In the picture above it is a picture of Henry Hudson's ship stuck in the ice
Henry Hudson faced many different challenges. The worst hardship he faced was the ice that could crack the boat in half. Hudson on his first voyage went through a lot of fog. Fog is one of the worst things you can have if you are an explorer because you can not see where you are going. This is exactly what happened to Henry Hudson because he went off course with the fog. On Henry Hudson's second voyage he encountered at the least seven storms. The rain caused huge waves that would come and flood the deck and the crew would have to use buckets and scoop the water off the boat. The third voyage was the worst. When some members of Henry Hudson's crew set off to find food on the shore, the First Nations attacked them and killed one of Henry Hudson's men. The man that died was one of the most important men on the ship. He would keep watch to see if there were chunks of ice up ahead and if there were dead ends. On his last voyage, Henry Hudson encountered the menacing ice. This ice was so thick that his boat was stuck. By the time the ice melted and the boat was free, his unhappy crew plotted against him and set him adrift in a boat with his son and a few other crew members.