There are good ships. Journal of a Voyage Around the World
(2013)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Xlibris UK, 2013
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781483609218 (electronic bk.) MWT12085089, 1483609219 (electronic bk.) 12085089
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Author is such a grand title and one for which I do not feel at all worthy. Instead, I would consider myself an adventurer with a pen and notebook. My adventurous spirit started way back when I was just seven years old and found myself plonked on the back of a rather large pony called Dawn. I had pestered my parents for horse-riding lessons, and now I sat shivering with fear and contemplating the sanity of my demands. As a shy, reticent, little girl, I did not have the courage to say actually I do not like this. So week after week, month after month, little by little, I lost my fear, and an adventurous spirit was born with me. Of course, horse riding has little to do with sailing, but for me, the experience of the former gave me the courage for the latter. Riding an unpredictable, frisky, jumpy mare has many parallels to sailing an unpredictable, frisky, jumpy yacht. Believe me when I tell you a yacht has a mind of its own. Sailing first entered my life in my teens when I had the privilege to crew on the Thames sailing barge Thalatta. In my twenties, I became a deck monkey on friend's yachts and enjoyed the thrill of racing in the Solent on the south coast of England. I gained my Competent Crew certificate whilst taking part in the Baltic leg of the Tall Ships Race. Working as a secretary for the army at the time, I was invited to join the crew on Sail Training Yacht British Soldier, a magnificent 55-foot Camper & Nicholson. I briefly co-owned a small day-sailor Pindari and cut my teeth on the perils of crossing the busiest shipping lane in the world, the English Channel. Sailing took a back seat in my early forties when I was gripped by the travelling bug. I had Australia in my sights, and I spent many a happy month soaking up the sights, sounds, and sheer vastness of that wonderful continent. I realized then that the world has a lot more to offer me. Yearning for more, I was a great believer in the saying a change is as good as a rest. I had been a secretary, a personal assistant, a hairdresser, and a professional tennis coach and have recently qualified as an approved driving instructor. I was a highly proficient horse rider, a crazy snow skier, a scuba-diver, and a tennis player. What more could I possibly achieve? Well, I have just added to that list a circumnavigator

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