No One Died

No one died. And yet, that time immediately after rejecting Steal Away felt like mourning.

During the survey, I spent the better part of five days discovering, thinking and planning aboard my new craft. I would eat here; I would sleep there; tools on that shelf. A dash to the mast for a reef would start by a grab at the rail here, my right foot there. Sit here to grind in the jib; there to adjust the main sheet. I’d begun to learn the boat and in so doing had grown attached. Vessel in hand, my imagination shifted; my mind moved to the Figure 8 course, wind, spray, an Albatross, that infinite undulation called ocean.

With the purchase, the project would finally manifest, the idea would have bones made of steel to hold its beating heart and onto which I could form the flesh. Now, and at last, there would be things that needed doing. Amen!

Without the purchase, all reverted again to the abstract, the hypothetical—pretty pictures and imperfectly rendered thoughts free floating in the Cloud.

Then my wife pointed to the tally of readers and friends who shared my disappointment. The sum came to exactly zero, the refrain, “wait for the right boat.”

The right boat! What on earth is that? Slocum did not choose Spray for her perfections; rather, she was free and could do the job. Likewise, Matt Rutherford’s St. Brendan, nearly as ancient as he and not much bigger, was all he could afford. At some point, said Phil Hogg in one of his emails, it’s more about the man than the boat.

In my ear Sir Ernest Shackleton’s whisper, “Go. Go now. To wait risks failure.”

414-KP54VWL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_

An excellent read.

Lately I have been reading Roland Huntford’s biography of Ernest Shackleton and have been amazed to discover that Sir Ernest, this intensely driven man of action, a hero by many measures and a giant among polar explorers, had a rather intuitive and haphazard approach to planning. For example, he never learned to ski, though Nansen and others had already demonstrated skiing’s advantages over traveling ice and snow on foot. Scott’s party, of which Shackleton was a member, made its first attempt at the South Pole with skis; that is, they carried them tied to the sledges that they man-hauled, and one could argue that Shackleton’s inept use of these skis on the long return—when he was ill, feeble and unable to walk—saved his life. Yet he did not incorporate skiing into either of his polar expeditions, a decision that probably cost him the prize.

Just so, dogs. Eskimo’s had been speeding over northern wastes with dog teams almost since the time of the first freeze, and Scott had sledge dogs in company, but none of the party knew how to drive them. Shackleton’s try at managing a dog team was a dismal failure and convinced him that dogs were not a polar solution. Instead Shackleton chose ponies, thinly furred, pointy-hooved animals, to pull the sledges on his first expedition, and the antarctic cold and crevices simply gobbled them up.

Shak and amund

Roald Amundsen and Sir Ernest Shackleton, 1888.

In stark contrast is Shackleton’s peer and competitor, Roald Amundsen, who studied the science of high latitude travel from a young age, poured immense amounts of energy into planning, and who bettered, with skis and dogs, Shackleton’s best, heroic efforts with an easy and dull efficiency.

So, when Sir Ernest swears to me that action is everything, I will quote him back with this:

“The … secret of [Roald Amundsen’s] success … was that … he acquired knowledge … and then bought his ship, instead of doing what most … explorers had done, bought the ship first and then acquired the requisite information.” (Shackleton, Roland Huntford, P. 159.)

Finding the right boat—that is, clearly defining scope, working through, in advance, the problems surely to be encountered, imagining every conceivable contingency—is at least as creative a part of this project as that which is to come.

5 Comments on “No One Died

  1. Two challenging Figure-8 areas are both at the opposite pole extremes – around Antarctica and through the Arctic Northwest Passage. When you reach the end of your strength and skills its time to fall back on your wise vessel choice… its your due diligence preparation that will see you through to your destination. I’m glad you selected a steel hull…couldn’t agree more… I’d want about 100+ hp main engine with a large prop to generate good thrust when you need it most while navigating through Arctic ice conditions… and don’t forget a large fuel tankage in reserve in case you need to motor to make it through a given geographic road block or stay ahead of forecast storm weather… and the list goes on but in the final analysis they are your tools if you know how to use them to your advantage…. otherwise they are just more things to maintain or fix… bottom line… after watching some hundred vessels challenge the Northwest Passage I’m convinced that preparation is the single most important item which will have the greatest effect on your success… so take your time and prepare well with specific equipment, broad local route knowledge and remember to enlist shore support staff… the time you spend preparing will be rewarded a hundred-fold in the final analysis… smooth seas!

    • Thanks for the encouragement, Doug. Yes, to me one of the most challenging, and interesting, aspects to this early planning exercise is that the two, high latitude extremes (the southern ocean and the Northwest Passage) have such different demands. A boat that is well suited for the NWP is not necessarily at all suitable for the south, and vice versa.

  2. Hi Randall, Good stuff all, hang in there with the search. I wanted to know if it is alright with you to use your review for sale purposes. I am going to put “Burning Daylight” on the market in the Spring. Keep that eye for detail open brother, best of luck. Regards, Vince

    • Hey Vince,

      Greetings. Hope all’s well with “Burning Light.” Yes, feel free to use my comments.

      Best of luck,

      RR

      • Cheers Randall…thanks for your help. An early Spring (and poor snowfall) in the PNW gave me a chance to get on the boat and out of the backcountry! Best Regards

Leave a Reply to Randall Cancel reply