The Phnom Penh Post

Disabled marine to attempt Atlantic solo challenge

-

A FORMER British marine on Tuesday launched his attempt to become the first physically disabled person to row solo and unsupporte­d across the Atlantic from mainland Europe to South America.

Onlookers applauded as Lee Spencer, 49, set of f on his tiny boat from Gibra lta r’s mari na to t he neig hbouring town in southern Spain of La Linea de la Concepcion, where it was loaded onto a trailer and driven overland to Portuga l.

He had originally hoped to leave from Gibraltar, his base for preparing for the voyage, but strong tides and adverse weather in the Strait of Gibraltar have forced him to switch his departure point to Portimao, in southern Portugal. He plans to officially embark on his voyage from there on Wednesday morning.

“I’m nervous, apprehensi­ve, excited. All of the above, really in buckets,” Spencer told reporters before heading off to La Linea.

The very first record set for a physically disabled solo ocean rower was in 2004, when Stuart Boreham left from Spain’s Canary Islands and reached Barbados 109 days, 12 hours and nine minutes later.

But he is aiming to make landfall in Cayenne in French Guyana in less than 70 days and is carrying only 90 days’ worth of food for the 5,600km journey on his specially-designed ocean rowing boat called Hope.

If he succeeds, he will also smash the able-bodied record for a solo Atlantic crossing between mainland Europe and South America.

Spencer served 24 years as a Royal Marine commando and completed three operationa­l tours of Afghanista­n, returning to Britain unscathed only to lose his right leg below the knee in 2014 after being hit by flying debris while helping a motorway crash victim.

He hopes his journey will challenge perception­s of disability as well as raise money for the Royal Marines Charity and the Endeavour Fund, which support the recover y of wounded, injured and sick British military personnel.

“If a disabled man can go out and smash an able bodied record in something as physical as rowing then that is a massive statement. That is what it is all about,” Spencer said.

It will actually be his second time rowing across the Atlantic, having crossed it in 2016 as a part of a fourman team of injured soldiers who had just three legs between them.

‘Quite difficult’

Spencer solo will row along the African coastline before heading out past the Cape Verde islands and into the Atlantic bound for Venezuela aided by currents and trade winds.

His self-righting boat is fitted with a solar-powered chart plotter and VHF radio to enable communicat­ion with passing ships, but once he leaves Portugal Spencer will be on his own.

He will spend most of his time on deck, rowing in two-hour intervals and using breaks in between to carry out maintenanc­e, eat, sleep, make drinking water and update his blog.

“There’s going to be times where I’m going to have to row through the night, I’ve got no choice, and that’s going to be quite difficult,” he said of his routine.

The first able-bodied person to row across the Atlantic solo from mainland Europe to South America was Stein Hoff, who made the voyage from Portugal to Guyana in 2002 and holds the current record at 96 days, 12 hours and 45 minutes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia