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Challenge 3

Jamie Andrew is raising money for 500 miles

Participants: Jamie Andrew, Alan Freestone, Stuart Macdonald

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Challenge 3 · 21 June 2007

500 miles helps people in Malawi & Zambia who have impaired mobility as a result of amputation, deformity, illness or accident by supplying artificial limbs and splints & braces for all-comers, but especially the poor. Our focus, through training, is development of sustainable in-country services.

Story

The Challenge

 

In July 2007 a team of three very unusual sailors will compete in the North Sea Yacht Race.  A gruelling test of sailing expertise and endurance, The North Sea Yacht Race is one of the longest and perhaps most challenging ocean races in Northern Europe – across the North Sea between Stavanger in and Macduff in NE Scotland.

What makes this particular team of sailors unique, is the fact that all three of them are amputees – each of them is missing one or more of their hands and feet.

The Crew  

 

Stuart MacDonald

Stuart, the team skipper, was born in 1960 without any fingers on his left hand, although a series of operations during childhood created for Stuart a small thumb  (a digit now vital to the team’s prospects of success!). Never one to let disability stand in his way, Stuart has learned to make the most of the limbs that he does have, performing most everyday activities as well as anyone else, and enjoying successful careers as a therapeutic woodwork teacher and designer of therapeutic aids.

 Although he has pursued a love of the mountains since the age of nineteen, Stuart’s primary passion is sailing.  With 25 years of sailing under his belt, including dinghy sailing, day racing, and many longer passages in all states of sea and weather, Stuart brings a wealth of experience to the venture, as well, of course, as the boat Mrs Chippy, which is his third yacht.  

 

 

Alan Freestone

Born in 1953 in Derbyshire, Alan chose an active outdoor lifestyle from an early age and has been a keen climber, skier, ski tourer and sailor for many years.  A move to the Isle of Skye in 1991 to set up a pottery business allowed Alan to continue his pursuit of these activities and he joined the Skye Mountain Rescue Team in 1993.

Life took an unexpected turn for Alan in May 2006 when a motorcycle accident necessitated the amputation of his right leg below the knee. Undaunted Alan has made an amazingly swift recovery and throws himself with gusto into the task of reclaiming the life he had before his accident.

An experienced skipper in his own right Alan is a hugely competent crew member and has completed many difficult passages including crossing the North Sea in previous years.

Alan is the team’s closest answer to Long John Silver.

 

 

Jamie Andrew

In January 1999 Jamie Andrew and a mountaineering partner were trapped for five nights on the storm bound icy summit of a French mountain.  Their rescue, which was one of the most dramatic in the history of the Alps , came only hours too late to save his partner. Jamie, despite suffering hypothermia and appalling frostbite, survived.  Days later all four of his hands and feet were amputated.  

Since losing his hands and feet Jamie has learned to walk again, taken up skiing, run a marathon, and returned to climb once more in the mountains that he loves so much.

Jamie has always been a keen sailor and has a wealth of experience exploring the islands and coastal waters of .

When the call comes out, ‘All hands on deck!’, Jamie is the only crew member who can legitimately stay down below in his bunk.

The Boat

The team’s boat is co-owned by Stuart and his long-time sailing partner Toby Clark.  She is called Mrs Chippy and is a 31 foot Beneteau Oceanis Clipper 311.

Mrs Chippy is named after the remarkable carpenter’s cat who sailed aboard The Endurance on Shackleton’s ill-fated polar expedition of 1914.

 

 

 

 

 

Donation summary

Total
£1,255.00
+ £331.41 Gift Aid
Online
£1,255.00
Offline
£0.00

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