Introduction To Sailing Europe In Ramprasad
Tips On How To Get Into Sailing
Log | Other Boats | Ramprasad | Introduction
previous |
next

Jamie says fairwell to a sunny
England, June 2003
The year 2003
has been panning out nicely so far. With one of the warmest
summers on record it seems I’ve spent most of this year
following the sun. Selling my share of my business and spending
2 months in New Zealand from March was perhaps the best
move I could have made, so when I returned in April the
last thing I wanted to do was go back to work. To cut a
long story short I decided a sailing trip across the Atlantic
was my calling. Don’t ask me why, it just had to be done.
The three months with my recently-retired parents back in
my home town of Saffron Walden was fantastic. A chance to
hang out with my folks, hit the pub with my Dad, allow my
Mum to iron my underwear (I specifically requested her not
to but you know how mums are), and catch up with some old
friends and make some new ones. Much of this was done in
my local, The OEG (Old English Gentlemen), except the ironing
of my underwear.
In short the last six months has consisted of very little
working, lots of drinking, chilling with some great people,
oh and flirting with some lovely ladies. So to up and leave
this and take on something that I had only previously had
one week’s experience of was difficult. The fact that I
was planning to cross the Bay of Biscay and the Atlantic
in a home-made 37ft yacht was insane. This was helped not
at all by responses like “you’re mad”, “there’s no way you’d
ever catch me doing that” and “you’re not a sailor until
you’ve sailed the Bay of Biscay”. My favourite was a comment
shouted out to me down the road as I left the OEG for the
last time: “Shark fodder”. Cheers!

The t-shirt says it all
I met Sailor
Sam (my nickname for him - a character from Rupert the Bear)
via the Crew Seekers website, a place for skippers to advertise
for fools to join them on insane trips (like crossing the
Atlantic on a 37ft yacht).
Sam is a doctor of Upper Atmosphere Physics, spent five
years creating instruments to assist in the study of the
Northern Lights and sees the world through a photomultiplyerspectroscope.
He built his ferro-cement yacht from a wreck over a 15 year
period, decking out the interior with gubbins gleaned from
second hand boat fetes.
A qualified Royal Yachting Association (RYA) offshore yachtmaster,
Sam has already crossed the Atlantic a number of times.
His piece-de-resistance, however, must have been sailing
the original Ramprasad (a traditional open Indian fishing
boat made from teak) from India to Australia single handed.
Check an Atlas to put into context just how mad this bloke
is.
Sam can speak about 27 different languages and is a member
of CAMRA, the Campaign for Real Ale. We’re in good hands.

Honest, I'm not really from Wales
I was led to
believe that Lorraine came from Wales, so I was relieved
to find that she’s actually a south-London grrrl (bling
bling) who was forced to live in Wales against her will.
Lorraine is actually one of those super brainy people without
having to try and has a proper English sense of humour.
Bit like Conny, who she describes as “the Crazy Kraut Canoeist”.
I first met her on the pontoon whilst waiting for the river
taxi to take us to the boat and full of enthusiasm she asked
me if I was Jamie. When I replied ‘yes’ she backed off and
her skin-head dad stepped up to show me who’s girl she really
is. Her dad is actually a bit of a geezer, a volunteer for
the RNLI with a lot of sailing experience behind him. His
parting words to me were ‘there’ll be plenty of times when
you think “this is it, I’m a gonner”’. Yeah, cheers mate.

How do you spell "Abba" again?
Meet Conny.
This Bjorn-from-Abba look-a-like spends most of his time
kayaking the cold Baltic seas just for a laugh. He kayaked
from Brighton to Chichester to meet Sam (taking 2 days with
a headwind to make his destination), though his Germany - to - Sweden - to - Denmark - and - back - again
trip wins him the Medal of Hardcore. At 37 he lives in a
camper van and describes himself as happily divorced and
when I met him he was sporting a Wallace and Grommet t-shirt:
crack a joke and Conny turns into a disturbing likeness
to Wallace. I’ve tried to capture this distinctive feature
on film but you’ve gotta be there really.
Oh, and he’s German. We’ve already mentioned the war and
he explained that not only does he get blamed for the war
but for the death of Jesus and global warming as well. Good
lad.

Sailing in style
Officially
Ramprasad is a ferro-cement 37ft cruising yacht. Unofficially
Ramprasad is a ferro-cement 37ft cruising yacht. Basically
I’m not allowed to say anything derogatory about this vessel
as it’s seeing me across some of the roughest seas known
to man. In truth I don’t have anything bad to say about
it anyway. Skip has spent years doing this baby up and whilst
all the la-di-da sailing types opt for super-light fibre-glass
modern vessels, Ramprasad is a solid, ocean-going work-horse
and she’s a beauty. Sam reckons if he tried selling her
he’d not get much for her because she’s ‘home-made’, but
I think the two are inseparable. Sam also reckons that she
performs best whilst packed down with weight, which is why
we’ve filled every possible stowage space with alcohol.
And there’s me thinking I was gonna lose a few pounds on
this trip. I strongly urge you to read all about Sam's 12
year project building Ramprasad from a rotting hull, it
makes fascinating reading -
CLICK
HERE.
Log | Other Boats | After Ramprasad | Sintra
previous |
next