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A joyous comparative study of two kindred voyages undertaken a lifetime apart.
In early summer 2015, following recent retirement, Barbara and Robert White left Plymouth, UK, on their elderly sailing yacht Zoonie , heading westwards to commence their circumnavigation. Eighty-seven years before them, in late summer 1928, recently married Erling and Julie Tambs left Ulvøysund, Norway, aboard their engineless, retired pilot cutter Teddy , on a similarly westwards route, to begin their cruise to the Pacific Islands.
Both couples rose to the demanding challenges of short-handed sailing and
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Produktbeschreibung
A joyous comparative study of two kindred voyages undertaken a lifetime apart.

In early summer 2015, following recent retirement, Barbara and Robert White left Plymouth, UK, on their elderly sailing yacht Zoonie, heading westwards to commence their circumnavigation. Eighty-seven years before them, in late summer 1928, recently married Erling and Julie Tambs left Ulvøysund, Norway, aboard their engineless, retired pilot cutter Teddy, on a similarly westwards route, to begin their cruise to the Pacific Islands.

Both couples rose to the demanding challenges of short-handed sailing and at the same time enjoyed and learnt from the new places and people they encountered on their travels. But the very different times in which they lived determined their status as circumnavigators, the knowledge and instruments they could rely upon, the places they visited and ultimately the outcome of their voyages.

Combining extracts from her blog, passages from Erling's book The Cruise of the Teddy and an enthusiastic curiosity to learn more about the world, Barbara embarks on a magnificent journey across oceans, between cultures and through time. From the highs of being welcomed to new lands with open arms and experiencing indigenous customs and traditions first-hand to the lows of devastating earthquakes and near-fatal misfortune, A Tale of Two Yachts offers an insight to lands and lives afar, all the while reflecting on what it means - and takes - to commit oneself to such a challenging expedition afloat.

In the end, the fate of the two yachts is determined by the elements - that which no sailor, no matter how advanced their technology, can control - and the intervention and generosity of the people present when disaster strikes.

While a tale of two yachts, this is at heart a tale of two couples, with a shared love for life and for the sea.


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Autorenporträt
Sailing came into Barbara's life when she was a young girl. Aged nine, with her father and brother, she built a flat pack Heron dinghy and spent the next six years sailing and racing her off the beach at Worthing, the town where she was born. The challenge and pleasure of sailing has been a perennial thread running through the six decades of her life since then.Although she started sailing big boats in her twenties, the charm and immediacy of dinghy sailing is as dear to her today as it was back then, and with her husband, Rob, she still sails the dinghy she helped build all those years ago.At eighteen she embarked on her first voyage with the Sail Training Association (STA), and many years later became a watch leader for the renamed Tall Ships Youth Trust (TSYT), a volunteer role she undertook for a decade.While raising her daughter, Emily, by herself, Barbara graduated with an Open University Arts Degree and qualified as a middle school teacher, before transitioning to a self-employed driving instructor, allowing her to take long periods off work to go big ship sailing. Barbara began her sailing blog, blog.mailasail.com/zoonie, in 2014, on which she is still active, and she has written travel pieces for the likes of Yachting Monthly, Yachting World, Sailing Today and Practical Boat Owner. In 2015 Barbara and Rob retired and having spent the two previous years planning their circumnavigation on Zoonie, their 40-foot Oyster 406, they were both ready to set off. The first half of this six-year voyage is documented in A Tale of Two Yachts, her debut book.Now back on solid ground, Barbara and Rob live in Dorset, South West England, though they look forward to many more adventures aboard Zoonie in the years to come.