John Fairfax, who died on 8th February in Henderson, Nevada, was the first person to row solo across an ocean. In 1969 he spent 180 days alone at sea to row across the Atlantic from the Canaries to Florida. In 1971/2 he rowed across the Pacific with his girlfriend, Sylvia Cook.
A colourful character never at a loss for a quotable soundbite, Fairfax was a precocious adventurer. At 13 he left his mother, then living in Argentina, to “live like Tarzan” in the jungle. He spent time with local peasants, foraged for food, and hunted jaguar and ocelot for skins which he sold in Buenos Aires. Subsequent adventures saw him drive from New York to San Francisco, ride a bike from San Francisco to Guatemala, hitchhike to Panama, and make his first million by smuggling contraband with pirates. And all this by the age of 25.
After making his way back to Argentina on horseback he tried to figure out what to do with his next quarter-century. As a child he had read about the 1896 crossing of the Atlantic in a rowboat by Harbo and Samuelson (fantastic book about this voyage), and it had captured his imagination. Now he stumbled across a report about the recent 1966 crossing of the Atlantic by Ridgway and Blyth. The record for the first solo crossing was up for grabs.
Less than twenty hours after launching from the Canaries in 1969 he was wondering what had possessed him to believe that this was a good idea. But a cigar and a steaming cup of tea laced with brandy apparently gave him renewed motivation, and 180 days later he successfully arrived on Hollywood Beach in Florida, and went on to row the Pacific with Sylvia Cook 2 years later.
I feel a certain amount of empathy with John Fairfax. I, too, have rowed solo across oceans. I, too, have frequently found it “a miserable journey”, as he described his Pacific crossing. I, too, have felt the boredom and frustration of the crossing, and the euphoria of arrival.
However, in one key regard, Fairfax and I have had profoundly different ocean experiences. When he was rowing the oceans forty years ago, shark populations were around five times what they are now. Shark-finning, by-catch, and the demolition of the ocean food pyramid have devastated populations of sharks and other apex predators. Fairfax happily describes how he lassoed and killed a dusky shark. Now he would be lucky to see one.
Forty years ago we had no notion of climate change or ocean acidification, although the process was already underway. Two-thirds of the world’s coral reef systems are now damaged, with ten percent being degraded beyond recovery thanks to coastal development, destructive fishing practices, pollution, and mining, as well as rising acidity.
The Atlantic that John Fairfax rowed across still had a thriving cod fishing industry. By 1992, Northern Cod biomass had dropped to one percent of its previous levels, and the Canadian government was forced to declare a moratorium on Atlantic fisheries.
The first container ship launched just over a decade before Fairfax’s voyage, in 1956. Today there are over 50,000 container ships plying the world’s oceans, transporting everything from cars to kiwifruit. It has been estimated that one container ship pollutes as much as 50 million cars due to their enormous weight and the low quality of their fuel, contributing up to 30 percent of the nitrogen oxide that leads to acid rain.
When John Fairfax rowed across the Pacific with Sylvia Cook, the plastics industry was still in its infancy. Now there are an estimated 3.5 million tons of plastic floating in the North Pacific Gyre, just one of five oceanic gyres around the world where plastic pollution accumulates, leaching toxic chemicals such as BPA into seawater and killing marine life.
It was concern over our unsustainable use of the world’s resources – oceanic and otherwise – that first led me to take up my oars for the cause. In just fifty years we have devastated the blue two-thirds of our planet. Let’s protect our oceans and give them a chance to recover, not just for the sake of future adventurers, but for all our sakes.
Fantastic facts….really appreciate all the work from grounds up you are doing to protect our mother earth. We are doing are small bits as much as we can as well!
Thank you, Shachi – keep up the great work!
Roz . . . thanks so much for your post remembering John Fairfax and showing us how much damage and devastation our kind has wrought on the Oceans in the time since he rowed the Atlantic the first time.
Mauri Roz – wanted to share the image of John Fairfax and Sylvia Cook arriving on Tarawa in 1972. Somewhat different to your own arrival – maybe you’d have looked more swashbuckling with a pipe. Can’t wait for your Pacific book.
Great to hear from you, David! Mauri to you and Tessie too.
