significant milestone and the anatomy of a long distance rower 19:53.653 28:59.197W

Row Across The Pond
Richard Hoyland and Steve Coe
Sat 23 Jan 2010 17:35
During the course of the last 24 hours we have reached one of three focul points on the journey. You may have noticed we are one of the further south crews and have hopefully chosen rightly and the 20 degrees latitude we are now on will offer stongerand more consistent winds know as the trade winds.. true enough the last 24 hours have been the most consistent and truest of winds we have so far experienced,, We have heard though there is a low pressure heading the fleets way which could put a stop to those lovely trade winds we sought out,, at least until they redevelop. I have always wanted to cross the atlantic but never thought i would be doing it in a 23' rowing boat,, but if there is any way to really appreciate this, then this certainly is near the ground and has to be the way, The trade winds are aplty named as this would have been the route for sailing ships to cross to go to the far east and america. The motor for this is quite simply the sun, and without meaning to harp on about it, it is hot here and could perhaps be likened to the boiler room for the earths weather syustem, this is both good and right, the equatorial low  pressures and mid atlantic high squeezes two opposing circulating air masses and produces  fairly reliable wind direction from east to west.. We hope to cash in on this for a free ride.. but lets not count chickens there not always that reliable... Climate change and all that.. For each degree of latitude there is 60 nautical miles. The uk Greenwich is 51degrees or latitude and we are currently 20 degrees,, therefore approx 1860 miles south ofyou right now,, Anitigua is only another three degree south so not sure temperatures will increase significantly,, no more heat please... We have approx 1800 miles still to row so about 1/3 the way completed.. now we are at the lower latitudes, we are told speed increases marginally, we'll see about that! Just so you dont think this is tough heres some thoughts to alley any notion that it is. Firstly there are two of us therefore only half the mileage to row than total, secondly we hope to use prevailing winds (not much up till now i do confess, so the intro has hurt a little/lot) and thirdly there is a current of approx .2 - .5 of one knots.. Hmm thats alot! yes it is if your only doing 2+ knots. I do have a bona contention, dont worry thats normal. Whilst theoretically we each have equal distances to row, I weigh considerably lighter than Richard and also he eats more than me and when he is resting i have to pull him along, now you may say that  he is stronger and therefore he will row faster, no best not go there [Richard - Steve neglects to mention the extra bits oif kit that he brought along that I will need to pull along for him]... just for the record thats all. Finally I would like to say hi to Bob and Pat. It was Bobs 81 b'day last weekend and he is a bit of an inspiration or show off. He ran his first marathon, (in actual fact The first London Marathon , when there was only 10 people in it..  When was that?) when he was 51 in under three hours, since he has run many many more and now is personal trainer to my wife for her 2010 LEJOG bike ride.. Happy birthday mate... was it a big cake or were they small candles.  We are preparing the boat over the next day or so for a stormy ride, so forgive us if communications slow up.. but please keep those emails coming, we do receive them and will get around to personally replying over time.. thats if there isnt an acknowledgement in the blog.. Thanks Dad for you message, that was probably your first ever email, great to hear from you, always offering with sound advice 
 
Anatomy of of long distance rower....as you can probably guess from the length of Steve's blogs, he's probably more designed for ocean rowing as he can stand the furnace of the cabin during the day to write the blog posts. As the ginger in the crew I struggle to find a moments peace from the sun...we Gingers tend to explode when it even gets remotely hot on the Tube in the morning! As we plough on to warmer longitudes the baking heat will only get worse, but the great consolation is a fabulous tan :-)
We've endured the toment of blisters on hands and feet so far and have happily left these behind...we even had a brief spell of coughs (although I don't know where these came from)..but a new menace lurks on the horizon. Day after day of sitting on the oars is starting to take it's toll and the bit threat is rowers bum :-( We've a real mixture of seating materials to park ourselves on..sheepskin, foam, gel pads, towels and inflatable cushions...but last night at 6:00am in the morning I got my first taste of the weeks to come when nothing seemed to be comfortable. When you are tired in the dark in the middle of the morning and surrounded by large seas this is not the time.
It brings to home the fact that we are totally self-sufficient for all medical matters on the boat and we have a comprehensive med kit which is compulsory (there's a picture of us getting ours scrutineered on the offical race website). So Dr Hoyland and Dr Coe have set up practice just North of 19N in the Atlantic, if you are passing we are happy to assist.
 
Iggy, thanks for the text, likewise I am in awe at the mighty City, this will be our year to disprove the theory that the most valuable thing in the Manchester City trophy room is the carpet. You keep the office going as you always do :-)
Googlier, likewise thanks for the msg of support, this stuff really keeps us going, guess you will be starting your new job shortly...best of luck, the 2nd floor will be a poorer place for you moving on :-)
Annie, I would avoid rowing at all costs in the gym..it's a horrible sport and I for one will be quitting as soon as I get to Antigua. Thanks for the updates, and glad to see the jokes are back online :-)
Ben, Freya and Willow...not seen any whales yet, bit when I do I'll be naming them after you all.