Duo set sail for 1,000 days alone at sea

vinnie

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HOBOKEN, N.J. - He's a veteran of long-distance sailing voyages in all kinds of weather. She's never sailed outside the Hudson River.

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But together, 55-year-old Reid Stowe and his 23-year-old girlfriend, Soanya Ahmad, embarked Saturday on a voyage that they intend to take them three times around the globe and last 1,000 days and nights ? nonstop, with no port calls for supplies or a walk on solid ground.

They set sail Saturday afternoon aboard his 70-foot, two-masted schooner, named the Schooner Anne, from a Hudson River marina in North Hoboken, in bright sunshine and temperatures in the 70s.

"This will be my first time sailing ever ? except for up and down the Hudson River," said Ahmad, the New York-raised daughter of immigrants from Guyana.

"I haven't gotten seasick ? so far," she said with a grin.

She may be tested when the yacht rounds South America's Cape Horn on the way from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, an area infamous for waves as high as 100 feet, as well as icebergs.

If they succeed, they say their time away from land will surpass the 657 days spent at sea by Australian Jon Sanders, who circumnavigated the globe three times from 1986 to 1988.

Stowe planned a course that initially will take them into the north Atlantic to take advantage of wind and currents, then head south of the Equator. Past the Equator, before passing Cape Horn, he mapped out a course that would loop around the south Atlantic, in the outline of a heart.

"This is a voyage that takes heart," he said.

Provisions were packed into every nook and cranny of the schooner's hull, everything from rice and beans to tomato sauce, pasta, pesto, olives, chocolate, spices and about 200 pounds of parmesan cheese. Sprouts were already growing in boxes for salads.

The rest of their food will be caught fresh from the sea ? automatically. Two contraptions at the stern will troll for fish, and when one is caught the line is rigged to alert them by tapping a piece of wood.

Rainwater will be collected in tarps stretched over the deck, and a desalinator will turn sea water into drinking water.

Crammed in alongside the food was a ton of coal and 100 boxes of firewood for the antique French iron stove that keep them warm, plus diesel oil for a motor.

Solar panels will generate enough electricity for the satellite communication and navigation system and for lights. Along with sending and receiving e-mail via satellite, they expect to post photographs, videos and blogs on their Web site.

They also have a small library of books on yoga, meditation and spirituality, as well as art and history, plus the collected works of Joseph Conrad and every book written by Herman Melville, including "Moby Dick."

Along with a well-stocked medical kit, they both learned how to clean and stitch cuts and to set broken bones.

The cost of the journey is covered by corporate and individual donations, plus donations of food, the sails and marine ropes.

Their message to the world, they say, is that any human being can persevere and survive while staying inspired and in love.

"It's inside everyone to go into the unknown, to sail by the sun and the winds of fate. Our ability to control our minds will allow us to do this," said Stowe, an artist born in Washington state who has been living on the Anne for decades. "If we had to come back for cheeseburgers, we wouldn't be able to do it."

They met four years ago when Ahmad, a college student, was photographing Manhattan's waterfront where the schooner was docked.

"He invited me aboard. It was my first time on a sailboat," said Ahmad. "Reid was looking for someone to go with him. At first, I said no, but then ..."

The 60-ton vessel is older than she is ? built about 30 years ago by Stowe and his family, including his mother Anne.

Ahmad's parents, both New York accountants, "are a little terrified," said their only daughter, the oldest of three siblings.

The voyage is formally called "1000 Days at Sea: The Mars Ocean Odyssey." Stowe, who has been a professional sailor and adventurer since he was a teenager, compares this journey to an expedition to Mars, which would involve about the same time in isolation.

He has sailed to every continent in the past four decades, including Antarctica. "I have the tools, I have the experience," he said.

One of those previous voyages was a 200-day trip with his wife in 1999. They're divorced now, but she gave him and Ahmad a life raft for their journey, and joined his mom and dad on the Hoboken dock to wave goodbye Saturday.

Stowe said the journey offers lessons even to someone who will never go out to sea ? or someone like Ahmad, who grew up in New York City: "You learn to be present to the situation, to look and see what's happening, and to do what needs to be done."

Adds Ahmad: "On a sailboat, you have to be present in the moment, in the now. Or there's no tomorrow."

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THE KOD

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CryBoy

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Raymond, you can't tell me that you wouldn't do the same if you had a 23-year-old girlfriend who was willing to spend all that time with you at sea. What else can you ask for?

Just gotta watch out for pirates.
 

saint

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Raymond, you can't tell me that you wouldn't do the same if you had a 23-year-old girlfriend who was willing to spend all that time with you at sea. What else can you ask for?

Just gotta watch out for pirates.

Even the hottest 23 year old would get old stuck on a boat with her. After I got bored tagging her she'd probably drive me to the point of tossing her overboard.
 

MadJack

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1000 days. lol
i wouldnt consider 1000 hours. not even close.
*maybe* 24 hours on a calm lake. lol
i have too much respect for that ocean out there and i'm not playing with it. period!
 

