Polar Training Itinerary & Logistics

The Overview

This Polar Training course is based in Beitostølen, Norway, and is designed as a practical introduction to Arctic and polar expedition travel. Over six days, we move from briefing and equipment preparation in Oslo into the winter mountain environment, where you will begin building the core skills needed to travel, camp and operate safely in cold conditions.

The course is built around learning by doing. You will travel on skis , haul a pulk, manage winter camp systems, cook on expedition stoves, practise winter navigation, and develop the routines needed to look after yourself and the wider team in cold weather. We will also cover key safety skills including avalanche awareness, transceiver searches, frozen lake travel, emergency procedures and basic self-rescue.

The journey covers close to 40km across frozen plateau terrain, using a mix of prepared tracks, off-track travel, camps and, where appropriate, huts or snow shelter options. The exact route and daily plan may change depending on weather, snow conditions, the team and the best learning opportunities on the ground.

By the end of the week, you should have a much clearer understanding of what polar and winter expedition travel involves: how to pack and move efficiently, how to manage camp life, how to make decisions in cold environments, and how the individual skills fit together during a journey.

This is a Level 1 expedition, so no previous polar experience is required, but good fitness, a practical mindset and a willingness to learn in winter conditions are important. The aim is to give you the foundations for future Arctic, polar and winter journeys.

The Itinerary

  • Arrive into Oslo and make your way to the group hotel. We will meet at 17:00 for the expedition briefing.

    The evening is focused on getting properly prepared for the week ahead. We will go through the itinerary, discuss the conditions we may face, check personal equipment, and introduce the expedition systems we will use during the course.

    You will also begin packing your pulk, looking at how to organise kit so that essential items remain accessible during the day. We will cover stove systems, fuel management and basic safety considerations before heading into the mountains.

  • After an early start(07:20am tram to bus station), we travel from Oslo to Beitostølen by bus and move into the winter mountain environment. We arrive around 12:30-13:00.

    The first part of the day is about building solid foundations. We begin with movement skills on prepared tracks, working through skis, boots, bindings, skins and waxes so that everyone understands their equipment and can move efficiently on snow.

    We will also introduce avalanche transceivers, including basic checks and use. Once the movement skills are settling, we bring the pulks into the system and begin travelling with expedition loads.

    By late afternoon, we aim to establish our first winter camp. This will include tent pitching, snow anchors, camp layout, stove use, cooking systems, sleeping systems and keeping organised in cold conditions.

  • Day 3 builds on the skills from the previous day and moves into more realistic expedition terrain.

    We begin to travel away from prepared tracks, developing confidence on skis or snowshoes while managing a pulk. The focus is not speed, but balance, control, pacing and learning how to move as a team.

    Throughout the day we will continue developing core winter travel skills, including uphill movement, controlled descents, route choice and efficient transitions.

    Camp routines should start to become smoother by this point. You will take more responsibility for pitching, packing, cooking and managing your own systems, with guides stepping in where needed. We may also introduce emergency snow shelters and discuss when they are useful in expedition decision making.

  • This is the main technical training day of the course.

    We will spend time on avalanche awareness, including transceiver use, probing, shovelling and group rescue scenarios. We will also look at the snowpack, basic stability observations and how these inform decisions in winter terrain.

    Depending on conditions, we will also cover frozen lake travel, including testing ice thickness, spacing, group protocols and safe movement across ice.

    Other skills may include winter navigation, steeper off-track travel, field repairs, emergency procedures and rescue systems relevant to pulk-based travel. The aim is to understand how these skills fit together during a real winter journey.

  • On the final mountain day, we bring the week’s skills together during the journey back towards the valley.

    By this stage, the systems should feel more familiar: packing, pulk travel, group movement, route choice, campcraft and decision making. Travelling downhill with a loaded pulk can feel very different from the earlier stages of the course, so we will manage the day carefully and use it as another learning opportunity.

    We aim to reach transport around mid-morning to lunchtime before travelling back to Oslo. Once back in the city, there will be time to turn around kit and, where possible, have a final group meal together.

    A late flight on this evening may be possible in theory, but we do not recommend relying on this due to travel timings, weather and potential delays.

  • Depart Oslo and travel home.

    By the end of the course, you should have a much clearer understanding of the systems required for polar and winter expedition travel: moving with a pulk, managing camp life, using stoves safely, making decisions in winter conditions, and working effectively as part of a team.

    The exact itinerary may change depending on weather, snow conditions, the team and the best training opportunities available on the ground. Flexibility is part of operating properly in winter environments.

