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February 20th, 2012

Atlantic Rowers Faced ‘House-sized Waves’ During Charity Challenge

Atlantic rowing hero Bert Portal spoke this morning on BBC Radio’s Breakfast Show with Gaby Roslin and Paul Ross. His chat was at 8:30 a.m. London time but you can still listen to it for the next seven days on the show’s Web site at about the 2:45 mark.

The infamous breaking oars are given a good thrashing, saying they “weren’t fit for purpose.” House-sized waves made it “pretty daunting for us as we’ve never rowed the ocean before.” Bert talks about his next challenge, mentioned in his Skype interview with us while in Barbados, the Marathon des Sables.

bert portal and a beer

Bert Portal on arrival in Barbados

Bertie talks about Facing the World, the charity he and James Cash rowed the Atlantic to support. To date, the two have raised $579,280 for children with facial disfigurements.

When asked what they ate for the seven days they drifted without oars, Bert tells that they didn’t eat anything but the fish they caught. It was too hot and miserable to eat. He also missed the premieres of two of his movies, “My Week With Marilyn” and “The Iron Lady,” and said it was OK because “I haven’t seen any of my own work for 20 years.”

His rower’s beard is given a moment in the spotlight when the hosts compare it to Capt. Birdseye and George VI! Bertie says that Sam hates his beard, and it’s suggested that he could play Falstaff with such a large beard. Apparently, food is a problem with the beard and one of the hosts suggested the oars could be hidden in there.

Bertie is charming and delightful, as always, so give it a listen!

February 13th, 2012

Bertie Portal: ‘Failure to make it across Atlantic was never an option’

Over the weekend the London Telegraph published Bertie’s account of his and James Cash’ successful row across the Atlantic for Facing the World. We’ve posted it here in it’s entirety. Don’t miss listening to our chat with Bertie on Skype the other day!

By Bertie Portal

6:30AM GMT 13 Feb 2012

At the moment, I feel like I’ve got very, very bad jet lag. I seem to have lost my sense of balance, and although I’m now on dry land [a hotel in Barbados], the only place I feel normal is on a boat. Which is strange really, because after 63 days rowing across the Atlantic, the one thing I never intend to set foot in again, is a boat.

Don’t get me wrong. I am incredibly proud of the money we have raised for Facing The World, the charity set up by my late friend Martin Kelly; that cash will help change the lives of children with facial disfigurations. Apart from anything else, it was something I just had to do, for Natascha [McElhone, Martin’s widow, who wrote about Bertie’s trans-ocean expedition in Weekend on January 21]. She’s one of my oldest and dearest friends – we were at drama school together.

That said, though, the idea of setting foot again on another waterborne vessel, let alone our boat, Patience, fills me with dread and horror.

It’s not just my hands, cracked and flaky from holding the oars. Nor my lips, burnt and sore from the sun. It’s the memory of endless hours lying slumped in the back of that boat, in the heat of the day; I can only liken it to being laid out in a hot, wet coffin.

We did our best to stick to a routine. One of us would row for two hours, then the other would row for another two hours. Sometimes, when it was really hot, or we were really tired, we’d only row for one hour at a time.

For the most part, we’d try and stay awake during the day, just for company. At night, though, the routine was that one of us would row for two hours, while the other one slept, and vice versa. At no point on the journey did either of us sleep for more than two hours at a time.

To keep ourselves sort-of sane, during the daylight hours, we’d play that game Who Am I? You get 20 questions, and have to work out what famous character the other person is being. That works for a bit, but there were times on the trip when I not only had moments of doubt and depression, but also started getting very confused.

bert portal and james cash arrive in barbados

Bert Portal and James Cash arrive in Barbados

I’d go to sleep for only a few minutes, then wake up in a panic, thinking it was time for me to take over the rowing. At other times, I hallucinated. As the journey went on, I became increasingly convinced that there were people just beneath the hull who were conducting a noisy dinner party. I wouldn’t have minded, but they seemed to be having such a good time.

I also found myself missing home, and, for some reason, a sandwich from Greggs: I can see it now, a crusty bloomer with egg and tomato. Which is peculiar, because I never go to Greggs.

