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New Single-handed 20' cat Trans Atlantic record

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(@mikesailor)
Posts: 423
Member
Topic starter
 
[#19212]

* Italian Matteo Miceli, 36, has sailed a 20-foot beach cat named
'Biondinanera,' 2700 miles across the Atlantic solo between Great
Canarian and Guadalupe in 14 days, 17 hours and 52 minutes. --
http://tinyurl.com/y4qrvr


 
Posted : January 15, 2007 10:48 pm
(@Dan_DeLave)
Posts: 956
Master Chief Registered
 

What a nut!


 
Posted : January 16, 2007 3:51 pm
(@stilettodude)
Posts: 805
Member
 

And I bet his daddy didn't follow him across on an identical boat! Good on him!

And yes he's a nut.

Clayton


 
Posted : January 17, 2007 9:02 am
MaryAWells
(@maryawells)
Posts: 5485
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Interesting, because Francesco di Benedetto left Grand Canary on January 2 on a modified Tornado with racks, attempting to break the same record. Francesco has not been heard from since his third day out. His team thinks his iridium phone failed but are assuming he is okay, since his epirb has not been activated.


 
Posted : January 17, 2007 9:17 am
(@stilettodude)
Posts: 805
Member
 

Nut & Nut

Really big ocean! Really little boat! But hey, thats why I'm behind a desk and they're out sailing.

Clayton


 
Posted : January 17, 2007 9:42 am
(@catfan)
Posts: 285
Mate Registered
 

Matteo Miceli is with Andrea Gancia, another Italian sailor, the current holder also of the out-right Trans Atlantic record for beach cats:
13d 11h 36m estabilished in early 2005.
The boat sailed by the Italian pair is the same utilized by Matteo for his solo successful attempt


 
Posted : January 17, 2007 10:46 am
(@dirkw)
Posts: 185
Member
 

Its very crazy but very remarkable too! Well done!
And maybe still safer than any of the sinking canting keel open 60 and vor 70. [don't take this comment too serious]


 
Posted : January 17, 2007 11:56 am
MaryAWells
(@maryawells)
Posts: 5485
Member
 
Quote
Interesting, because Francesco di Benedetto left Grand Canary on January 2 on a modified Tornado with racks, attempting to break the same record. Francesco has not been heard from since his third day out. His team thinks his iridium phone failed but are assuming he is okay, since his epirb has not been activated.

And here is the rest of the story, as reported in Scuttlebutt:
For the first three days, Benedetto was able to provide position reports to his support team, wherein they could track his progress. But on day four, his support team lost contact with him, and for the next seventeen days their only means of hope were in that the EPIRB signal had not yet been reported. However, on January 19th, his EPIRB was activated, which placed him 700 miles from Guadalupe, and just a bit south of his direct route. 8 hours later, and just before sunset, Francesco had been intercepted and rescued (along with his catamaran) by a cargo ship on her way to Barcelona.

Benedetto, who is expected to arrive in Spain by January 27th, has been in contact with his support team, and reported that his troubles began on the 7th of January, where he lost all his equipment in a storm. Said Benedetto,

I had nothing, imagine myself, the boat, the mast and two sails.

Nothing meant no water, food, GPS, glasses, auto-pilots, headlamps, medicines, ...

Without glasses and contact lenses, I could hardly see the end of the catamaran, and at night there were no stars. I had a small compass with no light and the EBIRP in my pocket, that's it.

Since Francesco had no routing support, he sailed right through areas with 20 to 30 knot wind.

The waves
were incredible,” he recalled. “Not too tall but steep and fast. Like cannon balls that I had to avoid... not for 3 or 4 hours, for days!

After sailing on for 12 days in hopes of finding a boat for help, he finally activated his
EPIRB rescue signal. -- Website: http://www.francescodibenedetto.com/


 
Posted : January 25, 2007 1:39 am
(@dirkw)
Posts: 185
Member
 

Mary, that sounds...scary! He was lucky to survive.
I still remember the report from Hans Bousholte when they crossed the atlantic in a modified Inter 20 but did not manage to get enough sleep and started to have haluzinations while developing serious skin desease same time to the drysuits they were wearinf for days in saltwater... cant imagine 12 days out of sea in heavy weather having lost besides food and water even the ability to see...


 
Posted : January 25, 2007 12:35 pm
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