Looking for the next great undiscovered drive? What about driving so far south, you actually hit the South Pole?

Come November, you can make it happen on a roughly two-week-long road trip across Antarctica with the Explorations Company.

Sound intrepid? That’s just the start. Travelers will have a chance to hike Antarctica’s highest mountain, Mt. Vinson (it clocks in at 10,000 feet); cross-country ski across the tundra; and locate the point on the Earth where all 24 time zones meet and time loses all conventional meaning. And if all the stars align, you can even try to break the world record for the fastest Antarctic crossing.

It’s all part of two exclusive trips that accommodate no more than six travelers a piece—at a price tag of $165,000 per person.

“These sorts of things just don’t get done, and that’s what makes it so special,” said Nicola Shepherd, owner and director of the Explorations Company, whose forte is in linking travelers with world-class conservationists in the world’s wildest corners, such as Botswana and India. Here in Antarctica, it's climate researchers whom she's connected with—and who originated these frozen voyages.

The Logistics
Weather is just the first of many challenges. (The temperatures can easily hover around minus 50 degrees.) Since passengers need at least 10 days to complete the driving circuit to the South Pole and back, it's unappealing to take a slow ship to get to Antarctica itself.

Instead, guests fly in on a Russian Ilyushin-76 jet. It looks “a bit like the grim reaper” on the outside, joked Shepherd, but it’s by far the most comfortable way to cross the Strait of Magellan. By the time the aircraft lands on Antarctica’s iced-over runway, a fleet of specialized 6x6 trucks await to begin the real journey.

The polar-adapted vehicles—a fleet of 19 retrofitted Toyota Hiluxes powered by a specially formulated, freeze-proof fuel—are the purview of Arctic Trucks, a company that has facilitated trips for Top Gear and British royalty. (Prince Harry used them on his 2013 South Pole charity trip for Walking With the Wounded.)

The route follows the footsteps of 1950s explorer Sir Vivian Fuchs from the Ronne ice shelf to the Ross ice shelf. Only 23 people have ever completed the 1,150-mile-long crossing, and more than half of them were on Fuchs’s team.

The Creature Comforts
To make things a little easier, Arctic Trucks provides specialized outerwear to keep travelers as appropriately dressed as possible. The crew includes a chef, who flies in enough ingredients to make meat-and-carb-heavy meals that power the day’s adventures. Champagne toasts are literally built into the itinerary. And although they don’t have running water, the mobile camps are well insulated and have private bathrooms with dry flush toilets—staffers will even put hot water bottles under your pillows to keep things nice and toasty.

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