By far the worst – and best – part of the trip, though, was making contact with people back home. It was thrilling to speak to my girlfriend Sam (Scott Thomas) and my parents, but then terrible once the call was over, and you realised they were going off about their business, while all you had to look forward to was miles of empty sea. You get an acute feeling of loneliness in the immediate aftermath of one of those calls: a bit like being visited in prison, I guess.

It’s not as if there was a lot to distract us. Far from finding ourselves in the midst of playful marine life, I think we saw one blue marlin, one jumping tuna, and a few dolphins, but they were busy, speeding torpedoes, not playful, like Flipper. I don’t know where all the fish had got to: on holiday in the Pacific, perhaps. The closest we got to aquatic life was the four big Spanish mackerel I caught off the side of the boat and cooked up on the stove. They were very tasty.

The good thing about having James as my crewmate was that we didn’t know each other well beforehand. That made the relationship more professional. We made a pact at the start of the trip that each of us would make it his full-time job not to look after himself, but to look after the other. He kept me going when I was getting down, and whenever he asked for my opinion about the salt sores on his bum, which seemed bigger every day, I would encourage him by going “No, they’re looking much better” in my cheeriest voice.

Low points? Having to turn back on the third day, after an electrical failure, wasn’t exactly a highlight. Bobbing around for seven days with broken oars waiting for replacements wasn’t great either.

Then there was the day we capsized. I was sitting in the cabin listening to Highway To Hell on my iPod – Sam had made me a wonderful music compilation – and suddenly I found myself lying on the ceiling, with everything flying around. Next minute, the boat turned back up the right way, but not before a lot of things had got smashed and spoilt. Later in the voyage, apparently, we got sent lots of messages from friends and well-wishers – Hugh Bonneville, Simon Curtis, Stephen Moyer, to name but three – but we never got to see them because our computer was destroyed in the capsize.

Luckily, we didn’t encounter any storms during the voyage, but we did get into some very high seas; I spent a lot of the first half of the trip in a state of general terror, watching these mountains of water heading towards us. Just as you thought it was about to break all over you, the wave would disappear under the boat, and you’d never see it again. All that fear wasted.

Worse than the drama, though, was the drudgery. It would take 90 minutes each day to collect and purify 20 litres of water. Cooking was no fun, either; it took ages, and you’d get boiling water spilling all over your legs. In the end, we decided to cook breakfast and lunch at the same time, just to get it over with.

Lack of space was another infuriating thing; there was simply no room to do anything, and when you banged yourself against something, it was always hard and sharp. Mind you, there is an upside to being confined with one person in a cramped space, which is that you realise early on that you can’t afford arguments. As a result, we would air an issue early on, before it became an argument.

In the final analysis, I think what kept me going was simply the fear of failing, which is, and always has been terrifying to me. I just wouldn’t have been able to look Sam in the eye again if I hadn’t completed the journey. Whatever setbacks befell us, the notion of giving up and limping back home was unthinkable.

You can read the full story of Bertie and James’s adventure on facingtheatlantic.com. So far, their trip has raised more than £400,000 ($630,000 US) for Facing The World, the charity set up by Natascha McElhone’s late husband Martin Kelly, providing facial reconstruction for children in developing countries. Watch a video of the charity’s work on facingtheworld.net and make a donation on justgiving.com/facingtheatlantic.

February 10th, 2012

Exclusive! Chatting with Bert Portal of Facing the Atlantic

Today Cynthia and Sheryl rang up Bertie on Skype and had a brief chat with him about his experience rowing the Atlantic to support Facing the World children’s charity. Bertie is, as you’ll soon hear, delightful and made us feel at ease immediately. Many thanks to his partner, Sam Scott Thomas, for setting this up for us and for absolutely everything to help us raise money for the charity.

There were some technical problems with the connection from Barbados so please excuse the intermittent loss of audio and our occasional swearing. We kept our chat short so that Bertie and Sam could join their friends and family to enjoy their incredibly well-deserved tropical vacation.

bert waking up

Bert waking up; photo courtesy of Sam Scott Thomas

Here’s the interview in MP3, we hope you enjoy it!

