Available Formats
Tasman Trespasser II
By (Author) Shaun Quincey
HarperCollins Publishers (New Zealand)
HarperCollins Publishers (New Zealand)
7th December 2010
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
Rowing and sculling
910.916478
Paperback
288
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 27mm
690g
In 1977, Colin Quincey became the first man to row the Tasman. Forty years later, his son Shaun decided to emulate his father - rowing the other way. His father's boat was the Tasman Trespasser, and when Shaun decided to build and row Tasman Trespasser II, he knew it wasn't going to be easy. At the time, he owned little more than a drum kit and a heap of dreams. While he was at home in the water - an experienced surf lifesaver and swimmer - in his own words he had never been so scared, had less money, been laughed at as much or been so unprepared for anything in his life. That he succeeded is history - that he set a new record, testament to personal endurance and sheer tenacity, as well as the skill with which he designed and built his boat. Don't miss a moment. My world is a confusion of violent twists, rolls and thuds, with screaming wind and waves crashing into, onto and over me. I am lying braced with my feet against the cabin wall, my back against another, sweating and trying to eat cold porridge ...
Shaun Quincey lives in Auckland, and has been busy touring Tasman Trespasser II round New Zealand, raising funds for surf lifesaving. The boat will then be on permanent exhibition at the National Maritime Museum.