I just finished Tania Aebi's first hand account of her Solo Circumnavigation, Maiden Voyage. I really enjoyed this book! I think I liked it for both what it said and what it didn't. Primarily it was not an epic tale of survival.
The title describes both the voyage and the concept in one. Tania was a very young and impetuous girl with little direction in her life. Her father, who seemed like he could be overbearing at times, decides Tania needs to circumnavigate in a 26 foot sailboat to discover herself. This concept is revisited several times throughout the book but when the reader is introduced to Tania's mother we begin to understand the father a bit more and why he is the way he is. However I could not get past the idea that her father was living vicariously through her.
Initially I began just enjoying the story of a young, yet extremely resourceful, girl who consistently finds ways to overcome adversity, and she faced more than her fair share. Then as she progressed through her adventure I was struck by her inexperience and naivete, and her father's for that matter. For example in the first few days of her trip she fails to let out enough anchor rode to actually get the anchor to touch the bottom. Then she's learning how to use her sextant in the middle of her passage from New York to the Bahamas. Now lest you think I'm casting judgement understand that I found her lack of skills enlightening and motivating. In that it told me you don't necessarily have to be an old salt of the sea with thousands of miles under your keel to head out over the horizon. I don't mean to start a debate with that statement so I'll leave it at that.
I don't want to give away everything in the book because I want you to click on that link above and read this book for yourself. The story details both her successes and her struggles. We learn about the people she meets along the way, including one who will eventually become her husband and the father of her two children. Some of my take-aways involve making sure a boat is broken in before heading over the horizon! Ms. Aebi took a nearly brand new off the showroom floor boat around the world and she paid a certain price for that. That she was successful speaks volumes to her resourcefulness, stubborness, tenacity and the the skills she developed along the way. You only have to read of her passage from Panama to Tahiti to begin to understand the depths of this young womans perseverance.
I think I read this book mostly in a self-involved mindset (I can hear what some of you are thinking right now...) I kept wondering how I would handle a situation that Ms. Aebi was enduring, usually wondering would I handle it as well as she...
I recently read a story written by Ms. Aebi in Cruising World. She'd just re-traced her trip across the pacific with her two boys. This time she was taking a more leisurely pace. Her first time through the area she was on somewhat of a race to try to become the youngest solo circumnavigator. It was good to hear she's still sailing and in fact has become something of an icon in the sailing world.
I recommend this book even if you aren't interested in sailing as it's just a good story. If you are thinking of something even close to crossing oceans then I think you'll enjoy as much as you learn.
Seaman Ray