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Laura Dekker, Teen Sailor, Sets Sail

TOBY STERLING   08/ 4/10 08:38 AM ET   AP

Netherlands Young Sailor

AMSTERDAM — She's not afraid of pirates. She's packed plenty of school books. And she's going to miss her family and her dog, Spot.

Fourteen-year-old Laura Dekker hopped onto her boat Wednesday and sailed off from the Netherlands hoping to become the youngest person to make a solo voyage around the world.

About 100 supporters waved as Laura and her father Dick Dekker left the southern Dutch harbor of Den Osse in her 38-foot (11.5-meter) yacht Guppy, bound for Portugal where she plans to leave her father and begin her circumnavigation attempt.

Last week, Laura won a legal battle when a court released her from the guardianship of Dutch child protection agencies. They had blocked her initial plan to depart at age 13 over fears for her safety and psychological health during the trip, which will likely take around a year.

"I can be sailing now, and that's great!" she told reporters Wednesday, sporting a skull-emblazoned black T-shirt.

Dekker hoisted the black Jolly Roger-like flag of The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society above her red twin-masted ketch – the same image she wore on her shirt – before sailing out.

Laura, who was born on a yacht off the coast of New Zealand, has been working to counter objections to her voyage since the authorities stepped in last year. She got a bigger, sturdier boat, took courses in first aid and practiced coping with sleep deprivation. She also made at least one solo trip across the North Sea to England.

The Dutch court ruled that Laura's preparations were adequate and it was up to her parents, who are divorced, to decide whether to let her make the attempt. Her mother, Babs Mueller, recently withdrew her opposition to the plan.

Dekker's case has fueled a global debate over the wisdom of allowing ever-younger sailors to take on the tremendous risks of sailing the high seas alone.

If she completes the voyage, any record she claims would be unofficial and likely to be challenged. The Guinness' World Records and the World Sailing Speed Record Council have decided they will no longer recognize records for "youngest" sailors to avoid encouraging overly optimistic youths backed by ambitious parents from seeking a world record.

In June, 16-year-old American teen Abby Sunderland had to be rescued in a remote section of the Indian Ocean during an attempt to circle the globe. A huge wave snapped her mast and left her helpless until she was eventually rescued by a French fishing boat more than 2,000 miles (3,200 kilometers) west of Australia.

Her parents were sharply criticized for allowing her to undertake the trip – a complete turnaround from the praise the family had basked in a year earlier when Abby's older brother Zac successfully captured the world record for youngest solo circumnavigator at age 17.

Three months ago, Australian Jessica Watson, completed a 210-day voyage on her 34-foot (10-meter) yacht, Ella's Pink Lady, around the world at age 16.

But while Watson remained at sea nonstop, Laura plans to stop at dozens of ports along the way to meet her family, rest, stock up and make boat repairs. She hasn't ruled out returning home to catch up on her studies if necessary before resuming her trip.

Laura conceded her trip "is a little bit different as the old ones, because they do it nonstop and I will do with stops."

Asked whether she was afraid of pirates in the Gulf of Aden, she said no, she expected to travel in a protected convoy through that area.

"Most people say it is a big problem, but there are so many yachts that will get in this water, and then we will sail all together," she said.

Although she appeared to be living the dream of every teen – to escape the parents – Laura knew there would be some things she would miss in her months at sea.

"My dog. My family," she said in response to a reporter's question.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hagagaga
My comments are funnier than yours.
12:16 PM on 08/05/2010
This is getting ridiculous.
12:03 PM on 08/05/2010
I am always shocked when people support these spoiled ego-trips, with the enabling mummy & daddy footing the enormous bill (it's their ego trip, too).

Now, I remember being reading & re-reading the amazing story of Robin Lee Graham's 1965 solo circumnavigation in National Geographic. But you see...he had SAILING SKILLS; he used celestial navigation & charts, the rigging was all manual (no motorized/computer-controlled sail trimming). is 21' boat had no GPS, NO RADIO, no radar. He left with $75 in his pocket for port calls, a super-8 camera, tape recorder & 2 kittens (alas, one jumped ship). Here's a synopsis of his voyage: http://www.bluemoment.com/dove.html

THAT was actually something special.

But now it's $500,000 yachts that literally can steer, tack & drive themselves. These 'sailors' are basically passengers on a moderately-dangerous thrill ride. And in this case....mygod...she's making dozens of little hops. Are any of those legs over 500 or 1000 miles? I doubt it.