The Sponge

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i dont think i could even stay with the same person for 1000 days on land. when the ocean decides to grab them i hope we don't have to waste any money to save them. 70 foot is a big boat for a river. I wouldn't do it if someone said if i make it i will get 20 million dollars.
 

hedgehog

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I would only consider going on a boat if it had a cell phone, directv, broadband internet, plenty of food and a horny girlfriend/wife. otherwise I am not likely to go on a boat except for the afternoon:00hour
 

THE KOD

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In what seems like the answer to a question nobody asked, sailor/adventurer Reid Stowe plans to singlehand his 70-ft schooner Anne from New York to the middle of the ocean - well, actually the middle of several oceans - and stay out there for 1,000 days. He's not headed anywhere. The goal is to stay out of sight of land longer than any voyager before. Stowe has dubbed the project the Mars Ocean Odyssey because 1,000 days is the expected duration of a journey to the Red Planet.

Stowe, who turns 50 this year, designed and built Anne in 1978 and has lived aboard ever since. No other voyager in history, from Vasco de Gama to the Mir astronauts, has been out of contact with terra firma for as long as Stowe's planned 1,000 days. The existing 'record' is held by Australian sailor John Sanders who took 657 days to sail around the world three times, also alone.
...................................................................

:scared
 

THE KOD

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I wouldn't do it if someone said if i make it i will get 20 million dollars.
..........................................................


for 20 million I am out there .

whats the worst that can happen. They have satelite radar to miss all the storms.


Think about it Sponge.
 

THE KOD

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The din and zoom of cars racing along the West Side Highway seem so far away. Here, a quiet fire crackles in a wood-burning stove. KROQ plays softly on the hi-fi and the creak of the 70-foot schooner, Anne, groans in the background.

In December, Reid Stowe, captain of the Anne, will push off from Pier 63 where his schooner is anchored and set sail for the next 1,000 days. His plan is stay out of site of land and, more importantly, leave dry land longer than anyone ever has since our distant cousins first emerged from the primordial stew eons ago.


He will not refuel, he will not re-supply, he will not pull into a harbor.


Stowe feeds his fire, makes tea and settles into a cushioned bench in the cabin he designed and built. "Sailing," he says, has always been about going "from point A to point B as quickly as you could, or doing the fishing route that you had to do."

He leans back to take a breath before launching into a whirlwind of how and why he plans to change that idea, not only for himself, but for others as well..


"It's really beyond sailing, to me it's more about that I'm the human that will depart terra firma longer than any human ever has. To me that's just terribly exciting."


It is not that he will just be on a boat, it is that he is embarking on a journey to explore and raise human consciousness. His 1,000-day voyage is an opportunity to head into what he repeatedly equates with the "white light void" of death with the opportunity to come out alive on the other side.


"We are all more enlightened if we pass through death with consciousness, with our eyes open, and that's in a sense what I'm learning to do at sea because it really is a pure white light void," he explains.


"The only thing that's there is me as I confront myself and who I am. That's how I feel my consciousness and that's what happens when I'm out at sea."
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MadJack

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He will not refuel, he will not re-supply, he will not pull into a harbor
yeah right! :rolleyes: see you in about a month when you drop off your GF because she can't handle it.
 

The Sponge

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for 20 million I am out there .

whats the worst that can happen. They have satelite radar to miss all the storms.


Think about it Sponge.

Scotty some storms come out of nowhere. I wouldn't even let you take a picture of me out there.:scared
 

The Sponge

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Another reason to stay out of peoples yards which would be the ocean in this case.

Fla. Crew Lands 1,063-Pound Mako Shark
By Associated Press
Fri Apr 20, 7:58 PM

DESTIN, Fla. - A 1,063-pound mako shark hooked close to shore :scared in the Gulf of Mexico is being investigated as a possible world fishing record.

The Sea Ya Later II was cobia fishing when its crew spotted the 12-foot 6-inch shark Wednesday afternoon between Pensacola Beach and Navarre Beach. The Mother Lode, a 45-foot charter boat, helped bring in the shark.

They used flying gaffs to secure the fish and then tied the gaffs to the Sea Ya Later II, which was tilting.

"If (the shark) hadn't been as tired as she was, this boat would be sitting on the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico," said Lindsey Stanley, the Sea Ya Later IIs captain, told the Northwest Florida Daily News.

After the shark died, it took eight men to pull it aboard the Mother Lode and take it to Destin.

The registered weight of 1,063 pounds makes the catch eligible for the world record in the 30-pound line class for a short-fin mako. The class record is a 997-pound, 11-ounce shark caught in Sydney, Australia, in 1995. The largest mako recorded in the all-tackle division was a 1,221 pounder caught in Massachusetts in 2001.

"I'm investigating it as a world record," said Jim Roberson, who represents the Panhandle for the International Game Fish Association
 
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