Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Derek Hatfield, Canadian Who Sailed Around The World Twice, Dead At 63

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Aug, 2016 12:16 PM
    A Canadian sailor celebrated for two solo voyages around the world and years of passionate charitable work has reportedly died.
     
    Derek Hatfield, who in 2003 became the 126th person to sail around the globe alone, died at the age of 63, his wife, Patianne Verburgh, confirmed to CBC.
     
    In a statement, friend and fellow sailor Eric Holden told The Canadian Press that Hatfield "was an inspiration to follow one's dreams and not be deterred despite what seemed insurmountable challenges."
     
    "He achieved what many sailors only dream of, in a world that many Canadians are unaware even exists," Holden said.
     
    Hatfield, a native of Newcastle, N.B., set off from Newport, R.I., on the Around Alone race in September 2002.
     
    Piloting the "Spirit of Canada," a 12-metre sailboat he built with friends and family, Hatfield sailed 28,700 nautical miles in nine months to achieve his goal of cirvumnativating the globe.    
     
    The journey was not an easy one.
     
    In early March 2003, as he rounded Cape Horn off the southern tip of South America, Hatifeld's boat was flipped several times by hurricane-force winds and massive waves.
     
    ''I didn't have any time to think. I was just trying to survive. I was going on pure adrenaline,'' Hatfield told The Canadian Press at the time.
     
    With his mast snapped into three pieces, Hatfield piloted the Spirit of Canada for 30 hours before reaching shore in Ushuaia, Argentina.  
     
    It took him nearly a month to repair the boat, but Hatfield stayed in the race and on May 31, 2003, he pulled back into Newport, finishing tenth overall and first in his class.
     
    Hatfield completed the around-the-world solo race again a second time in 2011. 
     
    That same year, Hatfield began working with the Broad Reach Foundation for Youth Leaders, a Toronto-based charity that teaches at-risk youth to sail.
     
    As an honorary director of the board, Hatfield worked passionately to promote the sailing program, said Marguerite Pyron, executive director of the charity, in an interview Monday. 
     
    "He would meet with potential supporters and talk about the value of developing confidence in youth who normally have very little opportunities accessing this type of activity," Pyron said.
     
    "Derek and us were (sending) a message to close that gap and, so to speak, democratize access to the sport."
     
    Pyron described Hatfield as a kind, unpretentious man who dreamed of exploring new places.
     
    "He was warm, he was genuine. He had an open heart," she said.
     
    Hatfield graduated from Toronto's York University with a degree in Administrative Studies before joining the RCMP in 1971. In 1986, Hatfield was hired by the Toronto Stock Exchange to manage a team of auditors.
     
    At the time of his death, Hatfield lived in Nova Scotia.
     
    Calls by Canadian Press to his family were not immediately returned.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Back Down From Charging Welfare Recipients Methadone Fee In Face Of Lawsuit

    B.C. Back Down From Charging Welfare Recipients Methadone Fee In Face Of Lawsuit
    VANCOUVER — Faced with a potential class-action lawsuit, the British Columbia government has ended its practice of deducting money from the welfare cheques of recovering addicts receiving treatment from private methadone-dispensing clinics.

    B.C. Back Down From Charging Welfare Recipients Methadone Fee In Face Of Lawsuit

    Overcrowding Not An Issue At Burnaby Youth Jail Where Inmates Rioted: Province

      The Burnaby Youth Secure Custody Centre's director of programs says in a statement issued by the Children's Ministry the facility is fully staffed and only at about half capacity with a total of 43 residents.

    Overcrowding Not An Issue At Burnaby Youth Jail Where Inmates Rioted: Province

    Surrey Man Dies After Collapsing On Grouse Grind Trail In North Vancouver

    North Vancouver RCMP Corp. Richard de Jong says it happened at around 8 p.m. Wednesday night.

    Surrey Man Dies After Collapsing On Grouse Grind Trail In North Vancouver

    B.C. To Change Human Rights Code To Protect Transgender People

    B.C. To Change Human Rights Code To Protect Transgender People
    VANCOUVER — The provincial government will specifically protect transgender people under the B.C. Human Rights Code, reversing its position about 10 days before Vancouver's Pride Parade.

    B.C. To Change Human Rights Code To Protect Transgender People

    Halifax Police Could Drop Use Of 'Middle Eastern' When Describing Suspects

    Halifax police are under fire for describing three unknown cab drivers suspected in a recent string of alleged sexual assaults as "Middle Eastern."

    Halifax Police Could Drop Use Of 'Middle Eastern' When Describing Suspects

    Keep Pokemon Go Out Of Saskatchewan Jails: Corrections Ministry

    Keep Pokemon Go Out Of Saskatchewan Jails: Corrections Ministry
    REGINA — The Saskatchewan Corrections Ministry is reminding Pokemon Go players to stay out of jail.

    Keep Pokemon Go Out Of Saskatchewan Jails: Corrections Ministry