Archive for the 'rowing' Category

Aug 22 2010

Row To Tangier

August 20th, 2010. From 0445 to 1645, Mike and I rowed from Smith Point, Virginia, to Tangier Island and back for a total of 28 miles, in one day. It was painful, it was beautiful, it was awesome. While I can’t talk to Mike about rowing for at least two weeks now, I can share a video of our adventure. Check it out:

No responses yet

Aug 15 2010

Gunning Dory Swamp Test

Today we swamped the gunning dory to see how she would handle completely full of water. This was a lot of fun, once we realized she would stay mostly on top of the water…

No responses yet

Jul 27 2010

Artemis Investments

Leven Brown and crew aboard ‘Artemis Investments’ are well on their way to breaking the Harbo and Samuelson 55 day crossing record for the Northern Atlantic, W-E. They are in to day 40 of their expedition with under 340 miles to go until they reach St. Mary’s Island in the Isles of Scilly. What a fantastic accomplishment it will be when they complete their journey. I especially appreciate them raising the bar for us the year before we leave on our expedition, as we have similar goals. Luckily, we are still able to claim the Harbo and Samuelson 55 day crossing record in the pairs boat category. I’m pretty sure at this point, however, the new overall record we will be chasing will be to make the crossing in under 45 days.

Here’s a video we took of ‘Artemis Investments’ during her first attempt to row across the pond:



No responses yet

Jul 09 2010

Forward Progress

Here are some more pictures of the progress being made on our multihull ocean rowing boat. These pictures show the planking of the vessel’s hull in progress. She looks awesome!




Mike and I are taking a Seamanship course through the Rockville Sail and Power Squadron (RSPS), which we just recently joined. The progression of courses we intend to take through the RSPS are as follows:

  • Seamanship
  • Piloting
  • Advanced Piloting
  • Junior Navigation
  • Navigation
  • CPR

Think we can get all that education and training in by next Spring? I hope so.




Tomorrow morning I’m rowing at the Capital Sprints Regatta in Anacostia, Washington DC.  I’m stroking a 4+, rowing 6 seat in the 8, and stroking a 4x.  Should be fun!

No responses yet

Jun 30 2010

Ocean Rowing and the Multihull

Even with all the controversy surrounding this year’s 33rd America’s Cup, it was still not difficult to become sidetracked by the sheer coolness of the multihull sailing vessels involved in the race – Alinghi and BMW ORACLE. These multihulls evoke shock and awe when considering their speed, size and beauty. Team Northern Atlantic are hoping to further the acceptance of the multihull concept in the sport of ocean rowing.

Our 30 foot multihull ocean rowing boat is being built on Shelter Island, New York by Captain Roy Finlay. Roy built and skippered ‘ORCA’, the first multihull ocean rowing boat ever rowed across any ocean. ORCA’s four-man crew left the Canary Islands and arrived in Barbados in 36 days. We believe that multihull ocean rowing boats in general, and the ORCA design in particular, hold great potential for setting new ocean rowing speed records.

The picture on the left (below) is our new boat starting to take shape: MDF frames on the strong-back almost ready for foam planking and fiberglass to form the hull. The picture on the right (below) is ORCA, rowed by a four-man crew from the Canaries to Barbados in 2007/2008 in just 36 days. Our boat will be a very similar design. She’s fast, but the boat is only part of the equation: Speed = Boat + Crew + Weather. I believe Team Northern Atlantic are well on our way to taking care of the first two operands in the equation!

The main hull of our multihull taking shape. ORCA - the first multihull ever rowed across any ocean.
The main hull of our multihull taking shape. The main hull of our multihull taking shape.

No responses yet

Jun 17 2010

Cedar Dory Floor Boards

For all you wooden boat master craftsmen out there, this post is not for you. Move along. For all the rest of ya, who’ve not got an eye for symmetry nor detail, check out these pictures of the ‘Row the Pond’ Training Dory.

We’re putting cedar floor boards in the gunning dory, which we plan to row across the Chesapeake Bay in July as part of our preparation to row across the Northern Atlantic next year (but in a different boat, which is being built by a professional boat builder as I write).

We’ve got all the cedar floor boards cut now, and have but the sanding and screwing left to do on them. After that, all that’s left to do is to touch-up the paint once more and then we can take her out and try to sink her! We need to see how she performs totally swamped with water before we try to row her across the Chesapeake Bay. That’s one thing I did not do last year that I wish I had, so it’s definitely one milestone on the ‘project schedule’ now.