Ditch the computers, nav gear, auto-pilot, communication devices (except for emergency beacon), and maybe she'll actually accomplish something of note. But as it stands, it's kind of a joke
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zooperman
09:57 AM on 08/05/2010
Sailing around the world? More like sailing leisurely from port to port. Not much of an accomplishment. But what the heck - it's a grab for 15 minutes of fame and some corporate endorsements.
08:20 AM on 08/05/2010
I wish her every success! She sounds like a great girl.
07:58 AM on 08/05/2010
I'm mixed on this...

Something tells me allow it, so that the kid satisfies her desire(s). Better than sitting inside playing Nintendo or Xbox, or like bored U.S. children; causing trouble!

On the flip side...

Something is also telling me that this is downright stupid!

This girl is very pretty, most likely a virgin, her parents have money/sponsors, and their little girl is sailing the world alone?
Does this girls boat have a flashing neon sign?

Picture people looking for her for just about anything (Child trade, prostitution, general kidnapping, Raped, Murdered, then dumped in the ocean, etc.). Sorry if it appears offensive, but, let's face reality. Any of these could easily occur, especially at night, if rough oceans, off the African coast or she could be asleep. She DOES sleep, doesn't she?

If it were MY child, I would concentrate on LOCAL projects for her/him, NOT allowing something as crazy as this.

"She's not afraid of Pirates?" hahahahaha!

I laugh because when she confronts them, she'll be singing a different tune. And they WILL get their way with her, and demand a substantial Ransom, or else ???.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marc NL
47,3% of all statistics are made up on the spot.
07:09 AM on 08/05/2010
The people in The Netherlands are well aware of the dangers of the sea.
It’s written on every page of its history. Every child learns how to swim from a young age on and have several swimming diplomas (Rescue, survival, etc.)
The point I am trying to make is that different standards apply for different circumstances.

In Holland you will not find a 16 year old driving a car it’s too dangerous with the traffic we have. You have to be at least 18 and take a driving course that will take several months to complete and 2 separate exams. (Very tough and expensive, I paid several thousand dollars for it.)

In the U.S you can drive at age 16 and you barely get any training. When I took my exam in the U.S (the south though) I simply drove around the courthouse in my own car! 50 dollars or whatever
I am just asking you to keep an open mind. What is morally acceptable for you and your surrounding (driving at 16 for example) might not be for someone else.

Laura is very determent, the court had a close look at it, her parents are giving her there approval and there and blessings that’s enough for me.
I hope she has a safe trip.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Zwaan
THINK! It pisses off conservatives.
08:50 AM on 08/05/2010
There are states in the US where the legal driving age is 14. And I don't want to think about all the young drivers texting while driving and not one law prohibiting this. A car is a lethal weapon in the hand of drivers.

However, personally I'd sleep better knowing my 13 year old was in bed in the next room and not in a boat somewhere on the ocean. JMHO.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
01:36 AM on 08/05/2010
We'll read about this girl again when some government has to spend a fortune rescuing her.

If there are age limits on when a kid can drive, drink, vote, why not for when they can take off on some hairbrained stunt?
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03:20 PM on 08/05/2010
KIV, I don't mind so much about "some government" spending "a fortune" on any rescue. But what really does bother me is when these adventurers end up having to be rescued at personal peril (and irretrievable loss of earnings) by hard-working fishermen who risk their lives on a daily basis just to earn a crust.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
01:23 AM on 08/06/2010
Yeah. The military is trained to chase down wayward teens. Those fishermen and merchant marines aren't.

Anyway, don't these kids have to go to school? I recall when mine were 14 the state told me I had to send them to school
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11:38 PM on 08/04/2010
This is madness. That's all - madness is pandemic, and as such, commonplace. Not surprising, not earth-shattering, but madness nonetheless. As I said about the young American girl with the lunatic parents COMPETING for who would be the "youngest" - there would soon be another, younger girl - and another, younger one after that. And after that. For what end? For what purpose? Well - to be the youngest, of course.

How young is too young? Not sixteen, evidently. Not fourteen either - to face alone forces which have sent uncounted thousands to eternity.

Twelve? Ten? Six? Three?

How young is too young? Scoffers will note that there will ALWAYS be defenders of the next "youngest" one. Without fail - without a doubt.