Conversation with Bertie Portal

Bert told us that being on dry land is great, but he feels a little ” … spaced out, a bit strange, like jet lag, really.” He and James Cash, his partner in Facing the Atlantic, kept their clocks on board Patience set to UK time. They crossed five different time zones during the voyage, but had no idea where they were located. When we asked about when he planned to shave his beard he told us he’s keeping it until after he returns to London. “It’s a kind of badge of honor for me, to show that I really did this thing.” We think he looks quite handsome in his rower’s beard!

We asked about Bert’s future projects and he sent this reply: “I’ve no idea. Robert Portal is available for work.” We know he’ll be back in the acting saddle very soon and look forward to seeing him on the big screen.

Bert is signed up for another adventure, but for only six days, not 63! He’ll run across the Sahara Desert in the Marathon des Sables described as: “The MdS is a multi-day, ‘ultramarathon’. Run in six days over a course of between about 150 and 156 (254km) miles long. (That’s the equivalent of running from London to Dover, deciding not to go to France after all and running back again. In 120 degree heat. With a back pack on. And voices in your head, talking about ice cold beer).” The MdS is a charity run supporting Solidarite-MdS and Facing Africa. The race is run April 6-16 and, amazingly, there are no more places for the 2012 race.

February 9th, 2012

The Queen is in “Oar” of Bertie and James!

Thanks to the fabulous Sam Scott Thomas for the pithy hed! Here’s a copy of a letter to Bertie and James of Facing the Atlantic from the Queen’s private secretary conveying her congratulations. We can’t think of two men who deserve it more!

beers in barbados

Beers in Barbados!

Pretty damn cool, innit?

“The Queen has asked me to send her congratulations to Robert Portal and James Cash on the successful completion of their trip across the Atlantic by rowing boat yesterday. Her Majesty was pleased to hear of their achievement and of the money they have raised to support the charity ‘Facing the World.’

The Queen has further directed me to send her good wishes to Mr. Portal and Mr. Cash, to which I would like to add my own.

Yours sincerely,
Edward Young
The Deputy Private Secretary to The Queen

As a follow up Her Majesty also said to her Private Secretary that she remembered her Coronation where she was congratulating Hilary and Tensing and it, in her Diamond year, felt similar congratulating two more explorers.

February 8th, 2012

Facing the Atlantic Rowers Make Land and a Video!

Yesterday morning Bert Portal and James Cash finally reached land in the Talisker Whisky Atlantic Challenge. There was much rejoicing and many beers gave their lives for the celebration. Talisker has collected hours of film from all the boats for a documentary they’ll produce and here’s the portion of Patience and her amazing crew rowing into Barbados.

You can spot those dark blue “I rowed the Atlantic” T-shirts in the video and photos below. I recognize the Sons of Norway and there may be some of the American crew, Team Epoch, there too.

bert portal in barbados

A rare and beautiful thing - Bert smiling

james in barbados

Our James Cash, looking very British

james embracing dry land

James embracing terra firma

beers in barbados

Beers in Barbados!

reunion

Reunion

james and anna in barbados

James greets his wife, Anna

bertie and james

Facing the Atlantic

bert portal and a beer

It's always noon somewhere

Check out the Talisker tracking site and the Facing the Atlantic Facebook page for more photos of Bert and James’ arrival in Barbados.

February 7th, 2012

Dry Land, Beer & Babes: Facing the Atlantic Finishes the Race!

UPDATE! We got pictures! See below!

Last night at 11:08 p.m. EST (4:08 GMT or 12:08 a.m. Bajan time) Bertie and James crossed the finish line of the Talisker Whisky Atlantic Challenge! Our brave, and incredibly resilient, rowers will bring Patience into the Port St. Charles Yacht Club today around 6 a.m. EST after a voyage of 2,752 miles and 63 days, 16 hours, and 8 minutes. Sam and Anna, and a host of friends and family are waiting there to greet them, beers in hand I hope!

bertie and james docking in barbados patience docking in barbados
bertie and sam bertie and sam
first non-freeze dried food

Photos courtesy of Samantha Scott Thomas

Bert Portal and James Cash have raised, to date, 364,000 GBP ($575,000 US) for Facing the World!

