The Adventurers' Club of Los Angeles gave me a warm welcome last night. I was there to talk about my Atlantic adventure. The theme of my talk was my new pet theory: that the gap between your plan and reality is the gap where you learn.
If adventures went completely, utterly, perfectly according to plan, there wouldn't be any point in leaving your desk. You'd already have lived your adventure in your imagination, and the experience itself would add nothing. It's the surprises, random events and muck-ups that give you an opportunity to learn. They are what makes it an adventure.
By that definition, my Atlantic experience was a very big adventure indeed.
[Photo: me with Dr Steve Bein, who arranged my speaking engagement in LA]
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Apologies for blogless day yesterday. Internet wouldn't work, car wouldn't work. Just one of those days. All resolved now.
But having finally got back online and cleared backlog of emails, now have no time to blog as busy packing for departure early tomorrow morning - speech at Adventurers' Club in Los Angeles tomorrow night, then off back to UK on Friday.
It will be fun to see friends and family back in England, but I haven't even left the West Coast, and I'm missing it already.
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On the Atlantic, all four of my oars broke. This was not good news, and I don't want it to happen again.
Last time I had carbon fibre oars. This time I am going for wood, and when I heard that Sawyers Oars had supplied the oars for the winning men's four in the recent Shepherd Ocean Fours Rowing Race my mind was made up.
I'd already met Bruce Bergstrom at the Outdoor Retailer Show earlier this year, but wanted to meet him again in his workshop to talk about optimal designs.
After our discussion today, I feel much more confident that no matter what trials and tribulations I may face on the Pacific, broken oars will not be one of them.
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Now, tell me they don't look related!
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