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Jennifer Figge Swims Across Atlantic, First Woman

DANICA COTO   02/ 7/09 10:45 PM ET   AP

Atlantic Ocean

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Jennifer Figge pressed her toes into the Caribbean sand, exhilarated and exhausted as she touched land this week for the first time in almost a month.

Reaching a beach in Trinidad, she became the first woman on record to swim across the Atlantic Ocean _ a dream she'd had since the early 1960s, when a stormy trans-Atlantic flight got her thinking she could don a life vest and swim the rest of the way if needed.

The 56-year-old left the Cape Verde Islands off Africa's western coast on Jan. 12, battling waves of up to 30 feet (9 meters) and strong winds.

David Higdon, a friend of Figge who kept in touch with her via satellite phone, said she had originally planned to swim the Bahamas, but inclement weather forced her to veer 1,000 miles (1,610 kms) off course to Trinidad, where she arrived on Feb. 5.

Figge plans to continue her odyssey, swimming from Trinidad to the British Virgin Islands, where she expects to arrive in late February. The crew won't compute the total distance Figge swam until after she completes the journey, Higdon said.

Then it's home to Aspen, Colorado _ where she trained for months in an outdoor pool amid snowy blizzards _ to reunite with her Alaskan Malamute.

"My dog doesn't know where I am," she told The Associated Press on Saturday by phone. "It's time for me to get back home to Hank."

The dog swirled in her thoughts, as did family and friends, as Figge stroked through the chilly Atlantic waters escorted by a sailboat. She saw a pod of pilot whales, several turtles, dozens of dolphins, plenty of Portuguese man-of-war _ but no sharks.

"I was never scared," Figge said. "Looking back, I wouldn't have it any other way. I can always swim in a pool."

Her journey comes a decade after French swimmer Benoit Lecomte made the first known solo trans-Atlantic swim, covering nearly 4,000 miles (6,400 kilometers) from Massachusetts to France in 73 days. No woman on record has made the crossing.

Figge woke most days around 7 a.m., eating pasta and baked potatoes while she and the crew assessed the weather. Her longest stint in the water was about eight hours, and her shortest was 21 minutes. Crew members would throw bottles of energy drinks as she swam; if the seas were too rough, divers would deliver them in person. At night she ate meat, fish and peanut butter, replenishing the estimated 8,000 calories she burned a day.

Figge wore a red cap and wet suit, with her only good-luck charm underneath: an old, red shirt to guard against chafing, signed by friends, relatives and her father, who recently died.

The other cherished possession she kept onboard was a picture of Gertrude Ederle, an American who became the first woman to swim across the English Channel.

"We have a few things in common," Figge said. "She wore a red hat and she was of German descent. We both talk to the sea, and neither one of us wanted to get out."

Figge arrived on Trinidad's Chacachacare Island, an abandoned leper colony, at 5:20 p.m. She plans to leave Trinidad on Monday night. During this brief respite, she has avoided the hotel pool and nearby ocean, opting instead for the treadmill.

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05:28 PM on 02/11/2009
Finally someone got out their slide rule and did some basic 3rd grade math. Really makes you wonder about the reporters and editors out there.
05:10 PM on 02/11/2009
Ok, I posted this once and it was apparently deleted.

AP News has published a correction to their original story.
"Figge swam only a fraction of the 2,100-mile journey. The rest of the time, she rested on her crew's westward-sailing catamaran. Her spokesman [said] that her total swimming distance has not been calculated yet, but that due to ocean hazards including inclement weather, he estimates she swam about 250 miles."

250 miles is just a little bit less impressive than 2400 miles (AP still has the distance from Cape Verde to Trinidad wrong)
04:26 PM on 02/11/2009
Link didn't format, you'll have to copy & paste
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mjeffn
Freedom's just another word 4 nothing left to lose
01:41 PM on 02/09/2009
There is lot of information lacking in the release. I think it is intentional on her part; for good reason. She probably wants to write a book about the adventure which will answer the questions brought mentioned by others here. This is time honored way for adventurers to make a living and finance future endeavors. Way to go girl. Awesome.
03:36 PM on 02/09/2009
Agreed.

