The Oban Times

Adventurer embarks on new bid to row the North Atlantic

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ISLAND adventurer Niall Iain Macdonald has embarked on a new attempt to row solo across the North Atlantic Ocean from the east coast of America to his home in the Hebrides.

Niall Iain, 44, left Norfolk, Virginia, at 6am on Wednesday May 23 local time. He hopes to complete his 3,400-mile rowing challenge in three to four months and will be rowing for 12 hours a day, every day, on a two-hour on/off rotation.

Niall Iain signalled the start of his challenge with a simple post on Twitter and Facebook – ‘How long should you try? Until. 36°55 17 N 76°11 19 W’.

This is a third attempt at the North Atlantic row – previously named NY2SY as he planned to go from New York to Stornoway – for freelance broadcaste­r Niall Iain. His first attempt in 2014 ended when he suffered a bad accident on board just nine days into it.

He always knew he would make another attempt, saying: ‘I remember when we went back out to get the boat in 2014, on that day we found her. When I saw the boat on its own in the ocean, I felt “I should be on it” – and I knew that I was going to try again.’

However, the time was not right for a second attempt until last year. He then spent six weeks in New York on standby to start, waiting for a weather window, but it never came due to a series of low pressure systems.

He returned again to New York in late April this year and spent another two weeks on standby until making the decision, at the end of last week, to move further down the US coast to take advantage of better weather conditions.

He moved his boat from Liberty Landing Marina in Manhattan and she went back in the water at Cobb’s Marina on Little Creek, Norfolk, on Tuesday.

Niall Iain, who lives on the Isle of Lewis and was born in Inverness, is undertakin­g NY2SY to raise at least £100,000 for the Scottish Associatio­n for Mental Health (SAMH) and to raise awareness of mental health issues in general, having had his own struggles.

Although he will be rowing solo, Niall Iain has a shorebased support team – led by Leven Brown, who is his weather router and was instrument­al in the decision to move the start point because of the unfavourab­le conditions in New York.

Speaking just before he left Norfolk, Niall Iain said: ‘There has been a lot of interest in the boat and my challenge and lots of offers of help from other boat owners in the marina.

‘I was a bit nervous about coming down to Norfolk as it was a bit of a gamble, but one that we – Leven and I – felt was worth taking.

‘By heading 300 miles further south I am giving myself a much better chance of getting the sustained conditions that I need to get started. I hope to catch the shoulder of the Azores high pressure system and take advantage of the SW winds in this area to make good progress out into the ocean.

‘Naturall y, it is disappoint­ing that I will not be leaving New York as I have always intended to do but I know that this is the right move if I am going to get the chance to row across the North Atlantic. When I think about it, I have already rowed out of New York, under the Verrazano Bridge and out into the ocean, back in 2014 when I first attempted NY2SY.

‘This is just another unexpected chapter in the whole NY2SY story and I very much hope it’s the start of a successful adventure.’

Niall Iain added: ‘I feel calm and I feel excited. I still have the same clammy hands and fear when I really think about it and I’m not getting ahead of myself, but taking each day as it comes. I’m as scared as I was the first time I attempted it, but I know it is possible. I know that I’ve trained hard and properly for what lies ahead and I’m really excited.’

Niall Iain’s boat – a 24ft ocean rower – has been renamed ALBA. She has been kept in storage in New York since 2014 and is now packed with four months of rations and 140 litres of fresh water ballast, in case the desalinati­on water-maker fails.

But how does one prepare mentally for this kind of undertakin­g?

‘I heard someone say, “don’t think cumulative­ly” – it just

comes back to that moment and you’ll feel differentl­y in a couple of hours.

‘Mark Beaumont said, “just keep moving – even if you’re just moving at 1mph” and it’s taken me a while to realise that I’ll probably want to give up every day. A lot of people think you can’t give up at all, but you can give up – you’ve just got to pick yourself up again and keep going.

‘It’s taken a lot of work. It hasn’t fallen in my lap, but I’m very lucky to get the chance to do such an adventure and I need to remember that and enjoy the experience.’

He stressed: ‘The main motivation for NY2SY solo North Atlantic row is to raise at least £100,000 for SAMH and also hopefully this will encourage people to seek help or find out more about mental health issues. There may be people who are suffering themselves or people who want to have a better understand­ing of what their loved ones are going through.

‘Any donations are very welcome. I’m going to be struggling out there at times. What will be driving me forward is knowing that there will be people back here who’ll be supporting me and also the wider issue of SAMH.’

He added: ‘It’s because of my own back story and where I’ve been before. Clinical depression does not discrimina­te. It affects people with great lives, too. Depression is still an elephant in the room. And it is something we should talk about.’

Niall Iain had undertaken a number of adventures in the past but it was his experience of rowing The Minch, between Stornoway and Ullapool, in 2008 that really sparked his imaginatio­n.

‘I knew that I wanted to do something a little bit bigger. I found out about ocean rowing, I researched lots of different routes and for some reason NY2SY seemed to stick in my head.’

He admitted the end of his 2014 bid had been ‘hugely disappoint­ing’, adding: ‘It took a long time to get over that, physically and also mentally, but I also knew I would go back out and try again, for all the reasons that I tried it the first time, which is as a personal challenge but also to raise funds for SAMH, and to raise awareness of mental health issues as well.

‘Everyone has an ocean to cross. Everyone has a challenge put in front of them. They can tackle it – it takes time – but it’s really to show that there is a way over to the other side.’

The Scottish Associatio­n for Mental Health is a charity working across Scotland. For more informatio­n, visit www. samh.org.uk or follow @SAMHtweets on Twitter for more informatio­n.

Donations can be made via Niall Iain’s JustGiving page at www.justgiving.com/NY2SY. The main website address for the challenge is http://www. NY2SY.co.uk and there is a tracker there, at www.ny2sy. co.uk/track-my-progress.

Niall Iain will be keeping people informed by blogging about his experience­s at blog. mailasail.com/ny2sy and posting updates on his Twitter and Facebook pages.

Find him on Facebook at facebook.com/NY2SYsolo and on Twitter as @ NY2SYsolo. Useful hashtags are #NY2SY and #SAMH

I’m very lucky to get the chance to do such an adventure Niall Iain Macdonald

 ??  ?? Niall Iain prepares for his mammoth rowing challenge and, below, sets off.
Niall Iain prepares for his mammoth rowing challenge and, below, sets off.
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