[gps-talkusers] Blind Sailing

Thought I would share this with the users list.  The talking GPS Scott is
referring to is the GPS version 3 from Sendero.


Subject: Blind Sailing ... From today's Chronicle (October 13, 2004).



Pam and Scott are coming in safely to Santa Cruz this eve.  They had great
winds and a beautiful sail into Half Moon Bay yesterday, will leave Santa
Cruz by noon Wednesday and plan to sail on through the day and night to LA.
They have plans to meet up with the Good Morning America folks in LA, then
ambitiously get into San Diego by Tuesday the 19th.  Lunch for today a yucky
(according to Pam) Zone shake and some cheddar goldfish .... Here is the
article that was in today's paper.

SAN FRANCISCO
Blindness is not a barrier
Seafaring couple sets out on voyage around the world
Michael Taylor, Chronicle Staff Writer <mailto:mtaylor@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Tuesday, October 12, 2004
They're a young cheerful couple, setting out from San Francisco in a 32-foot
cutter to sail around the world, an expedition that emanates fairly
routinely from this harbor -- with one big exception.

Scott Duncan, 38, and Pamela Habek, 42, are both legally blind -- put a
900-foot freighter smack in their path and they are not going to see it
coming. It's the sort of unwanted interruption that can happen pretty
regularly when you sail around the world.

To the cheers of about a dozen well-wishers, some of them waving their white
canes in the air, Duncan reversed his boat, Tournesol, out of its slip at
Pier 39 at 12:35 p.m. Monday and the couple set out to circumnavigate the
globe.

Carl Augusto, president and CEO of the American Foundation for the Blind,
said that as far as he knows, this around-the-world voyage by a blind couple
is a first. The foundation is one of about 25 sponsors that are helping to
pay the estimated $300,000 cost of the two-year voyage.

For Duncan and Habek, it's a chance to show the world, as Duncan put it,
that "disabled people can do this. We can't drive a car at 60 mph, but we
can drive a boat at six knots." Before they set out Monday, they both worked
as associate executive directors at San Francisco's Rose Resnick Lighthouse
for the Blind and Visually Impaired and lived in San Francisco.

Duncan is not totally blind, but he has 20/450 vision in his left eye and
what he calls "20-nothing" in his right. With corrective lenses, Habek's
vision is 20/200. Jerry Kuns, a totally blind man who is a friend of Duncan
and Habek, and who came along to help send them off, said, "They're seeing
less than 10 percent of a normal person."

A couple of obvious questions come to mind for Duncan and Habek. How do you
see where you're going? How do you know where you're going? How do you,
well, sail this thing around the world without accidentally killing
yourselves?

Duncan leads a couple of visitors down below and points out the array of
electronic aids that help the modern sailor get nearly any place he wants to
go.

"First and foremost, radar," Duncan said. "I can read it with a magnifying
glass and it gives a broad picture of what's in front of the boat."

Then there's the talking Global Positioning System. It tells Duncan and
Habek their speed, position and distance from various waypoints. They also
have charts and a 10-power video magnifier -- a souped-up magnifying
glass - - that they can place over charts.

These aids, along with his quarter century of experience in sailing, will
help him and Habek get Tournesol down the coast to Panama, then out across
the Pacific and Indian oceans, around the tip of South Africa, across to
Brazil, then through the Panama Canal, to Hawaii and back home.

Asked why he's doing this, Duncan, who once taught at a camp for blind
children, said, "I wanted to make a statement for visually impaired kids. I
told the kids at the camp that you have to work harder when you're blind. I
kept telling them they can do more than they think they can do.

"Next time you see a blind person, think, well, they're different, but I
don't necessarily need to do something for them," he said. "Nothing drives
me more crazy than when I'm crossing a street and someone grabs my arm."

It's a sentiment echoed by many blind people and certainly by the American
Foundation for the Blind.
"Blind people are constantly struggling to be viewed as equal in their
ability with sighted people," Augusto said in an interview from his home in
New Jersey. "And sometimes it takes an extraordinary accomplishment on
someone's part ... to show the sighted world that blind people are capable
of living, working and achieving with dignity and success alongside their
sighted peers."

Of course, Duncan has been pretty self-sufficient and successful for much of
his life. He had his own company -- AccessAbility Inc., , a firm that made
computer systems for the blind. He sold it and made enough money to be able,
with help from the sponsors, to sail Tournesol around the world.

Asked about the possibility of hitting a barely submerged container that has
fallen off that 900-foot freighter that might loom in their path some night,
Duncan, whose T-shirt bears the legend "Fear Sucks," simply points out the
boat's "ditch bag."

The ditch bag has food and water for five days, a first-aid kit and a radio
transmitter that sends a signal to rescue authorities worldwide. The boat
also has a life raft that can automatically inflate and a dinghy powered by
an outboard motor.

For her part, Habek, who came to sailing later in life, says she's going on
the trip because she had been working at the organization for the blind for
16 years and "it was the perfect time to transition into something else."

Habek is no stranger to the sea -- she grew up in Southwest Harbor, Maine,
and her father was a longtime rigger for Hinckley Yachts, one of the world's
best-known boatyards. But she didn't really get into serious sailing until
she met Duncan.

"I have qualms," she conceded. "I think about things like thunder and
lightning, and about the idea that there's no one on the bridge of a
tanker."

Then suddenly, the voyage was at hand. The lines were singled up. The engine
was churning. Duncan and Habek stood on the bow and their friends raised a
toast of champagne.

"It's not often in life that you do something and at the same time send an
important message and still have a wonderful adventure," Duncan said.
"Cheers! We love you! OK, you guys, we're going to blow this place."

Readers may follow the voyage at www.blindsailing.com
<http://www.blindsailing.com>.E-mail Michael Taylor at
mtaylor@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:mtaylor@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>.



Rich Irwin
rich.irwin@xxxxxxxxxxx



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