about

I'm a 26 27 year old Australian, currently sailing singlehanded aboard a 26ft Yacht named Constellation, from Holland to Australia - I departed on the 17th of Sept, 2007. Check my current position.

help!

If you think what I'm attempting is interesting, or you read regularly and enjoy my site, think about helping me out! There are a couple of ways to help, or send a dollar or two to keep me sailing and writing.

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what am i doing...

I need to borrow or rent a truck. F250 or similar, unlimited mileage - Any thoughts? twitter.

credits

Jo Mooring Aldridge (Contessa photo used in design).

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Archive for August, 2008

Short film - Sailing Across the Atlantic Alone

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

Here is a 16minute film I put together from footage I took across the Atlantic. Note: There is swearing at the beginning.

Special thanks to Jack for the camera, and to Tracy for letting me use her computer for editing!

Fundraising party writeup and trip update/announcement in my next post!

nick.



Atlantic Fundraising, Vancouver

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

I promised in my last post, I’d write from Vancouver… Yet I’m quickly running out of anything sailing related to write about, and so it took for the trip back to find any inspiration, or rather to stop and think (not that I really ever did think of anything sailing related to write about…But).

However, I’ve finally managed to make good on my promise to spend the money raised during my Atlantic crossing on purchasing a bridge in rural Cambodia. If you’re interested, visit my first post about the project to find more. Thank you so much to everyone who helped me, support someone else. I plan to continue my fundraising efforts on all solo passages over 1000nm - I just need to get back out to sea!

Oxfam Bridges for Cambodia Receipt

On the topic of fundraising, this Saturday is the day of a fundraising event to help me truck Constellation across America: Yes, that crazy plan is still on the cards. I’ll write all about it post-party, as well as provide more detail on what is actually going on with the idea.

So I went to Canada to be best man at a wedding, which was quite an experience… My duties successfully completed, I’ve made it all the way back to New York, via one of the longest routes possible. I must have easily completed my entire sailing mileage on a single round trip to Canada!

Vancouver via Los Angeles

Canyon

Super Snow

Searching for Salmon

Arriving at Vancouver airport at 5am, I arrived back in New York by 11pm - Ok, so there is a time difference.. But only of three hours! (I should have sailed). Out of the airport I had the great fortune of the taxi getting a flat tire.

Changing tire, NYC taxi

Picked up by another taxi, the voyage continued, and I write to you from Brooklyn… Where not a lot of sailing happens. There is a nice picture of a Veolia Oceans one-design (Constellation II?) on my desktop though, which is about as close to sailing I’ll be getting for awhile…

Next post to include video from my Atlantic crossing, as well as a report on the fundraising event!

nick.



Generous America

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

When I met Rune Monstad in the Canary Islands, he had cycled from South America right up into Canada, before flying to Europe, and is now en route north through Africa, as part of his bicycle circumnavigation. We had a lot in common in our attitudes about what we were doing, and were also equally dogged about finishing what we’d started. However broke, however tired and however angry, we both talked about the incredible generosity we’d encountered along the way, both grateful and suprised at how people reached out in all manner of ways. Rune couldn’t stop talking about how good America had been to him, and right now, I couldn’t agree with him more.

Here at the Brewers Yacht Yard in Greenport, people are helping me left, right and centre to get Constellation seaworthy again. A furler is being installed, my sails are being converted and repaired by Doyle sails, there is talk of a Furuno radar, new standing rigging, and a replacement boom. As a result of a frontpage article in the Suffolk Times (viewable here), I regularly get referred to as ‘Nick’ from people I’ve never met in town, with the article spurring on numerous invitations for dinner, barbecues, offers of assistance on the boat, wine from Long Island wineries, and even a recording studio offering to do a recording, based on the premise of the article mentioning I had a rusty guitar!

If all that wasn’t enough, recently a family motored into the Marina to meet me, holding up the paper to passers by, asking where I was. After a brief meeting, they were back the following week with a proposal: What if a party was thrown to raise money to truck Constellation across America? I was speechless, and I think all I could muster was a ‘Are you kidding? Really?’ I was bowled over by the idea, and within a few days, invitations circulated, the party had a date, and Constellation and I may just get across this great continent as planned! I’d been depressed over the enormity of the scheme, it all be very well to have an idea, but a whole other problem to make it happen. The cost of trucking a 3.5 ton sail boat from New York to San Francisco is no small sum, and sailing back to the Caribbean and through the Panama Canal is also no small feat… The Northwest Passage may be ‘open’, but Constellation told me in a dream, she was no ice breaker, and while Cape Horn beckoned (ha!), I’ll save those latitudes for the aluminium expedition ketch I spend too much time thinking about. So this party nears the end of the month, and with it brings great excitement at the thought of getting closer to solving the age old problem of getting into the Pacific from the Atlantic.

If it seems this blog may have become slightly neglected since I arrived here, I must apologise, it probably has, yet only for good reasons: Life has been full throttle, traveling in and out of the city from Long Island, visiting friends, relatives, racing boats, and generally having the time of my life. I’ve already said that sailing north from the Caribbean was a really good decision, but I have to say it again: Sailing north from the Caribbean was a really good decision.

I mentioned some months ago that I was going to Vancouver for a wedding, and that time has come. I’m terrified of doing the Best Man Speech, which is by far scarier than doing a solo transatlantic… All I can say is, it’s lucky I bought more than one bottle of Mt Gay Rum from Barbados; I’ll have to take mouthfuls of the stuff prior to toasting the the newlyweds, balancing a fine line between doing the speech in a pirate voice and actually not embarrassing myself nor the groom.

I haven’t been doing a great deal of sailing recently, so I hope my land based adventures are enough to keep everyone interested. Below are some photos of a trip to upstate New York:

Doing what I do best (bailing)
Bailing

Me, Ryan, Tow, Lake Waccabuc

My brother and I

Rock jumping


Rock jumping

Ryan, Tracy, Katonah
My brother & Tracy

Next post from latitude 49.25 longitude -123.13.

nick.



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