128 Boating New Zealand
or the first half of his life David Lewis walked
the well-worn path of conformity and duty.
It was medical school, WWII, marriage,
and children. Apart from climbing the odd
mountain or a cross-country canoe trip, his
life had predictability to it.
In his early 40s Lewis found himself working as a General
Practitioner in London’s East End. “I was becoming increasingly
out of tune with my patients’ outlook. Their aspirations,
particularly those of the young couples, were extraordinarily
limited and unadventurous. Fears of illness, insecurity, and
apparently the sky falling down obsessed them.”
Confronted with this wall of conservatism and with a
marriage in the last stages of failure, something snapped and
the overwhelming desire for adventure rushed into his life with
all the force of an incoming tide.
In 1960 he tossed it all in for a half-baked idea to race solo
across the Atlantic, 3,100 nautical miles from Plymouth to
Newport, Rhode Island. With his life savings he purchased
Cardinal Vertue – a 25-foot Laurent Giles design – and set out
with other pioneers on what would be the first single-handed
Atlantic race. It was an epic test for his adventurous resolve as it
took 56 days, a dismasting, grounding and several collisions to
get him there.
At the end of it all he turned around and sailed back to
England before writing his first book The Ship That Would
Not Travel Due West. His writing style was very readable and
embarrassingly honest with regard to his own shortcomings.
Perhaps because of this point the book was a great success. It
was also to set a pattern of adventuring and writing about it all
that would dominate the rest of his life.
After his trans-Atlantic race Lewis briefly returned to shore
life. As a doctor his bedside manner was unusual – sometimes
he would advise a patient to “see a proper doctor.” It did not
bode well for his career, so when he decided to go adventuring
with his second wife, Fiona, and two small daughters, he built
the ocean-cruising catamaran Rehu Moana and cut his ties to the
medical profession.
F
BREAKING
THE MOULD
feature
Sailor
Scribes
WORDS BY MATT VANCE
PHOTOGRAPHY SUPPLIED
It’s never too late to embrace life – especially if a boat’s involved.