Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Southern Atlantic Ocean Rowers Capsized
After a 2,700 mile row and 73 days at sea our friend and Fox Sculpture advocate Jorden Hanssen and his crew had to abort their remarkable attempt to row across nearly 4,000 miles of ocean from the western coast of Africa, Dakar, Senegal to Miami, Florida. This is one of the broadest stretches of open Atlantic Ocean. The distance being about 1,000 miles longer than Harbo and Samuelsen's legendary North Atlantic crossing aboard Fox in 1896.
Hanssen and his 3-man crew were capsized in their 29 ft. ocean rowboat. They were unable to right the boat and activated rescue beacons and a life raft which they maned while waiting for rescue. Their journey ended about 400 miles north of Puerto Rico.
Capsizing is a real danger in any small boat ocean crossing. In 1896, the Fox was broadsided mid-Atlantic and capsized however Harbo and Samuelsen both tossed out of the boat, righted the 18 foot vessel, with handrails they had built especially on the keel. Loosing many articles and food stores they continued rowing north to the shipping lanes and hailed the Bark, Cito (a square sailing ship) who replenished the Fox's supplies and gave Harbo and Samuelsen a meal onboard. After their visit and weeks later, the Fox, 55 days from New York Harbor, arrived at Britain's Sicily Islands.
Jorden in a letter supporting our Fox Sculpture Project credited his inspiration in ocean rowing to the original Fox crossing. Although made in a comparatively primitive open wooden boat the Fox crossing was never bested for 114 years.
Whether these crossing are made by modern vessels or not they require the same legendary iron men that sailed wooden ships. We know Jorden will return again to make continued attempts at ocean crossings.
You may like to learn more about Jorden Hanssen at his blog OAR Northwest or view his recent Today Show Interview.
Best regards, Bill
Friday, March 29, 2013
Voyage of the Fox - On open waters
The 'Fox' an 18 foot rowboat was the first craft of this kind to cross
the Atlantic Ocean, sans sail, motor, or rudder. The small open
surf-boat' left New York's lower Battery on June 6th, 1896, crossing the
Atlantic while plying the northern shipping route. The two
Norwegian-American seamen, George Harbo and Frank Samuelsen, made the
3,000 mile trip to landfall, Sicily Islands, British Isles in 55 days. A
record time which stood for 114 years. They continued on to Le Havre,
France (the mouth of the Seine), exhibiting their boat there and Paris,
Germany and Norway. They returned home from Copenhagen via a steamer
arriving in Hoboken, a New Jersey port, later that year.
Their remarkable feat was soon almost forgotten.
This sculpture was created to honor these brave seamen and centuries of sailors who challenged the unpredictable Oceans of the World.
The 4 foot model depicted is the Marquette for an 8 ft. bronze monument (1/3 rd life-sized).
Bill Osmundsen, sculptor.
Victor Samuelsen, project manager
Their remarkable feat was soon almost forgotten.
This sculpture was created to honor these brave seamen and centuries of sailors who challenged the unpredictable Oceans of the World.
The 4 foot model depicted is the Marquette for an 8 ft. bronze monument (1/3 rd life-sized).
Bill Osmundsen, sculptor.
Victor Samuelsen,
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