Roz
Savage is a British ocean rower, author, motivational speaker and
environmental campaigner. After 11 years as a management consultant,
she embarked on a new life of adventure by rowing 3,000 miles across
the Atlantic. Her unlikely transformation from office worker to ocean
rower, described with humor and soul-baring honesty in her blogs,
captivated a worldwide audience. Roz is now attempting to become the
first woman to row solo across the Pacific.
This is one in a series of blog posts from Roz during her journey. To follow Roz's adventures, visit http://rozsavage.com.
By recent standards today was a mega-result. 20 nautical miles closer to the Equator, and 17 nautical miles closer to Tuvalu. It was a brutal old day at the oars though, with constant high winds chopping the sea up into steep peaks and troughs coming at me broadside from the esast. But for the gain of 20 miles I'm willing to put up with some uncomfortable rowing and frequent dousings.
Not wanting to seem ungrateful, but the one downside was that I also got pushed a few miles west, and I'm trying to hang on to all the east that I can. In the zig-zag-zig of my intended course, I want the zag (eastwards) to be on the generous side. It doesn't matter if I get down to the latitude of Tuvalu too early – the winds will help me the rest of the way – but if I get down there too late…. Then it's hello Philippines – and another few months at sea before I have the chance to make landfall. This would most definitely NOT be okay.
This reminds me of a few lines from one of my favorite poems, Rudyard Kipling's If.
If you can dream – and not make dreams your master; If you can think – and not make thoughts your aim; If you can meet with triumph and disaster And treat those two imposters just the same; …. If you can fill the unforgiving minute With sixty seconds' worth of distance run – Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it, And – which is more – you'll be a Man, my son.
I'm not likely to ever be a man – nor, with all due respect, would I ever want to be – but to take the words in the spirit in which they are intended, I hope I can treat the twin imposters of big mileage and little mileage, and take them just the same. In either case, my effort has been the same – it is just a matter of what the ocean has allowed me to achieve. There is no "conquering" of oceans here – it is by the grace of the ocean that I will succeed – eventually.
[photo: The little birds were on board again today at dawn. Here is one perched on the aft hatch of my sleeping cabin. They're not as messy, nor as noisy, as the smelly poopy booby birds...]
Other Stuff:
I've realized that the tsunami I ordered (to spice up my voyage) was due to arrive on July 23. But it hasn't turned up. If there was a tsunami after the New Zealand earthquake it didn't reach me. Darned deliveries – never on time! I could call them up and see where it's got to, but of course I've lost the tracking number and they'd probably just tell me it's in the mail… so that's blown my chances of getting rescued by the Johnny Depp lookalike. Sigh!
Rozta' Bill was asking about my hashtag on Twitter. I can't follow Twitter from out here, but Nicole tells me that #rozsavage is the best way to find fellow Roztafarians. Thanks for asking!
Eco Champ of the Day #1! Laurey in Asheville, NC (which I very much hope to visit sooner rather than later!) "I have a catering company and a restaurant, as I think I've mentioned. We carry bottled water with our name on the bottle. Yes, plastic. Yes, the disposable kind. WE recycle the bottles but probably not everyone does. So I am going to use up the rest of the bottles we have (the company makes them by the pallet load for us) and then I will not order any more.
We also carry nalgene water bottles with our motto "Don't Postpone Joy(r) on them but they are the good, hard, reuseable kind, not the disposable kind. We will continue to encourage folks to use them and will, once this order is finished, no longer sell the disposable ones." This is great – just the kind of mindful attitude that I love to hear about. Whatever your occupation or role in life, I'm sure you can find creative ways to do your bit.
Eco Champ #2 – Stormcloud wrote to comment how disappointing it is in books when a character throws away something plastic, or uses a Styrofoam cup. So authors of fiction can actually help change our values. The planet thanks you!
Eco Champ #3 – Kathy Miritello! "Thank you for raising consciousness about ecological issues -- I'd never heard of the floating island of plastic out in the ocean and was appalled to learn how vast it is! Since then, I bring my own reusable shopping bags whenever I go grocery shopping, have a growing stash of Starbucks travel mugs that I take with me instead of getting my favorite beverage (chai tea latte) in their paper cups, and recently bought a stainless steel reusable water bottle to fill instead of a plastic bottle. Oh, and newspapers -- they make the best weed barriers for mulched planting beds!" I love chai tea latte too - and I've got my travel mug on board just in case there's a good coffee shop in Tuvalu!
Richard in Austin – I loved the sea shanties! I just have to share them here, for anyone who didn't see them in the comments:
I'm not good at patience, I'm not good at rhymes, I need western movement On these longitudinal lines. And if the gods will protect me, And take me still far, I'll keep on a-munching my Larabar.
I know that my poem Seems pretty dumb, It sounds a lot better After quite a few shots of rum. And there's an island awaiting It's the next logical step, Because waiting on the beach Is that hunk Johnny Depp.
Vern – thanks for pointing out the metaphorical angle – how very true!
Jess Rees – congrats on taking on the obituary exercise, although it sounds as if you don't need to! Paulo Coelho's book must have touched so many lives. What power. Maktub.
Special hellos to UrbanCowgirl and Carla Salikin & Larry Wallace in the Northwest Territories of Canada – thank you for your comments, your support, and for spreading the word!
Rowing adventure tour??! I like the idea of me being the drum beater and having other people row me around for a change! We could borrow the Greek Trireme that I rowed on when I was 19 in Greece – room for 174 rowers. Hmmm, 174 x $5K….!
Quick answers to quick questions:
Q: Roz: have you ever read Arthur Ransome's Swallows and Amazons? A: I'm ashamed to admit that I haven't. Will take note and try to get the audiobook for Stage 3!
Q: Do you have disaster insurance? A: Nope. Nobody will cover me!
Q: When you arrive at shore after a crossing, How long does it take to get your land legs? Do you weave as you walk? A: Usually about a week – and yes, there is a bit of weaving involved, and it's not all due to the beer!
Weather report:
Position at 2200 HST: 03 36.621N, 175 07.778W Wind: 20+ knots E Seas: 4-8 feet E, steep and choppy Weather: cloud and sun this morning, mostly overcast this afternoon and evening
Weather forecast, courtesy of weatherguy.com:
Using last night's Feedblitz blog email (26 Jul), reported position was: 04 09N 175 04W as of 26Jul 2145HST. Making good progress eastward. This is the preferred direction while in the equatorial counter current.
As of Monday 27 July 2009. According to measured data, there is ESE blowing squalls with winds 20-40kts have been in your area. South to the equator and east of your position to 171W, squalls continue. Otherwise, winds have been mostly ESE 5-17kts. Uncertainty remains, as previously discussed. Forecast is for wind direction to shift more ENEerly 13-18kts then, NE 5-10kts on the 28 Jul becoming light and variable.
According to satellite imagery, there is over cast skies and deep convection overhead and south to the equator. Embedded thunderstorms possible. You can expect more heavy rainshowers.
Suggest rowing towards the east
Sky conditions: Partly to mostly cloudy. Scattered heavy rainshowers, squalls, and possible thunderstorms.
Forecast (low confidence due to extreme variability in equatorial regions and naturally occurring small scale fluctuations in direction/speed in the Doldrums) Date/Time HST Wind kts Seas (ft) est 27/1200-28/0000 ENE 13-18 3-8 28/0000-28/1200 NE 5-10 4-6 28/1200-01/1800 Variable direction 1-8 0-10kts
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