Also wonder why I have not seen this in any other news outlet -- and it would be perfect for the slightly human-interesty blubs you see when you go to the Yahoo or MSN page to get to your email, and for network morning news shows...

One would assume the boat she was on used GPS to, every morning, circle back to the exact spot she got back onboard the evening before. Maybe there is some trepidation about crowning her acheivement because of things like that.
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aloha43
11:27 AM on 02/09/2009
Wow.
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cybertoothcat
11:24 AM on 02/09/2009
Holy mackerel! (pun intended)
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Seaglass
10:55 AM on 02/09/2009
Truly amazing. Now I feel like a fat sloth.
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Lex10
King O' The Web!
10:51 AM on 02/09/2009
Fifty-friggin-Six!
10:04 AM on 02/09/2009
I look forward to her book and all the details.
So many questions!

What a great adventure.
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fcsakes
08:39 AM on 02/09/2009
Wonderful! You didn't get where you are by paying attention to the naysayers, doubters, and jealous ninnies who sit around sipping colas and watching daytime TV - Go!!
09:14 AM on 02/09/2009
It makes you wonder....what they will say about someone who, I don't know, invents a cure for cancer...
"Ah, so he cured cancer...big deal......"
03:25 AM on 02/09/2009
This is shoddy reporting - I read this article on several different news sources and none of them
answer the obvious questions, like does the boat continue under power at night while she is
sleeping? Or does it try to maintain its position, or does it allow itself to drift with the current? It
looks like someone just did an uninformative news release and it’s been picked up, but I wish
media sources wouldn’t cover something like this until they get a few answers for their readers.
Otherwise the idea of “swimming across the ocean” is really quite meaningless. I mean, what
percentage of the distance was she actually in the water and what percentage riding on a boat?
From this article, we have virtually no idea of the answer.
07:37 AM on 02/09/2009
Wow, yeah, let's go with your criticism...
OK, let's say the boat carried her halfway...she still swam half of the Atlantic Ocean.
Let's say the boat took her 3/4 of the way, she still swam 1/4 of the Atlantic.
Also, she's not 16, she's not 26, or 36...she's 56...
What have you done lately?
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tailgateshirts
12:01 PM on 02/09/2009
While not being disrespectful to her accomplishments, some of these are valid questions.

I too was wondering what she did at night. If she got on a boat and would drive 100s of miles it wouldnt be as amazing, even tho still pretty awesome.
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Seaglass
10:58 AM on 02/09/2009
Breathe. This woman is still mind-blowing. Most of the fifty-somethings in my neighborhood hire people to clean their air-conditioner vents, but Figge took on the entire Atlantic.
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wwoody
Retired fishing for the truth.
12:32 AM on 02/09/2009
I'm exhausted just reading about her swim .
10:23 PM on 02/08/2009
I have a love of the sea. Even though I am not a sailor. There is something about the wide open expanse, depth, and power of a great body of water that lends itself to metaphor for real life. The Old Man and the Sea is a favorite story. Humans against...or in tune with the elements or conditions that exist, is the story of all of our lives. Mrs. Figge’s accomplishment is awesome to me because it causes me to imagine her experience and thereby I can tap into the spirit of her accomplishment. Can you imagine being out there, amongst the towering waves and the sea creatures as you seek to optimally blend with the environment with an intent of progression towards a destination, a goal, an island of reprieve from the cold waters of existence? Bravo dear lady, bravo!
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09:18 PM on 02/08/2009
I WALKED OVER 9,000 MILES.


.5 miles a day for 50 years, some stops for rest and food.
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amaycatbaker
08:54 PM on 02/08/2009
This is incredible! The woman is a fish!