CONGRATULATIONS!

We are incredibly proud to be a small part of Facing the Atlantic’s success and we are incredibly proud of Bertie and James for finishing the race after a mountain of difficulties. These men are true heroes. The money they’ve raised for Facing the World will help change the lives of many, many children.

Also, congratulations to the winner of our “For the Love of Bertie and James” contest, Lizzie1701! Good guessin,’ Lizzie!

February 4th, 2012

For the Love of Bertie and James …

We’re gonna give y’all a chance to win a sweet Valentine’s Day treat and all you have to do is … make a guess!

That’s right; guess what day and time Bertie and James will cross the finish line of the Talisker Whisky Atlantic Challenge and you’ll win a Limited Edition Hearts of Cherry Gift Box from Sjaak’s.

limited edition hearts of cherry gift box

SWEET!

This beautiful handmade gift box is made by a women’s cooperative in Thailand using tree free fibers such as mulberry. This box is then filled with dark chocolate Hearts of Cherry; a dark cherry truffle.

Here’s what you gotta do:

  • Guess what day and time Bertie and James will cross the finish line. That’s not when they row up to the dock in Port St. Charles, but when they reach the last waypoint out in the water near Barbados. Their last estimate is for Tuesday so keep an eye on the tracking site to make your guess.
  • Leave your guess in the comments below no later than midnight on Saturday, February 4! Leave only one guess, please.
  • We’ll announce the winner after we’re done celebrating the completion of their adventure with all sorts of alcoholic beverages.
  • Write to us at smadmin@simplymoyer.com if you have questions.

What better way to celebrate the completion of a long and difficult journey across the Atlantic for Facing the World than chocolate! (OK, beer, but we can’t mail that to you.) Get busy! You have only TWO DAYS to make your guess!

Remember, you can still donate to Facing the Atlantic/Facing the World on their JustGiving site until about the middle of March!

January 31st, 2012

Beers in Barbados Contest Results!

Well, thanks to your generosity there’ll be a lotta beer drinking in Barbados next week! We raised $300 to buy a few beers – and nachos – for Bertie and James and Sam and Anna and their family and friends. Thank you so much!

This morning Patience and her crew have 362 nm to go! They’re one of three boats still rowing and Bertie and James hope to be in Port St. Charles on Tuesday. They have strict orders to arrive during the day so we can all watch on the yacht club’s webcam.

Bertie and James rowing together

We drew the winning tickets for our Beers in Barbados contest:

beers in barbados tickets

We’ve contacted our two winners of the season three True Blood posters signed by Stephen Moyer and Anna Paquin. Congratulations!

Keep an eye on Bertie and James as they row towards dry land and the waiting arms of their loved ones on the Talisker tracking site. Thanks again to everyone who donated!

January 30th, 2012

LAST CHANCE! Buy Atlantic Rowers a Beer; Enter to Win Fabulous Prize!

You’ve got until 5 p.m. EST to make a donation to Bertie and James’ “Beers in Barbados” fund and enter to win one of two True Blood posters signed by Stephen and Anna. What’re ya waitin’ for?

Hankering for more hot press coverage about our rowers? Check out this story in the London Sunday Times! (PDF). Bertie and James are featured on page three.

Wanna win a signed True Blood season three poster? Signed by Stephen Moyer and Anna Paquin? Posters are 11″ x 16″ and you have a chance to win one of two posters (our choice). All you gotta do is buy a beer, or two, for our fantastic Atlantic rowers, Bertie and James!

true blood season three poster signed by stephen moyer true blood season 3 poster signed by moyer and paquin

Here’s how it works:

  • Donate $5 (US) to the Simply Moyer Paypal account (bbknot@gmail.com) – you need a Paypal account to send money. It’s free to sign up. If this is a problem, contact us and we’ll try to help you donate.
  • E-mail the receipt for your donation to smadmin@simplymoyer.com and let us know it’s designated for “Beers in Barbados”
  • Enter as many times as you like; the more beers for Bertie and James the better!
  • We’ll send the list of donors to Bertie and James to remember always.
  • Contest ends on Monday, January 30. We’ll draw the winning entries at 5 p.m. EST

Easy peasy!

patience waiting for oars from aurora

WHAT? You forgot to bring the beer?

