Solo pensioner sets off round world

Jeanne to raise cash for cancer fight

boat

British sailor Jeanne Socrates has started a solo circumnavigation to raise money for Marie Curie Cancer Care. She left Victoria, in British Columbia, Canada, on 25 October in her 38 foot yacht Nereida to sail solo & non-stop  around the world back to Victoria.  Her route will take her south of  Cape Horn, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand.

Jeanne, a 68 year old retired maths lecturer/teacher from Ealing, W. London, has logged well  over 55,000 miles of ocean sailing.  She (almost!) completed a solo,  15-month 'cruising-style' west-about circumnavigation in June 2008  but lost  her boat (a Najad 361, also named "Nereida"), due to autopilot  failure, on a Mexican surf beach north of Acapulco, within half a day  and 60 miles short of her starting point of Zihuatanejo, which she had  left in March '07.  

Determined to keep sailing, Jeanne bought a new Najad 380 and after sailing it from England to the Canary Islands, she set off in October 2009 to sail non-stop solo around the world.  After overcoming  several major challenges in mid-ocean, Jeanne was forced to pull in to  Cape Town in early December for repairs that couldn't be fixed on the  passage down the Atlantic.  After an unexpected 3-month delay for an  engine replacement, Jeanne sailed to New Zealand nonstop (62 days)  and  then on to Hawaii (36 days) before making for Cape Flattery & Port  Townsend, WA, USA (21 days) for major repairs in preparation for a second  nonstop, solo, RTW attempt to start from Victoria, B.C..

When asked " Why do it?"   Jeanne replied: 'Partly simply for the challenge of all it entails, partly to experience the long passages & being 'at one' with the elements & nature - it's another world! ...  I'll be at sea for 7-8 months.  .... my first-ever rounding of Cape Horn (early in the New Year 2011) will be 'the ultimate test' - The Mt Everest of sailing!   Having experienced the frequent storms and fronts of Southern Ocean weather during my five months of sailing there recently, I now know what to expect, but  rounding Cape Horn could well get much nastier, so I have to be prepared for that - and after Cape  Horn I will have to sail South of the other 'Great Capes' before returning north to Victoria".

She's had a tough time making her way south due to Pacific storms or no wind, but is presently 300 miles due W of Los Angeles, on her way SSE towards Cape Horn - just under two months' away.