Nelson Mail

Growing in the wind on an epic odyssey

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in the Whitsunday­s. After this came the opportunit­y to sail with a group of friends, and ‘‘it just sort of fell into place from there’’.

‘‘I knew I liked sailing and I knew I wanted to do something with sailing, but didn’t know you could turn it into a career or that you could turn it into these amazing global adventures.’’

She knew she would have to get some experience, and be able to fix a boat, the engine and the mast and rigging. So she started hunting for opportunit­ies.

She discovered the Clipper race, 40,000 nautical miles (74,000km) and 12 months at sea. ‘‘I signed up with $20 in my account and 12 months to raise $80,000.

Blair then put a campaign together to compete in the transTasma­n yacht race as her first solo experience. She says those trips taught her a lot.

‘‘I had to ask myself how would I cope on my own, and I learned that sailing 2500 miles to New Zealand and back.’’

In January, she set out from Albany in Western Australia on a latitude of 45 degrees south. From the start, the conditions were cold, wet and rough. The waves averaged 10m high. Most of the storms would give her 8m to 10m swells and 50-knot (92kmh) winds.

‘‘The Southern Ocean is dangerous, terrifying and beautiful, but so remote. And it’s this incredible place that you get to see something that a very small percentage of people ever get to see.

‘‘I don’t think anyone could sail the Southern Ocean and not be terrified.’’

For the first three quarters of the trip, Blair was sailing in summer, nothing dramatic had happened, and she was happy with the boat and comfortabl­e. But on rounding Cape Horn, she hit a storm that snapped her mast in the middle of the night.

She spent four hours trying to cut the mast free. She was 1000 nautical miles (1850km) from land and 600 miles (1110km) from the nearest ship. Rescue was not an option.

She jury-rigged a sail using her boom and limped to South Africa, where she spent the next two months getting the boat fixed. By then, it was winter – and, as she puts it, no-one sails in the Southern Ocean in winter. ‘‘It’s just a little bonkers.’’

Blair looked at the forecast and made her own assessment. The swell was going to be bigger, but the wind in the storms was going to be pretty much the same. But it was going to be a whole lot colder, and would mean sailing through the centre of storms rather than travelling with them.

‘‘I got my arse handed to me several times,’’ she says. ‘‘I got knocked down 170 degrees.

‘‘There were numerous times during that phase where I almost quit, where I felt it was too much, where I felt that next wave would be the one that did me in.’’

But on July 25, she sailed into Albany and the record books.

She describes the next trip, circumnavi­gating Australia, as a different challenge but potentiall­y more dangerous than Antarctica.

Part of the thrust of her next trip is to carry an environmen­tal message. And to drive the point home, she is asking people to send her Post-it Note messages of environmen­tal action they’re taking, which will be wrapped around the hull.

‘‘The idea is to show that as individual­s, we have the power to create change.’’

Lisa Blair is speaking at the Tasman Bay Cruising Club on May 14 at 6.45pm. $20 on the door. For more informatio­n on Lisa’s speaking engagement­s or how to donate, visit her website www.LisaBlairS­ailstheWor­ld.com or Facebook events page: https:/ /www.facebook.com/pg/ LisaBlairS­ailstheWor­ld/events/? ref=page_internal

 ?? LISA BLAIR ?? Lisa Blair is coming to Nelson on May 14 to talk about her epic solo voyage around Antarctica and to promote her next adventure, a solo voyage around Australia.
LISA BLAIR Lisa Blair is coming to Nelson on May 14 to talk about her epic solo voyage around Antarctica and to promote her next adventure, a solo voyage around Australia.

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