Bom dia amigos leitores, só agora tive tempo para pesquisar a incrível estória do francês Nicolas Jarossay que tendou cruzar o Atlântico sobre uma curiosa prancha de Stand Up Puddle. Isso aconteceu há quase dois
anos atrás em 14 de abril de 2016. E isso acontece com os melhores aventureiros. Leiam abaixo em inglês.
Fernando Costa
anos atrás em 14 de abril de 2016. E isso acontece com os melhores aventureiros. Leiam abaixo em inglês.
Fernando Costa
The Incredible Story of Nicolas Jarossay’s Abandoned Attempt to Paddle Across the Atlantic Ocean
posted April 14th, 2016 by Christopher Parker, Boss Man
Atlantic Stand Up Paddle Crossing
Nicolas Jarossay departed from Cape Verde on Sunday April 10th; He was hoping to become the first person to stand up paddle across the Atlantic Ocean but was rescued just hours later after deploying his distress beacon (photo: Horue Movie)
Last weekend, Frenchman Nicolas Jarossay boldly attempted to become the first person to stand up paddle across the Atlantic Ocean, however his brave voyage ended almost as soon as it began, with equipment failure forcing him to be rescued in rather dramatic fashion.
The 4,690km (2,915 miles) solo, unsupported crossing was expected to take 70-80 days, with Nicolas departing from Cape Verde (off the north west coast of Africa) and hoping to reach the Caribbean island of Martinique by the end of June. But instead of almost 5,000kms, Nicolas made it just 50kms before his historic crossing (and almost his life) ended in an… LINK
posted April 14th, 2016 by Christopher Parker, Boss Man
Atlantic Stand Up Paddle Crossing
Nicolas Jarossay departed from Cape Verde on Sunday April 10th; He was hoping to become the first person to stand up paddle across the Atlantic Ocean but was rescued just hours later after deploying his distress beacon (photo: Horue Movie)
Last weekend, Frenchman Nicolas Jarossay boldly attempted to become the first person to stand up paddle across the Atlantic Ocean, however his brave voyage ended almost as soon as it began, with equipment failure forcing him to be rescued in rather dramatic fashion.
The 4,690km (2,915 miles) solo, unsupported crossing was expected to take 70-80 days, with Nicolas departing from Cape Verde (off the north west coast of Africa) and hoping to reach the Caribbean island of Martinique by the end of June. But instead of almost 5,000kms, Nicolas made it just 50kms before his historic crossing (and almost his life) ended in an… LINK
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