I am very fond of cedar. I think cedar floor boards in a wooden boat are a classy touch – they look and smell great. My nostrils and lungs are full of cedar dust now, hopefully to soon be replaced by the light July sea breezes of the Chesapeake Bay!

Mike and I are going sailing this weekend. If interested, watch the tracking section on our website for a near-real-time map of our location. Not much wind is forecasted for this weekend, so we might not be sailing far, but we’ll see.

Launch FineMeSPOT Map

Launch sat2twitter Map

No responses yet

Jun 03 2010

Virgin GB Row 2010

The ocean rowing race around Great Britain has begun! This should be a really fun race to watch: men against women, mono-hull (‘Go Commando’) against multi-hull (‘Orca’). May the best team win!

http://bit.ly/9mQkU6

No responses yet

May 31 2010

Team Northern Atlantic 2011 Demo Video



No responses yet

May 17 2010

Tangier Island in Parade Magazine

My Dad told me about an article in this weekend’s Parade Magazine about Tangier Island. It looks like a nice place. The thought of fresh crab makes my mouth water. Mike and I are planning a summer row cross the Bay in the gunning dory once we get her ready for two rowers. Stopping over at Tangier for a crab dinner sounds like a sweet plan.

http://www.parade.com/news/our-towns/2010/0516-an-island-refuge-remakes-itself.html

No responses yet

May 16 2010

Traditional Rowing Positions

The November/December 2009 edition of WoodenBoat Magazine has a really good article on ‘Oars, Oarlocks, and Rowing’ in traditional wooden rowing boats (page 4). I love this magazine, by the way! I referred to this article when putting the rowing positions in my gunning dory. I worked on them some more this afternoon and got them mostly roughed in. The epoxy and wood need a bit more sanding, some painting, and a touch of varnish and then we should be about ready to put her on the water again. I can’t wait.

No responses yet

Apr 22 2010

Antigua

This past weekend I (James Caple) flew out to Antigua for a weekend visit (Mike Altarace stayed back this trip). It was short and sweet, I did not miss work, nor did I have to take any vacation days to go down. The Atlantic Rowing Race ’09 is drawing to a close and I wanted to get down there (Antigua) to talk to Simon Chalk and any ocean rowers who might happen to still be lingering around; I also wanted to see some ocean rowing boats in person, as well as just simply experience the magic of English Harbor. Come to find out it was Sailing Week when I was down there, so there were tons of huge sailing yachts and lots of sailing folk from all over the world. My only regret is not being able to stay a couple of months longer…

I had a brutal layover at JFK Airport on my way home from Antigua to DC, so I checked in my carry-on and took the train in to Manhattan to walk around. I ended up in Time Square where there were plenty of lights at 1230 at night.

On my flight back I finished Tori Murden’s book, ‘A Pearl in the Storm’, about her solo ocean rowing attempt across the Northern Atlantic and then across the Tradewinds Route. I thought her book was excellent: I marked it up and dog-eared a number of the pages like it was a text book or something.

No responses yet

Mar 29 2010

WRC Week 3 and Big Nautical Challenges

We’ve completed week 2 of the Concept2 World Rowing Challenge.  As of 11pm this evening, March 29, 2010, we have 2,227,875 meters behind us, or approximately 1,385 miles.  So we’re not quite to the half-way point yet and we’re still behind schedule.  The great news we received last week, however, was that the guys from the newly formed team, Ocean Adventure Racing Northwest, composed of Jordan Hanssen, Greg Spooner, Adam Creek and Richard Tarbill, graciously signed-up to our team and are now helping us slog our virtual way from New York City to the Isles of Scilly.  Jordan Hanssen and Greg Spooner were two members of the 2006 four-man crew who actually won an ocean rowing race over this same course becoming the first Americans ever to successfully row this stretch of ocean, land-to-land, West to East.  So it’s great to have them on our team!

If you notice on the Google Map image below, we’ve just cleared the coast of New Foundland and The Grand Banks area, and we are just about at the same longitude of the location in which the HMS Titanic sank.  You’ll also notice, many miles off of to our port, the Hibernia Oil Field.

In consideration of the markers of interest just pointed out, and the fact that we’ve just cleared the New Foundland coast and are now at a spot where the warm waters of the Gulf Stream race eastward while the cold waters of the Labrador Sea flow southward, I imagine this to be a particularly scary stretch of ocean.

