Abby Sunderland,
16, who cannot legally drive a car but is two months into a quest to
become the youngest person to sail around the world alone, on Tuesday
will face by far her most daunting challenge yet: the rounding of Cape
Horn.
While her friends back home in Southern California are
savoring the pleasures of spring, Sunderland is pondering the
treacherous passage between South America and Antarctica. With its
mountainous, heaving seas and gale-force winds, Cape Horn is a mariners'
graveyard, regarded as the Mt. Everest of the yachting universe.
Reached
this week via email the budding adventurer from Thousand Oaks claimed
she was not afraid.
"I understand very well how dangerous the
ocean is, and especially where I am, and I sail carefully and never
forget how fast things can turn bad out here," she responded, from a
position west of southern Argentina and 700 miles from Cape Horn. "But
fear would just get in the way. When things are going on, you don't have
time to be scared about it; you have to just get your head around
everything and deal with it."
If Sunderland is successful it will
mark her first major milestone and the beginning of a long, easterly
Southern Ocean traverse aboard a 40-foot yacht named Wild Eyes. Her
voyage is controversial because of her age, but also because she'll be
entering this notoriously inhospitable stretch as the Southern
Hemisphere summer fades to autumn and savagely cold and stormy weather
begins to set in.
"My biggest hope is that she has he maturity to wait
out any nasty weather rather than push too hard for a record and risk
getting into trouble," says Charlie Nobles, executive director of the American Sailing Assn.
Sunderland,
who lives in Thousand Oaks, Calif., and embarked Jan. 23 from Marina
del Rey, Calif., is one of two 16-year-old girls attempting nonstop,
unassisted solo-circumnavigations, subsiding on freeze-dried food and
desalinated water, while accepting only verbal or online guidance from
home-based teams.
Australia's Jessica Watson began her
odyssey from Sydney last October and rounded Cape Horn on Jan. 13. Soon
afterward she endured 70-knot winds that threatened to capsize her
34-foot pink sloop.
Watson, now more than 18,000 miles along and
crossing the Indian Ocean, is five months older than Sunderland, so
Sunderland will become the youngest if she completes her trip within
five months of Watson's ending date. (Abby's brother Zac, who completed
his voyage at 17, briefly held the distinction as being the youngest
sailor to solo-circumnavigate the planet but he made several stops.
England's Mike Perham, who is slightly younger, stole that honor weeks
later.)
Abby Sunderland's trip was delayed by about two months
because of boat issues. Her parents assure, however, that she'll listen
closely to weather experts and scurry to the nearest port if conditions
become too harsh.
Meanwhile, the intrepid mariner is faring
reasonably well. "I miss my family, and my dog, and my friends," she
wrote, adding that thoughts often turn to her 5-year-old sister,
Katherine. They share a bedroom and Katherine idolizes Abby, and has not
slept in the room alone since Abby's departure.
Aside from bouts of loneliness, the eldest Sunderland
daughter--one of seven children, with an eighth on the way--insists
she's relishing the experience of a lifetime. "Everything around me is
so amazing, just standing out on deck is exhilarating," she explained.
"Every day there are new experiences, and they always seem better than
the last; everything from squalls to gales, to just racing along."
Her
parents, on the other hand, are besieged by the same type of angst as
when Zac was braving gales and encountering ghost ships carrying
suspected pirates.
"I have definitely been recruiting the people
in my life who pray," said the mother, Marianne, in reference to a
recent convergence of severe weather fronts that were falsely predicted
to slam Wild Eyes. "But I am super-impressed with how Abby has handled
everything, from the boat and its workings to the loneliness and
monotony of everyday life at sea. But I'll be glad when she has rounded
the Horn and can get back up into some calmer waters."
Abby might
get to see her father before she rounds Cape Horn. Laurence Sunderland
has flown to Argentina and hired a captain to take him out to try to
photograph Wild Eyes before his daughter attempts the passage, but that
might prove difficult as 20- to 25-knot winds and large swells are in
the forecast through Tuesday.
After she gets around South
America's tip, Abby will turn to the north and attempt to outrun a
building Antarctic storm. Ultimately, she'll cross the southern Atlantic
and the Indian Ocean, pass between Australia and New Zealand and cross
the Pacific on a northeast course toward home.
That's a lot of
water to cover and, given her late start, perhaps a lot of icebergs to
dodge as well.
David Mikael Taclino
Inyu Web Development and Design
Creative Writer
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