American is 735 Miles from Becoming
First
Woman to complete solo ocean row
ATLANTIC
OCEAN -- (November 4, 1999) -- An
American woman from Louisville, Ky., is alone in the Atlantic Ocean just 735
miles from completing an amazing odyssey that will make her the first woman to
row across an ocean solely under her own power.
Tori Murden, 36,
is less than three weeks from arriving the Lesser Antilles in her 23-foot
rowboat, the American Pearl.
If she completes the row, she becomes the first woman and first American
to ever cross an ocean in a rowboat without using wind or sail and without the
aid of a motor or escort vessel. She
expects to complete the 3000-mile crossing when she lands on the shore of
Guadeloupe before the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday.
Last weekend,
Murden was elated. ?I can hardly
believe my good fortune. I am
beginning to see more fish,? she wrote this past weekend. ?And I just saw a bug!
The little creature is very far from land, but it is nice to see.?
Sunday was
idyllic with a perfect sunrise, a swim, a bath and freshly washed clothes.
A school of dolphins were welcome dinner guests and perfect subjects for
the video camera. But one visitor became a bit friendly, and Murden
accidentally dropped her video camera into the blue waters.
Her heart sank when ?I lost sight of the camera and saw the camera?s
tether between my feet. I untied
the tether when I changed the battery.?
By nightfall,
Murden was still shaken by the incident. ?It
is tempting to focus on the end instead of the moment at hand,? she lectured
herself. ?My safety will depend
on paying strict attention to the little things.
It is my opinion that big mistakes do not kill people in the wilderness,
little mistakes do.?
The incident is
typical of the psychological ups and downs of spending so much time alone at
sea. Last year, Murden spent 85
days alone at sea during a west-to-east attempt to row the North Atlantic.
The attempt failed after her boat was tossed like a matchstick during two
hurricanes in one week. She capsized 15 times in the two days before a daring rescue
at sea by a merchant ship. Her 85
days in the North Atlantic set the world record for the most time alone at sea
by a woman rower.
If Murden arrives
the Lesser Antilles prior to Thanksgiving she breaks another world record.
According to Kenneth Crutchlow of the Ocean Rowing Society in London, a
landing before Nov. 25 makes Murden?s crossing the fastest ever for a solo
rower. Briton Sidney Genders, who
made the same crossing ? from the Canary Islands to the Lesser Antilles in
73-1/3 days ? set the current record in 1970.
?At her current pace, she will smash the world record by days,?
Crutchlow said. ?Regardless of
whether she is the fastest, Murden?s accomplishments are truly remarkable,
making her one of the most revered people in rowing history.?
Murden?s east
to west solo row began Sept. 13, 1999 when she departed Tenerife, Canary Islands
on her self-built, 23-foot custom rowboat, the American Pearl. As of
today, she has rowed 2,252 miles in 53 days, averaging 42 miles per day.
This year?s row
is sponsored by Sector Sport Watches, No Limits?
Sports & Tech Wear, Fontana Candida Italian Wines and Fifth Third Bank of
Louisville. Murden is a member of
the Sector No Limits? Team, an elite
group of international athletes who dare test and transcend the outer limits of
human potential.
Murden?s
progress, message logs and related information is available at www.adept.net/americanpearl.com.
Information on Murden, world records and the history of solo rowers is
accessed at www.oceanrowing.com.
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4 November 1999
Contact
Julie Wellik, Kevin Plagman or Dana Ziegler
Communications West
Phone
415-863-7220
Fax
415-621-2907
E-mail
comwest@comwest.com

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