We are, virtually, at 48 degrees West, 46 degrees North.  This, oddly enough, is almost the exact location where Harbo and Samuelson reported coming into near contact with their first iceberg.  When I read about this is David Shaw’s book, ‘Daring the Sea’, this literally made the hair on my arms stand up.  About 330 more miles East is where Harbo and Samuelson experienced their big capsize where they lost most of their provisions and water, so we have that to look forward to this week!!

Concept2 World Rowing Challenge Boat Position Week 3

Here’s a video of Team OAR Northwest’s West to East fours race in 2006:

No responses yet

Mar 28 2010

ISAF Safety at Sea Seminar – Post Mortem

Mike and I attended an ISAF Safety at Sea Seminar at the US Naval Academy this weekend (March 27-28, 2010). It was a great event and we both learned a great deal about seamanship and boating safety. The speakers were exceptional, and the information provided was, for the most part, lucid and pertinent. One of my favorite presentations was made by Captain Matt Klunder, USNA Commandant, who admonished the importance of the sea throughout American history, and exhorted us to help expand appreciation for the sport of sailing and nautical sport in general.  As Americans, the sea is in our blood.

I also particularly enjoyed the talk presented by Gary Jobson as he provided a number of colorful, and somewhat scary, anecdotes from his heavy weather sailing experiences, particularly the 1979 FastNet race and his experiences on board Ted Turner’s vessel, Tenacious.

The in-the-pool demonstrations were enlightening in that we learned how difficult it is to get into a life raft with foul weather gear on. Moreover, life rafts are not comfortable – even in a calm swimming pool.

The Navy Midshipman did live man-over-board demonstrations in their 44 foot yachts and we got to see a live demo of a rescue at sea operation with a real Coast Guard helicopter!  The real-life demonstrations truly helped to interject a sense of reality to rescue at sea and the difficulty thereof.  Stuff happens!

Especially pertinent to our own objectives were the discussions on weather, heavy weather sailing and the Gulf Stream – the warm water current running South-to-North up the Eastern Seaboard. The information on warm and cold water eddies off of the Gulf Stream were tasty morsels of information. We want more!

More importantly, however, I think this weekend helped us to better understand just how much more we need to learn!

Education + Preparation = Success

Happily, Mike and I passed our ISAF Certification Tests so we are both eligible for international offshore sailing events now!

One response so far

Mar 11 2010

St. Patrick’s Day Required Attire

I’ve just setup the ‘Row The Pond’ online store in order to help raise some funds for this rowing project of ours. Wednesday, March 17th, 2010, is St. Patrick’s Day this year. Before next Wednesday arrives, however, you must get yourself a ‘Row The Pond’ St. Patrick’s Day T-Shirt from our online store. Look cool, impress your Irish friends while drinking a pint of Guinness, and support a worthy cause all in one purchase. Talk about a return on investment!



No responses yet

Mar 04 2010

TEAM NORTHERN ATLANTIC 2011 ATTEMPT WORLD RECORD ROW FOR CHARITY

This Sunday, March 7th, 2010, Mike and I are setting up an erg out at Gravelly Point Park in Arlington, just North of the Reagan National Airport, to do a 100,000 meter erg piece for charity. That’s right! We each owe the other 50,000 meters of continuous ergging, but we’ll take turns doing 10,000 meter pieces until we hit 100,000 meters. It’ll be great training for an ocean row, and we’re hoping to raise awareness, as well as some money, for our Charity, the Prostate Cancer Foundation in the process.

So take your bike out on the Mt. Vernon Trail to encourage an early arrival of Spring and stop by and say ‘hey’! I’m sure we’ll be the only two people at the end of the airport runway sitting on an erg :) Bring your family and friends too!

Please also consider giving some spare change to our charity, the Prostate Cancer Foundation. Make a donation on behalf of Team Northern Atlantic 2011 here: http://tinyurl.com/ydk979z.

The World Record Time for Tandem Heavyweight 40-49 year old men is 5:58:48.9. Two college women captured a World Record for their category last December with a time of 7 hours, 17 minutes and 56 seconds. Here’s a video clip of some news coverage of their success.

No responses yet

Feb 25 2010

And He’s Done It!!

