22 Jul 2008, The Brocade
I almost wish I was on dry land, just so I could check out all the cool things that are happening around this website - I can't see them from here!
When I get back to dry land, I'm especially looking forward to checking out the podcasts. If you're following the blog but haven't clued in to the podcasts, you might want to go to Twitlive.tv and take a look. I thoroughly enjoy my thrice-weekly chats with Leo Laporte, and you may enjoy adding another dimension to your Pacific-rowing-by-proxy experience.
I haven't been able to watch them myself, but apparently if you check in while we are recording (10am PST, or 6pm BST on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays) you can actually see Leo sitting in his studio, talking to me, along with all the comments and questions coming in from the chatroom. My mother just discovered this a week ago, and she's hooked!
Plus, you can get a FREE audiobook from audible.com, (I suspect that this only applies to people in the USA - Rita.) AND by downloading the podcasts you help me raise funds to finance the next stage of my row. See the bottom of this blog for details.
I was introduced to Leo last summer by his long-term friend Bill Chayes, who is the producer of our Pacific rowing/environmental documentary. We, and assorted others, were guests of Bill and his wife Michelle for dinner at their beautiful arts-and-crafts home in the rolling golden countryside outside of Petaluma, close to California's wine country. We had a wonderful meal sitting outside at a table on the deck, eating and drinking and chatting. (Ahhhh, how I LONG for an evening like that right now - nothing I like better than a good dinner party.. But I'm 1300 miles and at least 40 days away from any opportunity..)
And Leo was sufficiently interested in what I was doing to offer to do a regular series of podcasts with me. I have to confess, I didn't really know who Leo was at the time, but now I've been in North America for a bit longer I am starting to appreciate just what a lucky break this was. Leo has introduced me to a whole new audience via the podcasts and Twitter, as well as securing sponsorship from audible.com.
So what this means is that the more people that download the podcasts, the more audible.com pay as part of the sponsorship arrangement. And when you sign up, you can get a free audiobook. I listen nonstop to audiobooks while I row - Leo gave me an iPod loaded with 323 books that I'm steadily munching my way through - and during our podcasts he always asks me what I'm "reading". So you can even listen to the same book I'm listening to, and share my experience in a whole new way!
Other stuff
Position at 2100 22nd July Pacific Time, 0400 23rd July UTC: 24 28.173'N, 135 24.224'W.
Conditions the same as for the last few days - grey, chilly, windy and rough. I shall say no more in case I lapse into grumbles. I should be pleased that I am making good progress, and not mind about being constantly wet, salty, and bounced around. But it's sometimes easier said than done. Only those audiobooks are helping me through it - today, on Leo's recommendation, I listened to The Uncommon Reader by Alan Bennette - excellent!
It's good to be past halfway, but last night I did feel a little bit lonely. My weatherguy was most insistent that I had to have a halfway party. I looked around my boat. No company. No treat foods left. No bottles of anything interesting. Not much to start a party with at all. I briefly considered making some party decorations out of the silver wrappers from my expedition meals, but then gave up and went to bed. I will make up for it by partying extra hard when I get to Hawaii.
Thanks again for all the messages - especially to Margo, my East Coast enviro-sister! Looking forward to re-toasting with a glass of red wine next time I see you.
Thanks also to Jenny at KWMR - would love to get together for an interview once I've delivered the message in a bottle to the Hawaiian Islands Sanctuary. You're on!
And to Jim, John, Chris, Rod, Currin (why is everybody telling me about what delicious wines they're using to toast my progress?! Making me envious!!), Eric, Karyn, Rodli, Tim, Toni, Gene and Sindy.
Click here to view Day 59 of the Atlantic Crossing 28 january 2006: Fishy Business - flying fish, that is.
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22 Jul 2008, The Brocade
(Picture: Graphic kindly provided by Rick Shema - Weatherguy - of Roz's route so far, and wind conditions. For a larger view, go to Roz's Smugmug gallery and click on Sea Scenes and double click on the graphic. To get to Smugmug, click the icon above right - the little black box with a green grin.)
When I am in London, I often stay with my friends Sam and Ella. I've known Sam for nearly 20 years now, since our days at Thames Rowing Club, and during that time he has excelled at all kinds of sports, including sculling (Diamond Sculls at Henley), marathons (sub 3-hours in this year's London Marathon), triathlons, 4-man luge, and motor car racing.
Near their front door, they have this poem hanging on the wall in a frame. I haven't actually asked Sam if it inspires him in his athletic endeavours - but I know it does the trick for me!
If you think you are beaten, you are. If you think you dare not, you don't. If you'd like to win, but don't think you can It's almost certain you won't.
If you think you'll lose, you've lost, For out of the world you'll find Success begins with a fellow's will. It's all in the state of mind.
If you think you're outclassed, you are. You've got to think high to rise. You've got to be sure of yourself before You can ever win a prize.
