
Aventura crew
Top row: Nick, Nikki, Jimmy and Marianne, 
 Bottom row: Nera, Doina, Emily and Jean-Luc
I’m giving our esteemed captain Jimmy a rest from Log writing today so 
 that I can introduce you to the rest of Aventura’s crew. We have just 
 finished our first week onboard, with a short trip from Nuuk up to 
 Aassiat under our belts. There are eight of us onboard, so who are we? 
 Jimmy needs no introduction. There’s myself, Doina, Jimmy’s daughter, 
 and my own daughter Nera. Completing our family is Marianne 
 Aschenbrenner, my cousin. She’s a TV editor from Munich and is filming a 
 documentary on the Blue Planet Odyssey, starting with the Northwest Passage.
Together we make up the A watch. There are three watches, on for four 
 hour slots during the day and three hours at night, and we’ve a rota to 
 share out cleaning and dish-washing duties also.
Watch B is Nick Carter and Nikki Woodroffe. They already have experience 
 of high latitude sailing having sailed round Cape Horn and led a sailing 
 trip to east Greenland in 2012 with seven English ex-servicemen and 
 amputees. Nick has been on Aventura since she left Cherbourg and is 
 Jimmy’s right hand man, which means as lowly crew members we get a rich 
 combination of salty English sea dog, just enough military discipline to 
 whip us civilians into shape, and Jimmy’s wealth of experience and 
 unfailing commonsense to keep us on track. We’ll be heading off into 
 dangerous waters soon, and it is nice to have confidence in the guys in 
 charge.
Watch C hosts a wealth of international talent. Jean–Luc Gourmelen, 
 well-known French sailing journalist who is writing about the trip and 
 especially the performance of the new Aventura, adds a dash of Gallic 
 spice to the mix. Also on Watch C is Emily Penn, and I’ll find it hard 
 to sum up her achievements in a few words. She’s been working with me to 
 develop our Blue Planet Odyssey education program, in between her busy 
 schedule as Royal Geographical Society speaker of the year and Program 
 Director of Pangaea Explorations. Emily has brought along a trawl from 
 the 5 Gyres Institute to trawl for plastics in the Arctic Ocean as part 
 of a global reasearch program.
An odd mix, you’ll agree, and as this voyage proceeds I’m sure you’ll be 
 hearing more from Jimmy Cornell Sailing Circus.
Doina Cornell







 Diese Seite ist auf Deutsch nicht verfügbar.
 Diese Seite ist auf Deutsch nicht verfügbar.


