The Scotsman

Coastguard­s help Scots rower on his charity voyage

US officers fix broken rudder and help Macdonald on his way

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

A man rowing solo across the Atlantic has thanked coastguard­s who fixed his broken rudder after he thought he would be forced to abandon the expedition.

Niall Iain Macdonald set off from Cobb’s Marina in Norfolk, Virginia in the US on May 23 in a bid to row about 3,400 miles across the North Atlantic to his home in Stornoway on the Isle of Lewis.

However on Monday night his rudder broke in heavy weather and he feared he would have to abandon his NY2SY challenge, as he had been forced to in 2014, when he suffered a back injury days into his first bid to row across the Atlantic.

Mr Macdonald, 44, rang UK coastguard­s who contacted their US counterpar­ts, and settled down to wait in his position about 500 miles off the Virginia coast, fearing the worst.

Describing the wait on his blog, Back on course, he wrote: “After that, I basically went into a meltdown as I thought that I would have to abandon the row, and my boat, again.

“Disbelief, shock, sadness. I managed to get my head together for a while and began packing some dry bags with various things that could be salvaged from the boat.

“I then just sat and waited for the Coastguard to appear.”

However, when US Coastguard cutter Diligence arrived on Wednesday the crew told him they should be able to fix the rudder and took him on board, where they carried out repairs in their engineerin­g room. They then returned him to his boat, Alba, and fixed the rudder back in place.

Mr Macdonald, a Gaelic broadcaste­r, said the coastguard­s saved his row and expressed his gratitude to them.

He wrote: “I cannot find the words to express my gratitude tothecrewo­fuscgcdili­gence for all they did. I was treated so well onboard and there were never any questions like ‘what are you doing out here’ or any judgments.

“All they ever asked was ‘how can we help?’, ‘is there anything else that you need?’. A few hours earlier I had resigned myself to the fact that, once again, I would be returning home months earlier than planned and without my boat. Now, I am able to continue with my row and that is down to the hard work, ingenuity, persistenc­e and profession­alism of the crew of USCG Diligence. Thank you so much.”

Mr Macdonald is now continuing his row and hopes to arrive in Stornoway in September.

The US Coastguard said they were delighted to help.

newsdeskts@scotsman.com

 ?? PICTURE: PA ?? Niall Iain Macdonald thanks members of the US Coastguard
PICTURE: PA Niall Iain Macdonald thanks members of the US Coastguard

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