Let’s help our brave rowers celebrate completing an amazing journey for Facing the World!

January 21st, 2012

Actress Speaks Out About Facing the Atlantic’s Charity Challenge

Natascha McElhone (“Californication”) talked to the Telegraph (UK) recently about her husband’s legacy, Facing the World, and our own Bertie and James’ journey across the Atlantic to raise money for the charity. We didn’t think it was possible to love Bertie and James any more than we already do, but after reading this story and Sam Scott Thomas’ new Huffington Post blog, we are smitten beyond all reason!

natascha mcelhone on front page of UK telegraph

Front page coverage for our boys!

McElhone, as you’ll recall, was married to Dr. Martin Kelly who co-founded Facing the World. He died in 2008, leaving behind a legacy that inspired Bertie’s decision to enter “the world’s toughest rowing race.”

I have just spoken to my great friend Bertie Portal while he was on a satellite phone, weathering a storm in the middle of the Atlantic. He came off the oars to talk while his friend and rowing partner James Cash took over. The two of them are battling against enormous waves in a tiny rowing boat in order to raise money for my late husband’s [the plastic surgeon Martin Kelly] charity, Facing the World.

They are taking part in the Talisker Whisky Challenge, known as the “toughest row in the world”, for which they have undertaken to cross 3,000 miles from the Canary Islands to Barbados, taking turns at the oars, two hours on, two hours off, for 24 hours a day.

I have known Bertie for 20 years and I adore him. He’s a maverick, ridiculously chivalrous, incredibly funny, and fiercely loyal to his friends. He never wavers, he never cheats and he never takes a short cut. He is unfailingly polite, discreet and modest and once he has set his mind on something he is unstoppable – which is, right now, a source of worry…

I met Bertie at drama school: he’s a successful actor now, with both The King’s Speech and The Iron Lady recently completed. When I had started going out with my husband, I introduced the two of them. They clicked instantly, and soon took off on their own mad adventures, leaving me behind.

I remember Martin calling me after they had driven down to Exmoor together and telling me how he had had to pull over onto the hard shoulder because they were laughing so much he was crying and couldn’t see the road ahead. They had to jump out of the car and get away from one another to get a grip.

When Martin died in May 2008, aged just 43, Bertie stood at his graveside and said in his tribute that he wanted to “strive to do more”, to make a difference in the same way that Martin had done.

By that, he meant Martin’s charitable work. In 2001, Martin and another eminent surgeon, Norman Waterhouse, set up Facing The World to help children from the world’s poorest countries who had severe facial deformities and no way of obtaining surgery.

It followed a trip Martin had made to Afghanistan. He came across an eight-month-old girl, Hadisa, who suffered from a facial disfigurement caused by a condition called severe craniofacial clefting syndrome.

In her local community she and her family were ostracised, the elders having decided she was “a demon”. There was a possibility she would be stoned to death.

bertie and james leave la gomera a second time

Bertie and James launch Patience a second time

Martin met Hadisa in the local hospital’s primitive operating theatre. Though there were few resources, no anaesthetics and flies buzzing around, hordes of patients queued in the hope of receiving surgery that day or the next. Martin promised her father he would try to help and on his return to England, he approached Norman, his medical mentor who had made similar voluntary trips. The result was the foundation of Facing The World.

Norman put up £10,000 and I did an advert that raised the same amount. So with £20,000 and a single employee, Sarah Driver Jowitt, the fledging charity began by bringing Hadisa to London.

She underwent a series of operations that proved to be such a success that she was able to go to school when she returned to Afghanistan. We still have framed pictures and cards about the house from her and from other patients who have benefited from the charity’s work.

One says: “Dear Mr Martin doctor, you have made me so happy now. Send me a new name to match my new face.”

