The Voyage: Roz Savage
Roz: The Atlantic Videos
02 Aug 2006, San Francisco, California

Four short videos of my Atlantic row are now available for viewing online. Even if you read the dispatches you might not fully appreciate what it was like out there. If a picture speaks a thousand words, a video speaks ten thousand.

Parts 2 and 4 are my favourites, but 3 isn't bad either. Nor is 1, come to that. Enjoy!

Part 1: preparations in the UK, boatbuilding, Henley, provisioning, setting out.

Part 2: storms, broken oars, broken comms equipment, but spirit intact - just about.

Part 3: 101 days gone, just 2 days to go. But the retrieval line to the sea anchor has snapped, so the sea anchor is hanging there like a ball and chain. Only one thing she can do... "

Part 4: after 103 days at sea, dry land at last! Arrival in Antigua - this is one very happy rower."

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Pulling for the Planet: Eric Larsen
01 Aug 2006

On July 1, 2006 Lonnie Dupre and Eric Larsen became the first people in the world to travel to the North Pole in summer. Traditionally, Arctic Ocean expeditions are launched during the coldest time of year while the ice is still thick and stable. In summer, freeze-thaw conditions, shifting ice floes, slush and melt water pools have deterred polar explorers from attempting a summer North Pole Expedition. Until now. How did they do it?

They pulled and paddled specially modified canoes across nearly 1,000 miles of shifting sea ice and open ocean. It took them 2 months.

As well as being in it for the adventure, they teamed up with Greenpeace to draw attention to the impact of global warming on the Arctic. See their fact-filled website for more info and some fantastic photos.

And how did I get to hear about them? We both use XJournal for our blogs, and we are both concerned about the environment. Eric called me up today to compare notes on extreme expeditions, and we hope to meet up sometime soon.

I'd like to pick his brains about the Arctic, as I have ambitions in that direction. But I'd better get there soon, because it's disappearing fast and I'd rather trek there than row there.

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Tripping
01 Aug 2006, San Francisco, California

Trip 1: my iTrip, the snazziest little gizmo for playing music from your iPod in your car. It converts the music into an FM radio signal that the car's stereo system can pick up. It made all the difference to my drive up Highway 101. The only bit of bad news? It's illegal in the UK. Transmitting a radio signal, even if it's only the six inches from your iPod to your car stereo, turns you into a pirate radio station.

Trip 2: a hiking trip in the Wunderlich County Park just a few miles down the road from Robert's Nook. This is my new fitness regime - a brisk 5 mile walk/jog/run every day, climbing 1,650 feet and down again, through redwoods, eucalyptus, oaks and fir trees - shady and fragrant. Who could resist a path called Bear Gulch Trail? It makes exercise almost enjoyable.


Redwoods along the Bear Gulch Trail

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Johnny Cash: Heartrending
31 Jul 2006

A beautiful, heartrending song with a video to match. His voice sounds worldly-wise and world-weary, the voice of a man who has lived long and lived hard. Highly recommended.

Click here for the song and video.

Click here for more about Johnny Cash

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