals for zoos. This world-famous captain from Newfoundland never lost a single soul on either of these trips. Most believe that Bartlett’s contribution to exploration and natural science is without equal.

    Publisher (Source)

    St. John's

    Flanker Press

    Non spécifié
  • Final Voyages Trouble at Sea

    Creator

    Wellman, Jim

    Abstract

    The fishing industry kills more people than any other job in the world. On average, Atlantic Canada loses one fisherman every month. From the pages of the Navigator magazine comes a collection of more than twenty sea stories from Jim Wellman’s widely acclaimed series, Final Voyages. This volume marks his fourth venture onto the cold Atlantic waters, to stand alongside captain and crew and tell the stories of these unsung heroes: small-boat fishermen.

    Publisher (Source)

    [S.l.]

    Flanker Press

    Non spécifié
  • Final Voyages Volume I

    Creator

    Wellman, Jim

    Abstract

    Fishing has long been documented as being the most dangerous occupation in the world. That is especially true in the harsh, and often bitter, marine environment of Atlantic Canada. These perilous conditions have caused the sinking and loss of hundreds of Atlantic Canadian fishing vessels, claiming enormous loss of life. Former host of CBC Radio’s “Fisheries Broadcast” and now managing editor of The Navigator, Jim Wellman recounts some of those gripping tales as part of his regular monthly feature in The Navigator.

    Publisher (Source)

    St. John's

    Flanker Press

    Non spécifié
  • Adrift on an Ice Pan

    Creator

    Grenfell, Sir Wilfred

    Abstract

    On Easter Sunday, 1908, Dr. Wilfred Grenfell was summoned to treat a boy with osteomyelitis who had been operated on two weeks earlier. The young man needed immediate attention to save not only his leg but his life, so the doctor set out from St. Anthony, Newfoundland, with his komatik and his eight best dogs. To save a few miles, Dr. Grenfell took a shortcut across a bay, but the ice broke up beneath him, his komatik sank, and one dog drowned. He and the other dogs climbed out of the water onto an ice pan, which drifted out to sea in an offshore wind.

    Publisher (Source)

    St. John's

    Flanker Press

    Non spécifié
  • The Travel Journals of Tappan Adney, Vol. 2, 1891-1896

    Creator

    Adney, Tappan

    Behne, C. Ted Ted

    Abstract

    Setting out to visit his friends in Woodstock, New Brunswick, and with all intentions to return to the United States to attend Columbia University in the fall, Tappan Adney, at the age of 18, embarked on a trip that would ultimately set the course of his life. Tappan Adney's writings, illustrations, and photographs were published in Harper's Magazine. This follow-up journal to 2010's first volume, takes us back to a time when wildness was still something easily accessible and wildlife abundant.

    Publisher (Source)

    Fredericton

    Goose Lane Editions

    Non spécifié
  • The Travel Journals of Tappan Adney, Vol. 1, 1887-1890

    Creator

    Adney, Tappan

    Behne, C. Ted Ted

    Abstract

    In 1887, at the age of just 18, intellectually and artistically gifted American Tappan Adney embarked on his first trip to New Brunswick. He had plans to enrol at Columbia University in the fall, primed for a meteoric rise in academia — but fate intervened. He fell under the spell of the wilderness of Maine, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia, and the local Maliseet people.

    Publisher (Source)

    Fredericton

    Goose Lane Editions

    Non spécifié
  • The Polar Adventures of a Rich American Dame A Life of Louise Arner Boyd

    Creator

    Kafarowski, Joanna

    Abstract

    The first comprehensive biography of Louise Arner Boyd — the intrepid American socialite who reinvented herself as the leading female polar explorer of the twentieth century. Born in the late 1880s to a gritty mining magnate who made his millions in the California gold rush and a well-bred mother descended from one of New York’s distinguished families, society beauty Louise Arner Boyd was raised during a glittering era. After inheriting a staggering family fortune, she began leading a double life.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Non spécifié
  • Shark Assault An Amazing Story of Survival

    Creator

    Jennings, Peter

    Moore, Nicole

    Abstract

    The story of a brutal shark attack that cost a woman her arm and much of her leg, and her death-defying recovery. One of the most dreadful experiences humans fear is a shark attack. This horrifying agony is exactly what happened to Nicole Moore, a nurse from Orangeville, Ontario. It was an assault all the more brutal for being so unlikely — she was standing in waist-deep water at a Mexican resort.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Non spécifié
  • Stranded Alaska’s Worst Maritime Disaster Nearly Happened Twice

    Creator

    Saunders, Aaron

    Abstract

    The sinking of the Canadian Pacific steamship Princess Sophia was Alaska’s worst maritime disaster — until it nearly happened again. In 1918, the Canadian Pacific steamship Princess Sophia left Skagway, Alaska, on her last trip of the season to Vancouver. She never made it. Battered by a raging snowstorm and sent dangerously off course, she ran aground on Vanderbilt Reef, a rocky shoal in Lynn Canal, North America’s deepest and longest fjord. She would spend two days high and dry on the reef, with rescue ships standing by, unable to help, before she finally slid to her watery grave.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Non spécifié
  • Polar Winds A Century of Flying the North

    Creator

    Metcalfe-Chenail, Danielle

    Abstract

    Polar Winds traces a century of northern flight from balloonatics to bush pilots and beyond. "They were all gamblers and fortune seekers. They did things on their own — were independent people who wanted to be free to roam. They were good people, but, of course, some were loners or escapists.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Non spécifié