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Swirly World: Lost At Sea

Regular price $39.99
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per
Swirly World: Lost At Sea
Swirly World: Lost At Sea

Swirly World: Lost At Sea

Regular price $39.99
Unit price
per

Description

At 10:15am on January 19th 2022, renowned solo sailor, Andrew Fagan, set sail from Auckland, New Zealand, in his tiny 5.1m sloop-rigged plywood yacht Swirly World in Perpetuity in an attempt to set the world record for 'The smallest boat to sail solo around the world via the Great Capes'. The three capes being South America's Cape Horn, Africa's Cape of Good Hope and Australia's Cape Leuwin.

The voyage itself was estimated to take fourteen months non-stop. Fourteen months of food, water... and resolve. Andrew first needed to cross the vast South Pacific Ocean towards Cape Horn, the stuff of myth and legend and the point at which the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans meet ' one of the most feared sea routes in the world.

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  • At 10:15am on January 19th 2022, renowned solo sailor, Andrew Fagan, set sail from Auckland, New Zealand, in his tiny 5.1m sloop-rigged plywood yacht Swirly World in Perpetuity in an attempt to set the world record for 'The smallest boat to sail solo around the world via the Great Capes'. The three capes being South America's Cape Horn, Africa's Cape of Good Hope and Australia's Cape Leuwin.

    The voyage itself was estimated to take fourteen months non-stop. Fourteen months of food, water... and resolve. Andrew first needed to cross the vast South Pacific Ocean towards Cape Horn, the stuff of myth and legend and the point at which the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans meet ' one of the most feared sea routes in the world.

At 10:15am on January 19th 2022, renowned solo sailor, Andrew Fagan, set sail from Auckland, New Zealand, in his tiny 5.1m sloop-rigged plywood yacht Swirly World in Perpetuity in an attempt to set the world record for 'The smallest boat to sail solo around the world via the Great Capes'. The three capes being South America's Cape Horn, Africa's Cape of Good Hope and Australia's Cape Leuwin.

The voyage itself was estimated to take fourteen months non-stop. Fourteen months of food, water... and resolve. Andrew first needed to cross the vast South Pacific Ocean towards Cape Horn, the stuff of myth and legend and the point at which the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans meet ' one of the most feared sea routes in the world.