British
adventurer John Beeden has become the first person to row solo and non-stop
across the Pacific Ocean, landing in northern Australia on December 27. He
previously rowed across the Atlantic in 2011.
Deutsche Welle, 27 December 2015
The
53-year-old embarked on his journey from San Francisco on June 1 in his
six-meter (20-foot) boat named Socks II, and landing in Cairns, Australia, on
December 27. During the 7,400-nautical-mile journey he averaged 15 hours rowing
for 209 days.
Thank you Cairns for the brilliant reception, I was overwhelmed, it made the last 209 days worth while. Wow it's over! #solopacificrow
— John Beeden (@solopacificrow) December 27, 2015
"To be
the first person to achieve something like this on this scale is incredible
really, and I haven't processed it yet," Beeden told Australian national
broadcaster ABC.
His wife
Cheryl and two teenage daughters greeted him at the dock in Cairns when he
pulled in escorted by a string of local vessels.
4 miles to go! Just met up with family for the last little bit #solopacificrow #cairns #australia pic.twitter.com/OPddfN0bOb
— John Beeden (@solopacificrow) December 26, 2015
Pacific
'much harder' than Atlantic
Beeden
missed his planned date of arrival by about a month because of weather
conditions slowing him down. He repeatedly tweeted that the journey was proving
far more difficult than he had thought.
Trying 2 recover lost milage, going for it, looking 4 the magical #50nm 2day. #OceanRowing #SanFranto #Australia pic.twitter.com/JbB5Hbj5KC
— John Beeden (@solopacificrow) October 8, 2015
A seasoned
rower, Beeden had already rowed 2,600 nautical miles across the Atlantic Ocean
solo in 53 days in 2011, but said that the Pacific was much harder to tackle.
I'm exhausted, heat & humidity horrible 2day. Have received some brilliant messages of support which will help get me to the finish line.
— John Beeden (@solopacificrow) December 25, 2015
Along his
way, Beeden was met by a series of support boats as he passed islands and was
given supplies. After seven months on his own at sea Beeden said he found it
"strange" to be back among people and noise. For some of his time out
on the Pacific, the nearest human beings were the crew of the space station 250
kilometers (150 miles) above him.
"It's
strange, but it's good to be back, but it was kind of good to be out there as
well," Beeden said.
Rower lost
at sea during previous attempt in 1996
In 1983,
British rower Peter Bird almost made the solo row from San Francisco to
Australia, but was rescued near the Barrier Reef just 33 miles from the
mainland by the Australian navy, after 294 days at sea.
Bird made
several more attempts but was lost at sea in 1996.
ss/bk (dpa)

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.