Life's battles don't always go To the stronger or faster man, But sooner or later the man who wins Is the one who thinks he can.
Obviously I'd prefer a more gender-neutral version, but then it wouldn't rhyme or scan. But the point remains that self-belief is an amazingly powerful attribute.
For my first month on the Atlantic I was beset by doubts. What on earth had I been thinking? What had made me think I could do this?
And then I realized that, despite all my doubts, I was 1000 miles into it and actually yes, not only COULD I do it, but in fact I WAS doing it.
And of course now, having done it once, I've got reason to believe that I can do it again.
My point is that the first time you do something new and challenging, it's a leap of faith. You've got no reason to believe you can do it, because you've never done it before. But there's only one way to find out if you can - and that is to try.
As we've already invented the word "justdoitiveness", maybe what I'm describing here is "justdoitosity"!
Other stuff:
Position at 2140 21st July Pacific Time, 0440 22nd July UTC: 24 34.231'N, 134 56.615'W.
This morning I crossed the halfway point. 1304 nautical miles down, 1304 still to go. For myself, I'll feel more like celebrating when I can cross off 140 degrees West on the list of numbers on my whiteboard. That will be the line of longitude halfway between San Francisco (122 degrees W) and Oahu (158 degrees W). Then I will really start to feel like I've broken the back of the journey.
I find it hard to believe that I am nearly in the tropics. For the last few days the weather has been overcast, windy and grey. But the good news about this is that it has reduced my water consumption, which almost doubled during the hotter, sunnier weather.
Even though the winds are now helping me, I need to push on, so am still rowing from 7am to 9pm every day. The rowing has been tough and rough, rowing across the waves, which regularly crash against the starboard side of the boat, splashing over me until my left side is encrusted with salt, and on occasions today eliciting some very bad language!
Thanks to all for the comments and messages. A special hello today to Noelle, Rob and Jasper in Australia. Thanks for spreading the word about my row, and I can't wait to see you in Oz. although I'm not due there until 2010, so we have plenty of party-planning time still left!
With love and best wishes to all.
Click here to view Day 59 of the Atlantic Crossing January 27 2006, Cheerfully Miserable.
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20 Jul 2008, The Brocade
Last night it was a full moon. Unfortunately I didn't get to see it, as it has been overcast for several days (and nights) now. I would have loved to have seen it - one of my favourite Atlantic memories is rowing along on a calm ocean under a full moon, admiring the stars and generally feeling at one with the world.
Rowing across an ocean really does give me a sense of my place on the planet, and that planet's place in relation to the sun, moon and stars. It's evident, as I head west and south, how the times of sunrise and sunset (when it isn't overcast) are shifting.
And although I don't have a sextant on board, I had to study celestial navigation as a prerequisite for the Atlantic Rowing Race, and I can still remember enough about the subject to conjure up an approximate image of the earth turning as it circles the sun and picture how it all fits together.
There is a quote I found today on a list of inspirational quotes I'd prepared before the Atlantic, which I think comes from a Michael Crichton book:
Modern city-dwellers cannot even see the stars at night. This humbling reminder of man's place in the grander scheme of things, which human beings formerly saw once every twenty-four hours, is denied them. It's no wonder that people lose their bearings, that they lose track of who they really are, and what their lives are really about.
This really rings true with me. In ordinary life on dry land, I get so wrapped up in the general busy-ness and bustle, and it's only when I get out on the ocean, or into the mountains, or otherwise into the wild, that I am reminded that in the overall span of time and space, my little life - although very important to me - is smaller than a grain of sand on a beach.
Other stuff:
Position at 2130 20th July Pacific Time, 0430 21st July UTC: 24 40.470'N, 134 19.458'W.
Within the next few hours I should cross the halfway point of my journey. I will have rowed 1304 nautical miles, and will be the same distance from Hawaii. Now that I am in the trade winds, the second half should go faster than the first half. I have to confess - I very much hope this is so!
Conditions today have been grey, cold and rough. Not really the sort of day that makes me yearn for more of the same. Thanks for all the positive vibes heading my way - either through messages, comments, or just positive thoughts!
A special note to Tim: I've been using my "positive, energetic, enthusiastic" mantra here on the boat, too. It's a bit harder doing the hand gestures here though. I like to do it this way:
I am positive (fling arms out to sides) I am energetic (shoot arms forwards) I am enthusiastic (stretch arms up overhead)
And I tend to do repeat it several times, in an increasingly silly voice (especially on enthOOOOsiastic!) which at least puts a smile on my face at the start of the day!
Click here to view Day 57 of the Atlantic Crossing 26 January 2006: Sad Day on Sedna Solo - Roz finishes her favourite food.
Sedna was the name of the boat before Brocade became the main sponsor - the boat is now called Brocade.
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