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Showing posts from February, 2021

Sobering, unfathomable

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  Today's New York Times cover page...each dot in the graphic represents a life lost.   Almost 29M infected in the US, and 510K deaths. Globally 112M confirmed and 2.5M dead.  In Ireland, we will be on lockdown until the end of April. God help us. Pandemic blues

Book review: Facing Fear

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I first heard about Lisa Blair after news of her dismasting in the Southern Ocean some 1000 miles from anywhere in a furious storm. I was so moved by her story of courage and survival instinct that I nominated her for the OCC Seamanship Award, which she won. As the person responsible for the OCC PR effort, I then had the pleasure of corresponding with her to get information and photos I needed for press contacts. I was mightily impressed and inspired.  Imagine how thrilled I was when I learned a couple of years later that she was writing a book about her experience and she had joined the Women Who Sail Who Write group. I asked Lisa for an advance review copy which she gladly sent to me during lockdown from Australia (at great expense I noticed -- sorry about that Lisa -- next time pdf).  I have since devoured Facing Fear in two consecutive days. I couldn't put it down. She had me hooked from the first page. The first woman to circumnavigate Antarctica, she had intended to do it so

Awards

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PredictWind Fleet tracker - some of the cruisers we helped Last month, Alex and I, along with several other OCC members, were recognised by two awards for the work we did in supporting sailors who were being threatened by border closures around the world as the pandemic spread. The first was the Royal Cruising Club which awarded the OCC their Medal for Services to Cruising. That was a very special bit of recognition coming from the RCC.   The second award was the OCC Award given to Alex, me, Moira, Tim, Fi and Guy. We all worked to help cruisers stuck in various places, being stopped from reprovisioning and taking on fuel and water, and facing hurricane and cyclone seasons in the wrong places. We basically helped people make their own decisions about what to do and supported them with safety back up when they did.  We were really honoured to be recognised for this work. It was really rewarding to be able to help so many people and it really did keep us so busy that we didn't have

Sacred days

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  I have not written in some time as we remain in lockdown and there is little to write about except maybe vaccines which are being delayed. This is not about sailing, even remotely. It's about lore.  Yesterday, the 1st of February into the 2nd of February is the sacred Celtic period of Imbolc, which was the feast of Brigid, the Celtic goddess of fire and fertility. Imbolc is the mid-point between the Winter Solstice and Spring Equinox.  It was acquired by the Irish Christians, as they usually did, as the feast of St. Brigid, Ireland's only female saint. It is meant to represent the beginning of Spring. I made her cross for the first time this year. Watched a YouTube video about how to make it. Cut the rushes in the frigid, bone-numbing rain.   Having come from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, I had to catch up today with Punxsutawney Phil, the groundhog who foretells if spring is around the corner or if winter will continue. He called for 6 more weeks of winter. But, in watching th