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Alone at Sea
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Book Info
Author(s)
Publisher
Genre
Release Date
December 05, 1993
Pages
192
Recommended Retail Price
EUR 18,-
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Alone At Sea - a story of Dr. Hannes Lindemann's two solo crossings of the Atlantic Ocean.
Hannes Lindemann was born on 28 December 1922, in Germany. As a struggling medical student he worked in England harvesting crops, then in Spain as a photographer and journalist and later in Morocco as a laboratory assistant. Lindemann even donated blood to get extra cash to fuel his trips while working night jobs. When he landed a job as a plantation doctor in Liberia, he began construction of his dugout canoe, the same one which would take him across the entire Atlantic Ocean. His inquisitive and courageous nature led him to many adventures during which time he experimented on himself in the most extreme of conditions. He has written several other books on popular medicine and lives together with his wife in Bonn, Germany.
In October 1955, Hannes Lindemann set out in a dugout canoe and sailed across the Atlantic Ocean from the Canary Islands to Jacmel, Haiti, alone and unassisted. He landed in January 1956. This remarkable achievement was done in a wooden canoe carved out of the trunk of mahogany, two and a half feet wide, and twenty five feet long. Even in today’s modern times this would still be regarded as something rather extraordinary.
As a medical doctor, Lindemann was very interested in conducting experiments on himself. One of these was to test the concept that drinking sea water was a good idea during survival at sea. Needless to say it isn’t a good idea! The story unfolds in a totally honest and frank manner and the reader gets a good idea of what he went through during these times.
Exactly a year later he ventured out on yet another Atlantic crossing. This time in a seventeen foot folding Klepper kayak, drinking mostly beer and evaporated milk! 76 days later he arrived, still able to walk unassisted. This second journey seemed even more harrowing than the first and if it wasn’t being thrown around in monstrous seas then it was being becalmed, or encounters with sharks, whales and the battles inside his own mind. A truly awesome story, and which was luckily written finally in 1993; many years after completing these impressive feats.
The book is also available in German, but the original language is English.
Hannes Lindemann was born on 28 December 1922, in Germany. As a struggling medical student he worked in England harvesting crops, then in Spain as a photographer and journalist and later in Morocco as a laboratory assistant. Lindemann even donated blood to get extra cash to fuel his trips while working night jobs. When he landed a job as a plantation doctor in Liberia, he began construction of his dugout canoe, the same one which would take him across the entire Atlantic Ocean. His inquisitive and courageous nature led him to many adventures during which time he experimented on himself in the most extreme of conditions. He has written several other books on popular medicine and lives together with his wife in Bonn, Germany.
In October 1955, Hannes Lindemann set out in a dugout canoe and sailed across the Atlantic Ocean from the Canary Islands to Jacmel, Haiti, alone and unassisted. He landed in January 1956. This remarkable achievement was done in a wooden canoe carved out of the trunk of mahogany, two and a half feet wide, and twenty five feet long. Even in today’s modern times this would still be regarded as something rather extraordinary.
As a medical doctor, Lindemann was very interested in conducting experiments on himself. One of these was to test the concept that drinking sea water was a good idea during survival at sea. Needless to say it isn’t a good idea! The story unfolds in a totally honest and frank manner and the reader gets a good idea of what he went through during these times.
Exactly a year later he ventured out on yet another Atlantic crossing. This time in a seventeen foot folding Klepper kayak, drinking mostly beer and evaporated milk! 76 days later he arrived, still able to walk unassisted. This second journey seemed even more harrowing than the first and if it wasn’t being thrown around in monstrous seas then it was being becalmed, or encounters with sharks, whales and the battles inside his own mind. A truly awesome story, and which was luckily written finally in 1993; many years after completing these impressive feats.
The book is also available in German, but the original language is English.
User reviews
Rating
5.0
A great read, and I'm not really into historical type books. It might inspire you to get cracking on your own adventures! Big respect to Hannes Lindemann for doing what he did, in such a small 'boat', all those years ago...
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(Updated: December 06, 2009)
Rating
4.0
A very old story, but it's amazing how fresh it is to read. Especially considering the materials he had to use and the vast amounts of improvising, one can only have a lot of respect for Hannes Lindemann.
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