Honiton charity waves off rowers taking on 3,000-mile Talisker Whisky Challenge for Devon Freewheelers
By Guest
17th Sep 2021 | Local News
Lifeline charity volunteers based in Honiton bid bon voyage to an intrepid group of four gearing up to put their lives on the line, tackling a 3,000-mile ocean row adventure in aid of the Devon Freewheelers charity.
Force Genesis - Mark Sealey, of Wiveliscombe, near Taunton, grandmother-of-three Gemma Best, from Clevedon, Somerset, Amy Wood, from Salisbury, Wiltshire, and Will Cogley, of Portishead, near Bristol – on Tuesday (December 1) left the UK in anticipation of setting off on the Talisker Whisky Atlantic Challenge 2020.
The fab four flew out to the Canary Islands, ready to tackle what is billed as the world's toughest row.
The race begins on December 12, with Force Genesis hoping to row into Antigua in early 2021.
The four intrepid rowers are hoping to raise £50,000 for Devon Freewheelers, and have set up a JustGiving page for donations.
The team – who will spend Christmas away from loved-ones as they tackle the challenge, will row around the clock, operating on two-hour on, two-hour off basis, continuously working in pairs.
While away at sea they face 40-foot waves, dehydration and sleep deprivation.
They must carry their entire kit on their boat, Jasmine Ann, will not have any luxuries, and cannot have any outside help unless they are in life-threatening danger.
Daniel Roe-Lavery, Devon Freewheelers CEO, thanked Force Genesis on behalf of the charity, and urged people to support their efforts with a donation.
He said: "What they are doing is absolutely amazing.
"Because of the pandemic we haven't been able to have any fundraising activities, so for these guys to take this on for us is even more awe inspiring."
Mr Lavey-Roe added: "We are looking forward to supporting them in every way that we can from the minute they leave, to the minute they return in Antigua."
Mark, aged 56, said Force Genesis chose to row 3,000 miles for Devon Freewheelers after a chance meeting with a blood biker.
He said: "I am fifty per cent percent excited and fifty per cent terrified. There's a risk you might not come back. This is not easy.
"We all thought Devon Freewheelers, the blood bikes, was such a worthy charity.
"The four of us are willing to do this crazy thing and are willing to put our lives on the line.
"We are prepared to be at sea for six weeks, away from our families, because we think they are such a great charity. So please support us and give whatever you can to the Devon Freewheelers."
He added: "You see the Devon Freewheelers bikes on the road. They deliver so much, including blood, surgical equipment and baby milk.
"We wanted to support smaller charity that is struggling through the pandemic day-to-day.
"We thought that's going to resonate with so many people." Force Genesis is due to leave San Sebastian in La Gomera, the Canary Islands, when the race starts on December 12. They will row for around 45 days, travelling more than 3,000 miles to Antigua, arriving at Nelson's Dockyard English Harbour in early 2020. The mixed four will compete against teams and individuals from across the globe as they battle the elements to row the Atlantic Ocean. The Force Genesis rowers hope to be crowned first mixed four team to cross the finishing line in the 2020 race. Mark said the challenge had been three-and-a-half years of planning, and such was the risk involved, the competitors have updated their wills and written letters to loved-ones. "The biggest upside is what we are going to see when we are out there," said Mark. "People see the most magical sunsets and the most magical night skies, and then there's the wildlife of whales, dolphins, flying fish - there's the magic around that. "The thing we're all dreading is the capsize, it's just like a canoe, you have got to hold your breath and go around and with it and come back up again - or hopefully you will come back up again. "When you are on the water it's lots of joy and everything else in between. We're going to take in every moment – especially return to land." He added: "It's something to tell the grandchildren. "It's grown and grown and here we are three and a half years later we are not that far from making a start." After flying out to La Gomera at the start of December, the team will spend the days before the race packing up the boat with all the supplies and food needed for the race. The rowers face more than a month rowing the Atlantic Ocean, in a boat measuring around seven meters long, just short of two meters wide, with a small cabin for protection against storms. The Fore Genesis boat, a Rannoch Adventure R45, has twice completed the Talisker Whiskey Atlantic Challenge, with teams making successful crossings in 2017 and 2018. See the Force Genesis JustGiving page here.
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