Today Charlie Pitcher wins the Woodvale Atlantic Rowing Race of 2009! This is a very significant achievement as he’s finished ahead of all other boat classes in the racing fleet as a solo rower, which includes two- and four-person boat teams. It took him just over 52 days to complete his crossing. This is just an amazing achievement, and a really strong testament to the new boat design he was able to commission specifically for this race.

Team Northern Atlantic are equally excited about Charlie Pitcher’s performance as we are hoping to have a similarly designed boat built for our row across the Northern Atlantic next June. Our hope is that since Charlie Pitcher was able to row the Mid Atlantic Route in just over 52 days as a solo rower, with troublesome storms at the beginning of his race to boot, we stand a chance, if only a chance, at beating the 55 day, 114 year-old record over the Northern Route in a similarly designed pairs boat. That is, of course, unless Simon Chalk and Team Britannia III (a twelve-person boat) don’t claim the new speed record for themselves this June. In which case, I guess Mike and I will have to row all that much harder!!!

Here’s to the journey, men!

No responses yet

Feb 20 2010

Global Boat Works

Today we secured our first down payment on a new boat build with Global Boat Works in Devon, UK. If all goes well, they will start building our ocean rowing boat for us around May of this year. We are cautiously optimistic about having a new boat built as it is a time and energy consuming process, not to mention money consuming as well (hint, hint to potential title sponsors!). But it sure beats building a new, or renovating a used, boat ourselves! We realize it will probably be a difficult process, especially dealing with a boat builder overseas, but we believe the pain incurred now will pay dividends next year when we set off on our unassisted row across the Northern Atlantic from Battery Park, New York City to the Isles of Scilly. Jamie Fabrizio, the boat builder at Global Boatworks, comes highly recommended by all I’ve talked to in the Ocean Rowing Community. I’ve also seen some of his boats in person, like James Burge and Niall McCann’s ‘Komale’, at the Bristol Zoo, and Dave Clarke’s ‘Positive Outcomes’, in Macclesfield, and definitely understand the reason for the high praise he receives for his work. Moreover, Global Boat Works have also designed and built Charlie Pitcher’s solo boat, which is now less than 300 miles from Antigua in the Atlantic Rowing Race 2009, and who, incidentally, is leading the whole fleet by a healthy margin (especially given that he is rowing solo).

So today we begin a journey, in earnest, to make it into the history books by beating the 114 year old speed crossing record of 55 days set by Harbo and Samuelson in 1896. It’s crazy. We are undoubtedly in over our heads and probably more than just a little bit naieve about most aspects of this challenge. Nevertheless, it’s serendipity, if not synchronicity, that we find ourselves at this point in time with this crazy notion of rowing across an ocean to chase Harbo and Samuelson’s 55 day crossing record. And personally, just like in rowing an ocean, I’ve had head winds and some gales to contend with prior to getting some good forward momentum on this project. But now, at least for now, it feels like a wind is starting to build and blow us forward a bit. Steady as she goes!


The Global Boat Works Team

The Global Boat Works Team


No responses yet

Feb 05 2010

Charlie Pitcher’s Solo Boat

Charlie Pitcher is one of the solo rowers in the Atlantic Rowing Race 2009, which is currently taking place.  He is rowing in the Open Category in a one-off boat design, which seems to be extremely performant for this type of race.  If you notice in the video below, this new design puts a rather bulbous cabin in the bow of the boat, whereas in traditional ocean rowing boat designs, the cabin is in the stern.  This bulbous bow cabin, in addition to the low stern, allows the cabin to serve as a sail of sorts facilitating forward movement when the wind is blowing in the right direction.  She’s a beautiful boat, and I find the design, as well as how she’s performing in this year’s race, fascinating!

No responses yet

Jan 12 2010

‘Insure & Go’ Just Keeps On Going!

Is anyone else following the Atlantic Rowing Race ’09 as amazed as I am that solo rower, Charlie Pitcher, is leading the fleet after the first week at sea?

http://www.atlanticrowingrace09.com/progress/

Something tells me that the future of ocean rowing boat design is about to drastically change.

No responses yet

Jan 03 2010

Katie Spotz Underway

According to Katie Spotz’s twitter feed, she is now approximately 8 hours into her row across the Atlantic, from Dakar to French Guiana.  Her latest ‘tweeted’ position is just off the Senagalese Coast; approximately 11nm from Dakar and it took her roughly 8 hours to go that distance.  Sounds about right.  Very inspiring.  Glad there are Americans out there willing to take up an Ocean Rowing Challenge.

No responses yet

Next »