18 Feb 2006
Day 79
No news yet on this Saturday morning. As Sedna Solo is still moving, and moving northwards against the wind, I assume that the problem is with communications from the satphone. I will post an update as soon as there is some news.
Meanwhile here is another picture taken when she was visited by crew from HMS Southampton last Tuesday.
Thank you for your interest in Roz.
Atlantic Row Part 3 |
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18 Feb 2006
La Gomera, the day the race started.
18 Feb
All day I have waited for the telephone to ring but Roz has not phoned. I have checked her progress on the Atlantic Rowing Race website times without number. Sedna Solo is moving, though the mileage on Friday and today have not been as good as the previous few days. One good thing is that although the wind is ENE and would be moving the boat south west, Sedna has moved a bit more to the north, towards latitude 17 where she needs to be to reach Antigua. This can only mean that Roz is working hard at clawing back the degrees south where the wind and waves had taken her. A good sign in more ways than one.
I do hope and pray that whatever the problem is with the communications that it can be overcome. Other boats have had similar problems and been out of touch for days. Anyone who has been following the saga of Ben Fogle and James Cracknell will know this was only one of the various problems with which they had battled.
The picture that I hope to add tonight was taken on the day that the race began, and clearly shows the Royal Navy sticker on Roz' boat. Members of the Navy have been very supportive and helpful, and Roz is proud to have them on her list of sponsors. On the home page you may have seen that the venue for the welcome back party to be held in London will be on navy premises. They are doing her proud!
Atlantic Row Part 3 |
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In the groove - some disciplined rowing.
16 Feb, 06 - 20:36
I have received that rarest of things - a piece of unsolicited advice that is helpful. The text said,
'When I was trying to stop smoking, a mate said just stop putting fags in your mouth, you big wuss.
So just stop letting your routine break down - let your non-emotional mind stay in charge, you big wuss.'
For some reason this message hit home where more sophisticated arguments had failed. I'd been failing to make that essential link between present actions and desired future outcome. I want to get to Antigua, and soon. How am I going to get there? Teleport? No, get rowing!
I was quite embarrassed that my outlook could be so revolutionised by such a painfully simple piece of advice, but when I thought about it I found some consolation in the fact that it seems to be a common human failing at all levels.
I want to lose weight.
So stop eating so much, you big wuss!
I want a more exciting life.
So do something exciting, you big wuss!
I want my children to know a planet with rainforests/glaciers/diversity of species.
So start living a greener lifestyle/using energy from renewable sources/recycling your rubbish, you big wuss!
I want global peace.
So stop starting wars, you big W!
(or is that just hypocrisy?)
I now call this my Big Wuss principle.
Thank you to George from Atlantic4. That's the second good piece of advice you've given me, the first being on Day 1 of the race: 'your watermaker probably has air in it and needs priming'. Dammit, man, I may have to review my prejudice about unsolicited advice from men.
Note to non- British readers: 'wuss' is a mild term of abuse, implying weakness of some sort. A bit like 'wimp', but less harsh.
Other stuff:
In Eddy's clutches again...
Great progress this morning due in part, I suspect, to an eddy. I saw clumps of green weed floating in the water, which Tiny tells me are a tell-tale sign. Just hoping Mr Eddy doesn't now decide to do something naughty, like whisk me south after I've worked so hard to get back up close to 17°N... oh, just checked my position, and he already has. Swine.
Texts: thanks for messages from AJ, HSS, Derrick and Elizabeth Pitard, James O, DB, Firinne, Margaret and Bob, Kurt, K&T in Canada, Jeff, John T (I do have something in mind even more challenging... Just still trying to decide if it's a challenge too far), Steve from the Vivaldi Atlantic 4 (respect!), Helen from Univ, Pascale and Terrence (anything I want in Antigua? What sort of thing did you have in mind? A good dinner and a comfy bed will do for starters!), Martin Chambers, H Briers.
Rita Savage's PS: More sponsored miles looming: 2202 Phil Goodier; 2222 Yannis Niotis. Brief paragraph about Roz and HMS Southampton in today's Guardian, Telegraph and Times.
A party to welcome Roz back from her voyage is being planned for March 23rd in London. See her Home Page for details.
For GPS position, race position and miles from La Gomera, see http://www.atlanticrowingrace.co.uk
Wind: E, 12kts (estimate)
Weather: sunshine and cloud
Sea state: moderate
Hours rowing: 12
Atlantic Row Part 3 |
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HMS Southampton - Desperately seeking Sedna
15 Feb, 06 - 20:31
Apparently HMS Southampton had some difficulty in locating me yesterday, despite having some of the best radar equipment money can buy.
