Synopsis
After learning to sail his Wayfarer dinghy in coastal waters, a teenage Peter Clutterbuck decided to embark on a real-life Swallows and Amazons adventure - setting out on incredible voyages across the high seas. He and a series of intrepid crew first sailed across the Channel, then braved the notorious Bay of Biscay, cruised the Mediterranean, before tackling the North Sea and Baltic. They lived aboard the 16-foot dinghy for months at a time, without a cabin, exposed to the sea, completing some of the longest voyages then achieved in an open boat. Sailing on the edge, often on stormy nights, they survived towering waves, gales, capsizes, dismasting, nine rudder breakages in heavy seas, getting lost in fog, and hallucinations caused by sleep deprivation. Beautifully written and charmingly told, with plenty of offbeat humour, this is a classic true story and a delightfully entertaining and engaging insight into a golden age of freedom and adventure. Book jacket., This is a real-life story of small-boat adventure on the high seas, complete with extreme risk, last-minute ingenuity, and many near-misses. The Sea Takes No Prisoners begins in the 60s, telling of the adventures of the author as a boy--a time of boarding schools, long holidays, and an unbelievable (to today's parents) amount of freedom and danger. Encouraged by his parents (who lived abroad) to become more independent and self-sufficient, Peter decided to see how far he could get in his family's small open dinghy Calypso. At age 16, he spent a winter restoring the 16-foot Wayfayer open boat before sailing headlong into a force 7 gale and very nearly capsizing, after which he headed back to land to plan even more extreme adventures. The Wayfayer is a popular class of open dinghy (11,000 built): a boat designed for daytime gunkholing around coastlines and estuaries. But along with the occasional brave crewmate, Peter managed to sail her across the English Channel, through the Bay of Biscay, down the French canals and into the Mediterranean, then up into the North Sea and the Baltic to Oslo, living aboard for three months at a time. These were some of the longest voyages that anyone had ever achieved in an open boat, where (as Peter says) you "have to be like a tightrope walker, concentrating on balance day and night, fully aware of the consequence of relaxing your vigilance." He survived huge waves, nine rudder breakages in heavy seas, dismasting, capsizes, and hallucinations caused by sleep deprivation. He also managed it on a tiny budget, working as a farm laborer, hitchhiking everywhere, and at times living on one meal of cereal a day, to save the maximum amount for his boat. Charming, beautifully written, and a lovely insight into a seemingly golden time, this is primarily a great read, but will be of huge practical use to anyone wanting to go that bit farther in their dinghy. It also includes a lovely foreword by world-famous yachtsman Brian Thompson., A classic real-life tale of Swallows and Amazons adventures on the high seas, the author's intrepid voyages in his tiny open boat are breathtaking. With a Foreword by record-breaking yachtsman Brian Thompson.