Sometimes, groups of them come from the hospital for tea parties. I remember that huge beatific smile breaking across Martin’s face as he looked at these kids, they were so full of hope, so incredibly trusting of him. Those were good days, his sense of achievement and happiness were contagious.

Now Bertie has picked up the baton. When he first told me of his plan, I thought: he’s mad. Rowing with James without a break for 60 days or more? He’ll come to his senses soon.

But as I write, they have been out there for 42 days, three hours and two minutes. The winners, Box Number 8, finished the race last Saturday, but Bertie and James, who have suffered some devastating setbacks, still have 992 miles to go. How dreadful must that feel?

They started out on December 5, but had to turn back when their water purifier broke down. Three sets of oars have snapped, and after the last ones went they had to drift, losing ground, for three days, waiting for replacements to be brought to them. They have capsized, and been bashed about, but undeterred, they carry on…

Before they set out, Bertie and James – a personal trainer and a terrific sportsman – trained hard for two years, taking seamanship courses and passing exams, all the while keeping up their day jobs. Bertie became obsessed with raising money. The pair talked at schools across London, they got friends, and friends of friends involved: Bill Nighy, Dominic West and Rupert Penry-Jones came to the broker ICAP’s charity day just after they set out on the voyage to help raise extra money.

This sort of pilgrimage has stirred everyone who has come across them into action: it has woken us up, we’re excited and galvanised into doing things we would never normally do.

Bertie and James have already raised more than £350,000 for their endeavour, which dramatically changes the possibilities of what the charity can achieve and how many lives can be improved.

All of us gave Bertie small tokens before he set out. He has a beaded bracelet of Martin’s to wear as a sort of talisman. His mother had asked all her friends to write him a message so that he could read a new one each day that he was at sea.

His girlfriend, Sam Scott Thomas, supports him from afar, every stroke of the way. A friend’s son has a chart next to his bed following the course of their journey and ticks off each day they are at sea. Another friend sends him a riddle a day to figure out.

Martin is dead and cannot witness any of this, but this adventure feels like an amazing tribute to their friendship, a last wave from Bertie to him. Martin used to say: “It is said that as we get older, we get the face we deserve… let’s not make [the children] wait that long.”

So, in the spirit of these courageous children, I hope that you will go to the website facingtheatlantic.com and pledge something. On the same website you can see a three-minute film of Martin talking, and the surgeons at work. It shows that miracles can happen.

You can also help cheer on Bertie and James by entering our “Beers in Barbados” contest!

January 12th, 2012

Life at Home While Your Partner is Rowing the Atlantic

Ever wonder what it’s like for the people who stay behind and support those rowing the Atlantic for charity? I remember assuming that once Bertie and James of Facing the Atlantic got started there’d be little to report.

Boy howdy was that a wrong assumption! Sam Scott Thomas, actor Bertie Portal’s partner, will give us a glimpse into her life while Bertie’s at sea in her new Huffington Post blog! Here’s a sample of her first post:

To say being at home while your partner rows the Atlantic is easy would be lying. Some days are better than others as we watch Patience’s little tracker line move slowly across the Atlantic. However I wouldn’t change it for the world. It has been and continues to be an exciting time, whatever is thrown at us.

sam and bertie on launch day

Sam and her Bertie on launch day

Head over there and give Sam a read and remember to comment, Like it on Facebook, and post it on Twitter!

You can follow the boys (who are nearly half way across the Atlantic!) on the Talisker tracking site and you can donate to buy them a round of Beers in Barbados and enter to win one of two signed True Blood posters!

January 11th, 2012

First Look: Robert Portal in “The Iron Lady”

Yes, that’s our very own Bertie Portal looking very handsome in his role in “The Iron Lady.”

robert portal in the iron lady

Check your local theater listings to see the movie.

Remember! The “Beers in Barbados” campaign is up and running. If you’d like a chance to win a True Blood poster signed by Stephen Moyer and Anna Paquin (and one signed by Steve alone) donate to buy Bertie and James a coupla beers when they reach Barbados! It’s easy as pie.

January 6th, 2012

UPDATE! Bertie and James are ROWING Again!

