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  • The Singlehanders – Peter Heaton

    The Singlehanders – Peter Heaton

    Published by Michael Joseph, London in 1976 a first edition. Large octavo, 208 pages nicely illustrated. A very good if not fine copy.

    Peter Heaton’s well thought through book on the evolution of the singlehanders.

    In the 19th century stockbroker Richard McMullen became a singlehander because he sacked his two hands for being idle and insolent. Those that more carefully planned their way into it are categorised as Pioneers (1876-1899); Romantics (1900-39); Escapists (1940’s and 50’s) and those from the Competitive Era. As well as the individual exploits the issues of loneliness etc are explored.

    Great photography and technical diagrams.

    Singlehanders covered well by Heaton

    $25.00

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  • Fair Winds and Far Places – Zane Mann

    Fair Winds and Far Places – Zane Mann

    Published by Dillon Press, Minneapolis a first edition 1978. Octavo, 272 pages well illustrated and well written. Very good near fine condition.

    If you are exhausted from reading about the drama of round the world sailing then this will give you some respite. Zane Mann came across the beautiful fifty foot sloop “Serenity” and it changed his life. The next three years were spent in the Caribbean and this is the account of his sailings and exploits

    Zane Mann gave it all up for the Caribbean … and the lobsters!

    $25.00

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  • The Jason Voyage  – the Quest for the Golden Fleece – Tim Severin

    The Jason Voyage – the Quest for the Golden Fleece – Tim Severin

    Published by Guild Publishing, London 1985. Octavo, 263 pages well illustrated and with charts etc. A very good near fine copy.

    13th century BC and Jason sets sail in his galley to find the Golden Fleece. Legend or fact? From Greece across the Aegean through the Dardanelles and Sea of Marmara and the Bosphorus and up along the Black Sea all the way to Colchis were Jason found the “fleece”’ and his bride Medea.

    Tim Severin had already tested the legend of St Brendan who sailed a leather boat from Ireland to America. And repeated the voyages of Sinbad. For Jason he built a twenty-oar galley and repeated the 1,500 mile voyage … a few volunteer oarsmen were required! Superb mytho-archaeology [our word]

    Tim Severin put it all into Jason and proved the possibility

    $25.00

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  • Round the World Non-Stop – John Ridgway and Andy Briggs

    Round the World Non-Stop – John Ridgway and Andy Briggs

    Published by Patrick Stephens, Wellingborough, England in 1985 a first edition. Octavo, 236 pages well illustrated from coloured photographs and with charts, diagrams and good technical content.

    John Ridgway and Andy Briggs sailed their 57 foot ketch “English Rose VI” around the world non-stop in 1983/4. The departed from Ardmore in the far north-west of Scotland and made it all the way back in 203 days, then the fastest on record.

    Ridgeway, another Voyager hero, formerly in the Parachute Regiment … rowed the Atlantic with Chay Blyth and sailed it single handed. He led expeditions to the upper Amazon, the Southern Andes of Patagonia, the Sahara and the Himalayas .. he also went round the world in the Whitbread race. Our sort of bloke.

    Top class account of a record breaking voyage

    $25.00

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  • Small Boat Against the Sea – Derek King and Peter Bird

    Small Boat Against the Sea – Derek King and Peter Bird

    Published by Paul Elek, London a first edition 1976. Octavo, 244 pages nicely illustrated. A very good copy.

    The subtitle … “The story of the first trans-world rowing attempt” has to be taken with a pinch of sea salt as this unlikely pair “only” made it across the Atlantic. Regardless a pretty good achievement and a remarkable story. At the start there were three with the pretty Carol Maystone who jumped ship so to speak in Morocco … don’t blame her!

    Derek and Peter had originally intended to have a bespoke rower built for the global trip. Lack of money canned that idea … but lady luck arrived and John Fairfax offered them the Britannia II in which he and Sylvia Cook had rowed across the Pacific.

    Very readable honest account … exciting

    $30.00

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  • Against All Odds (Around Alone in the BOC Challenge) – Alan Nebauer

    Against All Odds (Around Alone in the BOC Challenge) – Alan Nebauer

    First edition , McGraw Hill, 1996. Large format, octavo, 166 pages, endpaper maps, illustrated well and with concluding table of results and glossary of nautical terms.

    Australian Alan Nebauer successfully completed the 1994-95 BOC “Single Handed Around the World Challenge”. He came fourth in Class II (12.2 – 15.2m).

    Much more was achieved and experienced than simply that result. One the first leg across the Atlantic he rescued Josh Hall from the UK from his sinking Class I vessel Gartmore. This story alone makes the book a worthwhile read.

    Then round the Horn with a Jury Rig and then trouble with the rudder … all very testing!

    Sadly, it also records the death of Harry Mitchell from the UK who was lost at sea in very hard conditions approaching Cape Horn from the west.

    Australian Nebauer in the “Newcastle Australia” makes it all the way … an incredible achievement

    $30.00

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