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Adventure Life List Cross the Atlantic By Emma Richards FOR AN AMATEUR SAILOR, navigating the Atlantic Ocean is a huge achievement. When you don't see land and just a few ships for days, there is a great sense of freedom and adventure out there on the sea. If your aim is to maximize pleasure, set off in a bareboat setup with a four-person crew, minimum. The three-to-four-week crossing is a challenge, for sure, but it's also very possible to do if you prepare both your skills and your equipment properly. SKILLS & TIPS: First, solidify your sailing skills in a dinghy, a small boat that's usually shorter than 15 feet long. Being in a small craft forces you to learn how to balance a boat, as well as get a sixth sense for the wind and how it affects
When organizing your boat, make sure to have a replacement for every partwith the possible exception of the mainsail. Then take apart every piece of equipment you can and learn how to reassemble it; you'll inevitably have to fix something at sea. Usually, the best time to set sail from the U.S. is from mid-June through the end of July. You'll avoid the stormy winter; iceberg season, which runs from April through the beginning of June; and hurricane season, from the end of August to September. If you're sailing from Europe, go anytime from November through April, as you'll travel with the trade winds that bring you south to the Caribbean Sea. Avoid sailing too close to a storm because you're greedy for speed. Not only is it dangerous; you risk running into a headwind, which will force you off course. The other mistake is the opposite: being paranoid of the gales and sailing into a windless high-pressure area. You'll have to use your motor often, and you may run out of fueland a no-wind/no-fuel combo is worse than facing the gales. Stay on the northern edge of the Bermuda high, a subtropical high-pressure system in the North Atlantic, and it will carry you along in good style. TRAINING: You don't need to be in killer physical shape to sail across the ocean; if you can easily move and raise the sails, you'll be fine. But practice climbing the mast while the boat is tied to the dock. Going up and having a look around at sea is one of sailing's hardest tasks. Being familiar with it will be an advantage.
Scotland's Emma Richards, 31, is the youngest finisher of the 30,000-mile Around Alone race, which took her 130 days at sea, in 2003. Subscribe to Outside and get a FREE Gift! Give the gift of Outside Magazine! Subscribe to Outside Online's free weekly e-mail newsletter featuring gear reviews, fitness advice, galleries, podcasts, and more. |
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