Yorkshire Post

OFF TO SEA FOR MUM AND ME

York nurse Eve Ashforth is leaving behind the emergency room for an around-the-world yacht adventure that her mother has dreamed of. Laura Drysdale reports.

- ■ Email: laura.drysdale@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @YP_LauraD

WHEN A&E nurse Eve Ashforth embarks on a near year-long adventure racing a yacht around the world, she will fulfil a dream of her mother, Diane, from almost three decades ago.

It was she who mentioned the Clipper Race to her daughter in passing in October last year, a suggestion that appealed to Eve’s adventurou­s spirit.

“She said it on a whim,” says Eve, who knew little-to-nothing about the race. “I’m quite a spontaneou­s person. She went to bed and I went and looked on the website and just applied for it there and then.

“The next day I told mum ‘this is what I’ve done’. I’m quite spontaneou­s and I think if the opportunit­y appears, I will just go for it.”

“She know that I am adventurou­s and love testing my limits,” explains Eve, who was going through a period of feeling low at the time. “She knows me very well and knows if I have something to work towards, I will do that.”

Nearly 30 years ago, Diane had wanted to take on the challenge herself but was unable to fulfil her dream when she found out she was pregnant with Eve. “For me, I am in a better position at the minute,” says 28-yearold Eve. “I am doing it for both of us. It will be a great thing for us both.”

A desire to try new things and grasp opportunit­ies is something the pair have in common. “She’s quite spontaneou­s as well. She has always been that kind of person that’s not afraid to take risks and I feel like I have grown up with her doing that... It is something that I have carried with me throughout my life.

“It’s quite a nice thing, really, something that connects us together is this not being worried about taking risks because perhaps opportunit­ies are much greater.”

Eve, who lives in York, spent the first 10 years of her life in Canada, amongst nature and wilderness, before moving across to England.

For as long as she can remember, she says her family has been drawn to the ocean and, earlier in her twenties, she spent three months living on a beach in Mexico, as she learnt to scuba dive to monitor coral and fish species.

“I have always been that kind of person that wants to try new things and have new experience­s and skills.”

Next summer, Eve will begin the 40,000 nautical mile endurance challenge, facing some of mother nature’s toughest and remote conditions, as the 2019-20 Clipper Race gets underway.

Dubbed the only event of its kind for amateur sailors, around 40 per cent of the crew are usually novices and anyone from the age of 18, regardless of experience can apply to take part.

“People who have never sailed before can get involved with something as amazing as this and I just felt like I had to go for it,” she says. She had never set foot on a yacht before signing up. “It encompasse­s the ocean and that is something that I absolutely love. Why not test the limits of your own capabiliti­es?”

Clipper Race participan­ts are split into 11 teams competing against each other on the world’s largest matched fleet of 70ft ocean racing yachts. They can choose to take on the full circumnavi­gation or compete in one or more individual legs.

During the last edition of the race, those on board battled 14m-high waves, hurricane-force winds, boat speeds of up to 35 knots – the equivalent of 40mph – extreme heat and freezing conditions. Despite the challenges and, in her words, “the huge element of danger”, Eve is determined to go the whole way.

“I couldn’t choose [a section of the route] for one. I felt like it was the right point of my life to go for it and do this crazy adventure. I wouldn’t want to regret anything. I want to try and do the whole thing because that’s the kind of person I am – all or nothing.”

The route will take competitor­s from the UK down to South America, across to South Africa, onto Australia then up to China, across the Pacific to Western USA, down to Panama and then back across the Atlantic.

“Hopefully I will get all the way around,” says Eve. She is looking forward to the thrill of being out on the ocean and meeting people from all over the world.

“There’s always that risk of danger with a race like this but I am not really that frightened about that. I have got it in my head that I am going to complete the race because it is the kind of person I am. I don’t do things by half. I am very resilient.”

Since securing her place in the race, just weeks after she applied, Eve has taken part in two gruelling levels of Clipper training – and has two more to go. “Considerin­g I have never sailed before, level one was a huge shock,” she says. “Excuse the pun but it was literally like being thrown in the deep end. I am hugely surprised about how much I have learnt in such a short space of time but it is definitely not without its challenges.”

“On a side note,” she jokes, “I have been surprised at how well I can sleep at a 45-degree angle and also how many different types of pasta dishes it’s possible to create with only five ingredient­s.”

She has now learnt about the different parts of the boat and how to race a yacht, as well as being introduced to the watch system – though shift patterns are already the norm for Eve, who is an A&E nurse with York Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. “It’s difficult,” she says, reflecting on her role. “It is not without its challenges but it is also not without its rewards as well. That’s the highs and lows I think I look for throughout life.”

It is the teamwork that she enjoys about A&E especially, and she will certainly need to work collaborat­ively during her time at sea.

“I think it will be a huge amount of fun, but I think it will be the hardest thing I have ever done in my life, without a doubt. I don’t think that is necessaril­y because all we are seeing is ocean. I think it is more about the teamwork dynamic on board.

“I think being in such a confined space and not being able to get off could cause a few issues, but it is how you deal with that stuff and I like to think I am quite good at managing difficult situations with my job.”

Eve will have little contact with her family and friends, including her mother Diane and father Paul, once the race begins. “I think it will be hard. I think it will be really hard, especially at the beginning when everything is quite new and the realisatio­n of what’s actually going to happen is dawning on you. But my family have always been very accepting with allowing me to go and do various crazy things and not having too much contact.”

Despite the distance, members of her family are hoping to meet her halfway round in Australia to offer their support. “[Mum’s] really proud. I think she’s also really terrified for me. I’m not, but I think it is things like hurricane situations that she’s heard of. She is immensely proud, though... I feel like I am taking this opportunit­y for both of us.”

I have always been that kind of person that wants to try new things and have new experience­s and skills. I just felt I had to go for it. Why not test the limits of your own capabiliti­es? Eve Ashforth, 28, who is taking part in the 2019-20 Clipper Race.

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 ?? PICTURES: MATTHEW DICKENS, IMAGECOMMS, CLIPPERROU­NDTHEWORLD.COM ?? IN TRAINING: Eve Ashforth gets to grips with sailing on the ocean as part of a team before the Clipper Race.
PICTURES: MATTHEW DICKENS, IMAGECOMMS, CLIPPERROU­NDTHEWORLD.COM IN TRAINING: Eve Ashforth gets to grips with sailing on the ocean as part of a team before the Clipper Race.
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