Polar Training Course Kit List

The checklist below should help you pack for the trip. As a general rule, keep the weight of your kit to a minimum while still bringing everything you need to stay safe and comfortable.

What to carry

This trek is fully supported by a team of mules who will transport your main baggage between huts.

You will only need to carry a light daypack during the day, which makes movement across the ridges much easier and more comfortable. A 35 litre rucksack is usually an ideal size, giving enough room for essential items such as water, food, camera, wet weather gear, spare layers, sunglasses and any personal items you want easy access to.

Please remember to leave enough space in your daypack for a small amount of group safety equipment and, at times, some scrambling equipment.

    • Ropes and Hardware

    • Group emergency and rescue equipment

    • Backpack – 35 to 45 litre alpine or climbing pack. This should be large enough to carry spare layers, food, water, sunglasses, camera, waterproofs, and scrambling kit when not in use. Your rucksack should have a waterproof liner.

    • Small bag – for travel clothes and any items not needed during the trek. This will be left at the start and transported to the end hotel.

    • Main duffle bag (20kgs max limit per person)100 litre or larger soft duffle bag for mule transport. This will carry your main baggage between camps. Please do not bring a hard suitcase, as soft luggage is much easier to load and secure on the mules.

    • Lightweight sleeping bag – rated to around 0°C comfort

    • Sleeping bag liner – silk preferred
      (Both items can be rented from Nordur)

    • Trekking trousers or light softshell trousers

    • Shorts

    • Waterproof jacket

    • Waterproof overtrousers

    • Long johns or thermal leggings

    • Thermal baselayer tops – ideally 3 short sleeve and 1 long sleeve

    • Technical underwear – preferred, as it dries faster

    • Fleece or softshell jacket

    • Warm insulated jacket – synthetic or down

    • Sun hat

    • Warm hat

    • Sunglasses – Category 3 or 4

    • Lightweight thermal gloves

    • Scrambling boots – usually a lightweight B2-rated boot with ideally the climbing zone at the front of the boot. Please get in touch if you are unsure. Boots must be well broken-in before the trip.

    • Lightweight shoes, sandals or slippers for around hut

    • Technical walking socks – 4 pairs. A mix of thicknesses works well for summer conditions.

    • Spare boot laces

    • 2 x 1 litre Nalgene-style bottles

    • Head torch with spare batteries – minimum 70 lumens

    • Walking poles – ideally ones that pack down small enough to attach securely to your rucksack without affecting movement

  • Please bring a small personal first aid and hygiene kit including:

    • Antiseptic cream

    • Throat lozenges

    • Diarrhoea treatment such as Imodium

    • Painkillers

    • Plasters

    • Blister treatment

    • Insect repellent

    • Rehydration salts such as Dioralyte

    • Sun cream – factor 50 minimum

    • Total block or high protection for lips, nose and other exposed areas

    • Wash bag and toiletries

    • Small towel

    • Antibacterial hand gel or hand wash – enough to use before every meal

    • Harness with gear loops

    • Climbing helmet

    • Belay plate, 120cm sling and HMS Krab
      (All can be rented from Nordur)

    • Audiobooks, Kindle or podcasts for the evenings in camp

    • Camera and spare batteries

    • Penknife

    • Power bank – an Anker-style power pack is a good lightweight option and will charge a phone several times

  • Before the start of day one, we will repack any equipment not needed during the trek into the spare small bags. These bags will then be transported to the hotel at the end of the trip.

    All sleeping kit and other equipment not needed during the day will be transported between camps, allowing us to move more freely and enjoy the ridge.

  • Your main baggage will be transported between camps by mules. This should be packed in a soft duffle bag or holdall, rather than a hard suitcase. Soft luggage is much easier to load, carry in this environment and much less likely to cause injury to the mules.

The detail

Cost per person £1345 (£50 increase for upgrade to final night in Imlil to celebrate

Inclusions

  • All Meals - Day 1 Dinner through to Day 7 Breakfast

  • All Transfers (Airport -Ouirgane, Imlil to airport)

  • Group Safety kit (Ropes, climbing hardware, group shelters, first aid kits, emergency comms)

  • Guiding through-out Nordur guides and local guides.

Exclusions

  • Flights and transfer to UK airport

  • Insurance

  • Anything not stated in Inclusions

  • Personal equipment

  • Please don’t hesitate to get in touch if you have any worries or concerns. I am always happy to chat things through with you.

    Jamie - Founder