Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

6 Men Become 1st To Cross Perilous Drake Passage Unassisted

The Canadian Press, 30 Dec, 2019 09:54 PM

    LOS ANGELES - As freezing water thrashed their rowboat in some of the most treacherous waters in the world, six men fought for 13 days to make history, becoming the first people to traverse the infamous Drake Passage with nothing other than sheer manpower.

     

    They dodged icebergs, held their breaths as giant whales breached near their small boat and rode building-sized waves while rowing 24 hours a day toward Antarctica.

     

    The team of men from four countries finished crossing the Drake Passage on Wednesday in just under two weeks after pushing off from the southern tip of South America.

     

    “This is a really big deal in Antarctic history to hear about this,” said Wayne Ranney, a Flagstaff, Arizona-based geologist who has led expeditions to Antarctica and crossed the Drake Passage in motorized vessels more than 50 times. “One hundred per cent of their progress was done with those 12 arms for 600 (nautical) miles. That’s just phenomenal. I can’t even imagine.”

     

    Besides the threat to their lives, the men laboured under grueling conditions. Their 29-foot (9-meter) rowboat, named the Ohana, had to be in constant motion to avoid capsizing. That meant three men would row for 90 minutes while the other three rested, still cold and wet.

     

    “You’re rowing inside an open hold, 40-foot sea waves are splashing in your face, near-freezing water is splashing over the bow,” said 34-year-old Colin O'Brady of Jackson Hole, Wyoming, one of the six men on the boat.

     

    “It was quite harrowing," O'Brady told The Associated Press on Thursday in his first interview after the journey. “By the end, we all lost a good amount of weight and were delirious from the sleep deprivation."

     

    The men had to use a bucket to go to the bathroom. To rest, two men needed to lie shoulder to shoulder in a tiny space while a third would lay in a fetal position in an even smaller area.

     

    “You’re curled up and jammed into a small space, trying to get a few winks of sleep before the alarm would go off and boom, you’re back at it again,” O’Brady said.

     

    The toughest part for O'Brady's fellow rower, Jamie Douglas-Hamilton of Edinburgh, Scotland, was the constant bombardment from the elements.

     

    “We were hit by winds from every single direction ... and the seas down here are very violent — it's the roughest ocean in the world,” the 38-year-old said. “We almost capsized many times, and the problem with that is the water is so cold that if you go in, you've probably got two to five minutes.”

     

    Physically, Douglas-Hamilton said he fought crippling seasickness and numb hands and feet. At one point, a strap he had to wear around his ankles while rowing wore through his boots and cut into his skin all the way to the bone.

     

    “It was absolute agony,” Douglas-Hamilton said.

     

    The other men on the expedition were: Fiann Paul of Reykjavik, Iceland; Cameron Bellamy of Cape Town, South Africa; Andrew Towne of Grand Forks, North Dakota; and John Petersen of Oakland, California.

     

    Paul, Douglas-Hamilton and Bellamy are record-breaking ocean rowers, Towne is a championship rower and has climbed the tallest mountain on every continent, and Petersen was a championship college rower.

     

    In addition to storms and waves, the men dodged icebergs and whales that could easily have destroyed their small vessel. And then there were the mental challenges, especially during the night shift.

     

    “At night we can’t see the waves as they roll and crash into us and we can't see the horizon so there is no sense of progress," O’Brady wrote on Instagram as he documented the journey. “It feels like being inside of a washing machine, blindfolded where time is standing still."

     

    Discovery documented the journey while following the men in a larger, motorized boat.

     

    O’Brady’s wife, Jenna Besaw, was on the Discovery boat running logistics and watching her husband’s death-defying adventure.

     

    “There have been some frightening, intense moments when our boat — a 120-foot-long boat — was lurching forward and up and over these massive waves, to see the rowboat hidden for minutes at a time was rather unnerving,” Besaw said.

     

    The row across the Drake Passage is just the latest adventure for O’Brady, who became the first person to traverse Antarctica alone without help last year.

     

    A book about that journey is coming out on Jan. 14, 12 years to the day since O’Brady was severely burned in a fire in Thailand. After the fire, he said he was told he would never walk again.

     

    He said that prognosis has helped fuel each new adventure.

     

    “I am dreaming of what’s next,” O’Brady said. “To be determined, but I don’t think my expedition life is over.”

     

    For Douglas-Hamilton, the journey across the Drake Passage might be his last time setting a record, and he's content with that.

     

    “I would rank this as the toughest challenge any of us has ever done,” he said. “This was such a good one, I'd be happy leaving it at this. The memories from this one will last forever.”

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Conservatives Postpone Policy Convention To Focus On Organizing Leadership Race

    OTTAWA - The federal Conservatives say they're postponing a policy convention that had been scheduled for mid-April to allow more time to organize an upcoming leadership race.    

    Conservatives Postpone Policy Convention To Focus On Organizing Leadership Race

    Feds Won't Let Resistant Premiers Scuttle Municipal Handgun Bans: PM Trudeau

    OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he won't let resistance from unwilling premiers scuttle the plans of municipalities that want to ban handguns.    

    Feds Won't Let Resistant Premiers Scuttle Municipal Handgun Bans: PM Trudeau

    Prince Harry, Meghan And Archie In Canada For The Holidays

    Prince Harry, Meghan And Archie In Canada For The Holidays
    TORONTO - If you're out and about in Canada this holiday season and happen to spot a couple with a young boy that look remarkably like Prince Harry, his wife Meghan and their son Archie, your eyes may not be deceiving you.

    Prince Harry, Meghan And Archie In Canada For The Holidays

    Closure Of Bus Depots On Vancouver Island Part Of Industry-Wide Struggle: CEO

    Closure Of Bus Depots On Vancouver Island Part Of Industry-Wide Struggle: CEO
    Maryanne Titian, 69, says she and her husband John both have diabetes, and he is also waiting on a kidney transplant while she has suffered mild heart attacks.    

    Closure Of Bus Depots On Vancouver Island Part Of Industry-Wide Struggle: CEO

    Internet-Based 911 Calling On The Horizon; Aim Is To Enhance Response

    Internet-Based 911 Calling On The Horizon; Aim Is To Enhance Response
    TORONTO - Emergency services will have to soon ensure they can pinpoint the location of people calling 911 for help on their cellphones.

    Internet-Based 911 Calling On The Horizon; Aim Is To Enhance Response

    27 New Affordable Rental Homes Open In Nanaimo

    27 New Affordable Rental Homes Open In Nanaimo
    Twenty-seven new affordable homes are now available for moderate- to middle-income families and individuals with the opening of a new rental apartment building in Nanaimo.    

    27 New Affordable Rental Homes Open In Nanaimo