It's not really surprising - I was perfectly camouflaged. A small silver boat on a glittering sea (as it was until shortly before they launched the RIB), hidden by huge waves.
So if anybody wants to stage an invasion of Britain, they could do worse than deploy a fleet of small silver rowing boats on a sunny day...
Other stuff:
For the benefit of regular texters, and maybe of passing interest to others, this is how my ocean-going comms setup works, or occasionally doesn't....
If you send me a text via the Iridium website, it comes straight through to my satphone. Now when I say satphone, I want you to visualise a mobile phone circa 1990. It's big and chunky, and it's a nightmare to text from (press 1 three times to get 'c', for example). That's why I acknowledge your texts in my dispatch rather than texting back to you.
When I connect the satphone to my iPaq the phone is acting purely as a modem. My iPaq can't 'see' the satphone as your PC might 'see' an iPod or PDA. So I can't download texts from the satphone to the iPaq. If I want to keep a note of your words of wit and wisdom I have to copy them by hand into my logbook.
Iridium satphone courtesy of Gcomm, iPaq PDA from
Explorers Web.
Another limitation of the satphone is that it can only hold a maximum of 29 text messages, which is why it causes me a problem if someone sends a message spread over 4 or 5 texts. I get my weather info via text and sometimes this can't get through because the satphone has hit its mailbox limit. I have to clear down the messages a couple of times a day to make sure the vital ones can get through.
So if you have a longer message, it's better if you use the Contact form on my website. This will also mean I have a permanent record of your email address, which I don't have if you text me (unless I copy it down manually, which I haven't been doing). Messages from the Contact page go to my land-based email address and my mother picks them up daily. She'll either tell me about them, or forward them on to my top secret only-my-mother-knows expedition email address.
The reason I don't give out the expedition email address to all and sundry is not because I'm getting above myself. It's because these emails come through to my iPaq via the satphone link, and this link is extremely slow and extremely expensive ($1.50/minute).
This may all sound painfully low-tech, but believe it or not this is just about as good as expedition comms get. The Iridium satphone handset isn't cheap - about £1000 - but technology-wise it's a long way behind land-based mobile phones.
Which reminds me... one final note. I think some of my friends have tried texting me on my normal mobile phone number. Errrr, it doesn't work in mid-ocean. Not too many mobile phone masts out here. I'll get those texts if/when I reach Antigua!
Summary:
Text messages
Pro - I generally get them the day you send them, unless my phone has hit its limit of 29 messages
Con - only suitable for short messages, and I have to clear down the messages daily.
Contact form
Pro - better for longer messages, and I will have a permanent record of your email address and words of wisdom
Con - my mother gets to read it first, and may or may not send it on to me, depending on content and length (definitely nothing over about 8K)
And finally, if you do send me a text, do please remember to sign it, or at least enter your email address, or I won't know who it's from!
AH: you texted me about the difference between 100% and 99.23% being a very zen concept. I need to know more - very relevant to my next project. Can you send more (via contact form, please) or refer me to further reading?
Thanks for texts and/or Valentine wishes from Molly the teddy at Southbourne Juniors (I'll get Monty back to you just as soon as I can), RJA, Julian, Celina & Barnaby Hamm, Penny, Nick, Matthew & Ben Collier, Malcolm Brookes, Sandi and the US fanclub (?!), Keith and Isabel Martin, Alasdair from Team Sevenoaks, Sarah Whittingham (you're a dark horse! Great to hear from you), John T, Jeff (I'm sure it would be the only boat in the world called 'Baboon Balls'. But I'm sure there are easier ways to become a celebrity!), Tim Ratbag (mmm, eating those yummy miles!), DB, Lizann, Ian Jackson, Rick, Margaret and Bob, Kevin, Natalie (four seasons in one day yesterday - didn't know at the start of each shift whether to wear waterproof, windproof, t-shirt, or nothing!), HSS, Steve Duffy (keep me posted!).
B - I knew the rose was from you, really. You are daft - I'm not even there!
Rita Savage's PS: A party to welcome Roz back from her voyage is being planned for March 23rd in London. See her Home Page for details.
Incase you haven't discovered this: if you click on the pictures above you can see a larger version - much clearer- you can see Roz' smile!
For GPS position, race position and miles from La Gomera, see http://www.atlanticrowingrace.co.uk
Wind: E, variable (estimate)
Weather: sunshine, squalls
Sea state: rough
Hours rowing: 12
Atlantic Row Part 3 |
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