
The three female round-the-world crew members remaining on Mission Performance made a pact to complete the circumnavigation together. As they return into the ‘home’ waters of the Atlantic, they are looking forward to completing their ambition.
With
a number of Mission
Performance’s crew
leaving the race due to injury, the three fearless females Sophie Hetherton
(19), Kate Davidson (25) and Claire Carroll (37), have pledged to support each
other through the tough conditions so they can complete their journey together.
Claire Carroll, a sound
engineer from Dumfries, UK, said the trio made the commitment to keep going and
keep each other motivated, within the depleted core team of round-the-world
crew members remaining on board.
“Kate, Sophie and I all found we had similar motives - we wanted to race and
push the boat as hard as we could. We are pretty tightly knit. I always say
that the only way I'm going back into London is on the boat as a
circumnavigator so I don't have an option to get off, serious injury
permitting. Sophie and Kate feel the same, so it's really good to have that
strength there. “We learnt
that to feel a sense of achievement you just had to get stuck
in. Losing some of our crew mates through injury has been tough but in some ways
it has made us realise that we don't want to get off.”
Kate Davidson, a bartender
from Georgia, USA, said the three were too stubborn to quit and it was nice to
know that they will have each other through to the end. It’s also tough coping
with the fleeting relationships made with crew members who may only be
participating for a single leg.
“It feels terrible to watch people you really like and get on with leave the
boat when they have finished their leg, and I think any one of us would feel
guilty about doing that to each other and Matt, our skipper. Ultimately we are
the core of this boat. “Time
together tends to be either on deck during happy hour or while one of us is on
Mother Watch. We'll always gravitate to each other to talk about silly things like
crazy cheese-induced dreams or show off particularly spectacular bruises. “The best thing about having
Sophie and Claire around is just that we do really understand each other. If
we're on deck I can count on them to be in the right place at exactly the right
time for any sail evolution. Likewise, I know we can share frustrations and
stresses and the occasional exhaustion-related cry,” Kate added.
Sophie, a student from
York, UK, is the youngest female crew member on this edition of the Clipper
Race. She said: “I accepted this whole race was going to be tough physically
and mentally but I was never sure how I was going to react to it. “What I have found is that I love the physical
hard work, the hard days are what make part of the experience for me and when
you return from the bow after getting thrown by waves and pulling down sails
that are being difficult it gives me a sense of achievement that we did it and
hopefully no one was hurt. “I always love
the first evening in port. We arrive in after finishing a race and we can all
sit down, talk and even laugh at the times when we were frustrated. It's only
then that I can start to comprehend what we have just achieved. It was tough
and relentless but we got through and I am that one bit closer to saying I have
sailed round the world.”
Yes gritty determined strong girls. Good on yer, keep it up. Jamaica looked fun, hope the big apple is too.
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