Boating New Zealand – April 2018

(Brent) #1

116 Boating New Zealand


D

onaldson, 47, attempted the crossing in 2014 and
came agonisingly close to completing it after 84
days at sea. After paddling half the Tasman with
an unrepairable rudder and sitting in a once-in-
40-year storm – while looking at Mount Taranaki
80km away – he aborted the attempt.
Tis time, Donaldson will again depart Cofs Harbour on
the New South Wales coast and aim for the Taranaki coast
2,200 kilometres east – although he will probably paddle
around 3,000 kilometres.
“Tis time around it’s about fnishing the job,” he says. “It’s
about the challenge. No one has done it solo by kayak before.”
A former multisport athlete (triathlon, cross country, adventure
racing), Donaldson has represented New Zealand in several
disciplines, including triathlon in the Commonwealth Games.
For 12 years, he owned a coaching business that centred
on swimming from learners to elite. “I’ve coached people to do

various crazy things such as the Cook Strait swim and ultra-
distance running and cycling. It’s time to put those coaching
theories to an extreme test.
“Tis kayak attempt was fairly obvious to me as I’ve got
the skill set to do it. Tere have been 15 attempts in the past,
which have all fnished in various forms of failure. It’s a bit like
training for an ironman – once you go over the eight hours of
exertion you’re into serious endurance range, so the only thing I
have to do is make sure my body doesn’t break down.”
Tere is also a charitable aspect to his mission: as an
asthmatic, Donaldson has linked with Asthma New Zealand to
raise awareness of the condition.
“I have had asthma since childhood – and now my own
son has it as well. I am living proof of what you can achieve.
Actually, the sea air, without pollen, is pretty good. I will have
no issues out there!”
Once he sets of, Donaldson’s biggest hurdle will be Mother
Nature. “Te tricky part of the Tasman is the weather. You
generally get two days of good progress followed by two to four
days of the Tasman trying to push you back.”
If weather conditions are favourable, Donaldson aims to
paddle for about 16 hours a day.
“You just waste energy if you’re paddling into wind of more
than 20 knots. So the aim is to deploy the sea anchor, slow down
the rate of drift and hopefully hook into a favourable current.”
With design improvements made to his boat from the
original craft, Donaldson’s new vessel has a length of 6.3m and
is 0.76m wide. It’s half the weight and has a bigger cabin for
extra comfort and shelter, with more room to store food, water
and provisions for the crossing.
During the attempt, Donaldson will initially burn roughly
11,000 calories per day, but his body will become far more
efcient at around 6,000 calories. He will get his nutrition via a
mixture of protein shakes and Radix dehydrated food. Drinking
water is from a small desalinator – a device that makes clean
drinking water from seawater. BNZ

BOATBRIEF


When weatherman Bob McDavitt
gives the word sometime in April, Kiwi
adventurer Scott Donaldson will set
of on a second attempt to become the
first person to successfully kayak from
Australia to New Zealand.

Another


Tasman


attempt


Follow
Scott’s
progress
http://www.tasmankayak.com/
Free download pdf