Advertisement

Prince Harry’s Antarctic race called off due to harsh conditions

Britain's Prince Harry, second right, helps take down a tent after a cold chamber training exercise with the Walking with the Wounded South Pole Allied Challenge 2013 British team at Nuneaton, central England, Tuesday Sept. 17, 2013.
Britain's Prince Harry, second right, helps take down a tent after a cold chamber training exercise with the Walking with the Wounded South Pole Allied Challenge 2013 British team at Nuneaton, central England, Tuesday Sept. 17, 2013. (AP Photo/Darren Staples)

LONDON – Organizers of an Antarctic charity race involving Prince Harry said Saturday they are suspending its competitive element because of harsh conditions, but plan to continue the journey to the South Pole.

Harry, 29, is a member of one of three teams involving injured soldiers that set off last week on the 200-mile (320-kilometre) Walking with the Wounded South Pole Challenge.

Expedition director Ed Parker said the teams were experiencing “a higher degree of stress” than expected and will no longer race one another but travel and camp together.

WATCH: Prince Harry arrives in Antarctica for trek to South Pole

In a recorded message on the organization’s website, Parker said the teams had had “a pretty tricky couple of days. The weather remains good but the terrain is very difficult, far harder than we had anticipated.”

Story continues below advertisement

He said the teams would now be driven for part of the route and then finish the final 70 miles (112 kilometres) to the pole on foot, likely within a week.

Harry and actors Dominic West and Alexander Skarsgard are on the trek with teams from Britain, the Commonwealth and the U.S.

Guy Disney of the British team said there had been “a few small injuries – nothing too serious” and that the teams were determined to make it to the pole.

Harry, an army Apache helicopter pilot who has served in Afghanistan, spent several days in 2011 trekking with wounded servicemen on a similar expedition to the North Pole.

Sponsored content

AdChoices