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To: nunya bidness; maica; wardaddy; Squantos; harpseal
He beat me by a month and a half. (About 70 days Guam to San Diego, with crew.) But I was not technically adrift, while making a very slow transit of the north Pacific, although at times I had my doubts. (This was during a "La Nina" reverse El Nino, when the dead calm zone extended across the trade wind bands all the way north to Alaska.)

Actually, the military should hire this guy to talk at some survival school for a while, mostly about keeping the spirits and will to live up. I took 43 days to go solo from Panama to Hawaii (Great El Nino, trade winds gone again, I got it both ways!) and you can get VERY bummed out, and that's on a boat making progress with radios, CDs, books, good food etc.

How this guy kept himself from "going for a swim" during a low point is the real story of this epic to me. He must have had a great source of inner strength, or maybe he "just wouldn't let the sea beat him".

Any way, I salute one tough old SOB.

10 posted on 09/24/2002 7:16:41 PM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: Travis McGee
Maybe Mr Van Pham has had a lot of survival training during his years in Asia before his arrival in the US.

And I take great umbrage at calling a 62-year-old "old!" LOL!

11 posted on 09/24/2002 8:16:40 PM PDT by maica
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To: Travis McGee
Well both you and he beat me. About 27 days was my max run. I'm a big believer in having a nice kicker(and a good generator)....course you need some fat tanks. Many a windless day I have shaved in my reflection on a glass sea. Hot and flat as a pancake. I bet you Pacific guys don't get too many days like that...lol

What was that book about the guys who drifts in his liferaft from The Azores to the Windwards after his sailboat was holed at night....it was about 10 years ago.

I forget how long his epic was. I've got the book stashed in my storage at work....
13 posted on 09/24/2002 8:25:20 PM PDT by wardaddy
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To: Travis McGee
Hmmmm. My boat never leaves the river.

I was at the marina, this summer, working on engine #2, and about 25 fire trucks showed up. Everybody went running toward the lodge - I poked my head out of the engine deck, thinking, "What the heck?"

Seems a young couple went out on the river in a rowboat, to do some fishing. Net result, two dead kids. Rough water.

I am glad I did not have to see the father carry his dead child to the rescue workers, begging for help.

And I have not mentioned any of this to my wife.

16 posted on 09/24/2002 8:32:03 PM PDT by patton
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To: Travis McGee
Your 43 days has got my "slighty less" time on a Bermuda 1-2 beat.

I think after the first couple of days it becomes a routine.

Trying to sleep singlehanded under sail is the hardest thing to accomplish. Sleep being a subjective term.

25 posted on 09/24/2002 9:16:15 PM PDT by nunya bidness
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To: Travis McGee; Poohbah
Weren't there longer tales of survival adrift during World War II?
36 posted on 09/25/2002 5:30:06 AM PDT by hchutch
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