Pipe-smoking – one vice I’ve never tried. Maybe I should if it would help swash my buckle! 🙂
Hope to see you and Tessie again soon. Any New York trips planned?
John Fairfax from New York Times…
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/19/us/john-fairfax-who-rowed-across-oceans-dies-at-74.html?pagewanted=all
Link to get you started in the resistance against shark finning…
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shark_finning
There are many petitions and organizations that would like your support.
Every year from September to March (they just finished this years drive-hunt) approximately 23,000 dolphins are killed for children’s lunches and mostly pet food additives in Taiji, Japan at “The Cove”
http://savejapandolphins.org/
The Japanese hunt whales due to a loophole by marking their boats for “research” (in English, for the cameras).
http://www.seashepherd.org/whales/japan.html
The US almost wiped out the American Bison, so I know it is not even close to being too late. But you will just have to muster some inconvenience, and get involved in some small way.
Many of these grassroots organizations have free facebook presences and outlets for your action.
http://5gyres.org/
http://plasticpollutioncoalition.org/
http://www.surfrider.org/
All that is needed for the triumph of evil in the world,
Is for good men to sit idle
~Edmund Burke
Row Roz Row!
~Jay 🙂
According to http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Environmentandgreenerliving/Thewiderenvironment/Climatechange/DG_072901,
“carbon dioxide (CO2) measurements were made
on a mountain top in Hawaii [from the late 1950s]. Over the next decade, these measurements
confirmed that levels of CO2 in the atmosphere were rising year on year.
In 1967, an early computer simulation suggested that global
temperatures might increase by more than 4 degrees Fahrenheit, depending
on CO2 levels.Improved climate models developed over the next 20
years confirmed the link between CO2 emissions and global warming. Then
an ice core from Antarctica first revealed a link between carbon
dioxide levels and temperature going back more than 100,000 years.
Warnings like these encouraged international action on climate change.
The first major international climate science conference was held in 1979. The conference called on governments ‘to foresee and prevent potential man-made changes in climate’.”33 years of political inaction…
Thanks for this, Margaret. It’s frustrating, isn’t it? How much more obvious does it have to become before we do what is necessary?
Roz Savage
Ocean Rower and Environmental Campaigner
First Woman to Row Three Oceans: Atlantic, Pacific, Indian
National Geographic Adventurer of the Year 2010
Author of “Rowing The Atlantic: Lessons Learned on the Open Ocean”
https://www.rozsavage.com
Some people cannot be stopped! 🙂
This is a link that I got today about Sea Shepard finding out about Hong Kong Airlines shipping dolphins. First, they walked in with 2400 signatures on a petition. Now Hong Kong Airlines faces 6000 signatures (gathered in two days!) and needs to address the situation as it permeates social networking. Your signatures and sharing counts…
http://www.seashepherd.org/news-and-media/2012/02/28/sea-shepherd-shows-hong-kong-airlines-the-direct-action-tactic-1346
This is a link from an article just written today. A girl saw a man releasing balloons at a car dealership and posted it on her social networking site. Another reader sees the post and posts it on the car dealership facebook site. An immediate and pro-active response from the dealership ensued. … The epitome of simple actions.
http://5gyres.org/posts/2012/02/28/be_the_sea_change_brooke_mougeys_victory_and_big_5g_smiles
Ripples begin with one small drop.
Row Roz Row!
~Jay
Roz et al;
In less than two days, Honk Kong Airlines bans all transportation of dolphins. !!!
What a few signatures can do…
http://www.seashepherd.org/news-and-media/2012/02/29/hong-kong-airlines-bans-transport-of-wild-animals-1348
Row Roz Row!
Roz, this is so interesting, thank you so much for sharing this tale, you raise consciousness around you, big thumbs up
Roz was able to meet with the Kiritbati President,
Anote Tong at the end of her Stage II Pacific Row. This is a recent video regarding global warming and the challenge of the island’s inhabitants. It is clear that they would like us to help and “buy them time” before forced evacuation due to global warming. They have lived on these islands for 4000 years and they have approximately 30 years left. “Climate refugees” could be a new international word.
http://youtu.be/psEsUvGaJ0A
Thanks Roz… for never giving up! Row girl row!
Some encouragement from Cali.
http://campusprogress.org/articles/plastic_free_campuses_campaign_launches_at_ucsanta_barbara/