Of course there will - madness is pandemic...
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11:52 PM on 08/04/2010
The Dutch court ruled that 13 was too young but 14, with approved guidelines, was old enough. So you have your answer.
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11:08 AM on 08/05/2010
Thirteen may be too young for the Dutch - but I guarantee that it isn't too young for plenty of Americans - who were plainly saying so on threads relating to the American girl just a few weeks ago...
07:47 PM on 08/04/2010
Congratulations Laura, I think it is great that you passed all the hurdles to live your dream. Yes you are young, but you passed all the 'tests' of the Dutch child services so I trust that you and your family made a well considered decision and that you are capable of making this journey. Just let those Americans talk, they think that all the 14 year old people are just like their own average 14 years old babies.
It is clear to me that you must be an exceptional 14 year old. By now I am sure you and your parents know far better than me that there are dangers to your adventure. Be safe and good luck to you.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kamen Gullberg
11:27 PM on 08/04/2010
Well said, fanned for common sense.
09:35 AM on 08/05/2010
If 14 is mature enough to circumnavigate the globe alone then why not bestow all the adult perks and responsiblities on their shoulders. 14? Old enough to drink, marry, sign legally binding contracts, serve in the military, pay taxes, etc. Hell, let's kick them out of the house! They're old enough to be on their own in the world.
02:29 PM on 08/05/2010
I see what you mean. Circumnavigate the globe is indeed not something anyone can do. Maybe we should require anyone, including adults, that wants to do that to go through the rigorous training and tests that Laura went through. Sailing around the world by yourself is not a thing anyone can do, so setting an arbitrary age limit is silly and naive. Maybe we should set higher standards for everyone in an exceptional positions (like the Dutch did for Laura). I am sure if higher standards (other than the ability to make a ever larger profit) would be set for powerful people (like CEOs of oil companies) the world would truly be better for every 14 year old.
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06:34 PM on 08/04/2010
Americans have much to teach the Dutch about parenting teenagers so it is good that Americans are here to help this girl's parents. We have the highest teen pregnancy rate in the modern industrialized world and the Dutch barely register on the scale.

This girl should follow Bristol Palin as a role model and forget about this silly sailing thing. American parents have spoken.
06:58 PM on 08/04/2010
There are extremes on either end of the permissiveness scale. Try to exercise too much control and you end up with teens acting out or winding up pregnant due to sheer ignorance, but, if you are completely permissive you wind up with a Joran Van Der Sloot who has no boundaries whatsoever.
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Kamen Gullberg
11:29 PM on 08/04/2010
It is wealth for Van Der Sloot not societal influence.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Altario
Among nerds, I'm cool.
06:07 PM on 08/04/2010
Take the toy out of her Happy Meal, because she can't make good food choices, but stick her out in a boat alone in the middle of the ocean. You just can't make this stuff up.
05:46 PM on 08/04/2010
Another rich kid with nothing better to do.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeffreygeez
07:42 AM on 08/05/2010
I am sure she has her American Express double platinum card with her in case of emergencies. She never leaves home without it I am told.

By the way is a mature say eight or nine year old allowed to do this sort of thing? Kids nowadays are so much more able.No parenting needed any more, obviously.Their on their own. Children know best.
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05:26 PM on 08/04/2010
I hear the sound of 100,000 American helicopter parents starting their engines.
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undsoweiter
but I know where to look it up
06:17 PM on 08/04/2010
incoming!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Altario
Among nerds, I'm cool.
04:38 PM on 08/04/2010
What if she ends up dead? All you people laughing about this, all those cheering on this child. What if she ends up dead? Do you secretly harbour some sick desire? I just don't understand you people.

She is a child. Where are her parents?
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05:59 PM on 08/04/2010
If she ends up dead there will probably be a burial at sea. A thousand other things could happen to. Think of the positives.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Altario
Among nerds, I'm cool.
06:07 PM on 08/04/2010
I pray you never lose a child.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alteredstory
Hold on to the center
06:31 PM on 08/04/2010
The same could be said about driving a car, going camping, rock climbing, biking, eating, drinking, so on.

Yes it's risky, but she's clearly capable of sailing her boat, and has spent the last year drilling on safety. Your standards for parenting are not the same as those for other people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Altario
Among nerds, I'm cool.
09:14 PM on 08/04/2010
Driving and drinking have age restrictions far older than 14.

You far underestimate the dangers in going ALL AROUND the world. This isn't just letting her go out on a Sunday afternoon by herself. This isn't about letting her accompany her Mom or Dad on the trip.

This is beyomnd reckless. In my opinion, the parents are the ones hoping for fame, money, and are willing to put a child in danger to do so.
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02:06 PM on 08/04/2010
Is there are a reason that all (most?) of these underage round the world sailors are female?
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06:03 PM on 08/04/2010
Women mature faster plus they have more guts like Amelia Earhart. It takes a man about 45 to start getting some sense.
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06:10 PM on 08/04/2010
men try it to it just the press is not quite as concerned. Young women caught by pirates makes for good old fashion American frightening TV. When in reality no pirate is thinking about a kid. A pirate would probably give you his own kid.