Here’s a neat video (and it appears they both have at least one pair of shorts left) of Patience and Aurora during the transfer of oars. Looks like two sets from what I can see!

Go Team FTA!

Here’s Anna Cash’s Facebook post about today’s events with Patience and Aurora. There were a couple of snags but the boys are on their way to Barbados – again.

I have just spoken to James. He shouted out to Bertie whilst I was on the phone and said ‘Bert – What are you doing?’ and Bert shouted back loud and clear ‘ROWING!’

THE BOYS HAVE THEIR OARS! WHOO HOO! Bert obviously couldn’t WAIT to get back in the seat and James sounded SO upbeat. They are moving again! They are really not very far away from having done 1000nm and could have done so by tomorrow evening. So fingers crossed.

Now, unfortunately they couldn’t fix the tracking beacon because when Aurora came this afternoon to try and get one of the crew aboard Patience to fix it, the seas were so rough that Aurora crashed into Patience and broke the rudder! MORE bad luck! HOWEVER, somewhere deep in James’ DIY genes (and believe me they are buried deep! Chris Cash you could have shared some more with him couldn’t you?!) he asked Aurora for a ‘coat hook’ and somehow has managed to fix it! Please God, keep it fixed for the next 30/40 days will ya? So the beacon remains un-fixed but they have new wires which when they get some calmer seas they will try and fix it themselves.

bertie and james leave la gomera a second time

Bertie and James launch Patience a second time

Talking of God, the boys had a word with him this morning, so please, if you believe in him, can you have a word too? Goodness knows they don’t need any more bad luck.

They will be giving their co-ordinates to the race organisers every 6 hours, so unfortunately their position will not be updated as regularly as it was before. So please bear with them and we will try and give you as much info as we can when we receive it.

They are SO determined now and have big plans and new regimes to get this challenge completed. They thank you SO much for all your support and are absolutely delighted to know that they have now raised over £350,000 for Facing the World so far. This is really spurring them on now. Barbados, watch out!

How much do you love these men? (We’re gonna give you a chance to prove it … soon.)

James’ uncle, Tony Prince, made another lovely video of Bertie and James’ second launch on December 9. It’s every bit as lovely as the earlier launch, perhaps even better because the boys left with greater determination.

Way to hang tough, gentlemen!

January 5th, 2012

Facing the Atlantic Rowers Interviewed on BBC Radio

Earlier today Bert Portal was interviewed from on board Patience, somewhere in the middle of the Atlantic expecting the support ship, Aurora, to bring new oars on Friday! HOORAY! He spoke to Dominic King of BBC Radio Kent and you can listen to the archive at about the 20-minute mark. Here are some excerpts from Bertie’s conversation with King:

When asked about their location: “Well we are about 1,000 miles from the Canaries and about 1.600 miles from Barbados, so pretty much in the middle of the Atlantic.”

Bertie gave a brief rundown of re-starting the race nearly four days behind everyone else because of a power outage, then the auto helm broke, and all their oars were broken by massive, strong waves. They’re currently sitting on a drogue waiting for the new oars. The tracking beacon on board Patience is also broken so Bertie and James must radio their location to Aurora every six hours so it can be manually added to the tracking site. The new tracking beacon will arrive with the oars.

Bertie and James rowing together

Bertie went on to tell what else has happened to them: “Two days ago we capsized, a huge wave came and turned us over.” After the oars arrive “We’re gonna gun it and make as quick speed as possible.”

They are drifting but not entirely without a course as Bertie explains: “It drifts, we put what’s known as a drogue out at back at the stern and that really keeps us stable and sort of pushes us very, very slowly in the right direction. At least we’re not going in the wrong direction.”

They’ve had little opportunity to leave the cabin in heavy seas but … “Yesterday, I went fishing and caught four mackerel and we ate them for supper. Made a nice finish to a rather bad day.”

When King asked about their emotional states Bertie didn’t sugar coat it: “No, we’ve been up and down, you know, it is difficult I won’t deny it, when all we want to do is get to the other side and we’re stuck. We’ve been stuck for a week now just bobbing up and down, not doing anything, not being proactive in this adventure.”

He was happy to learn that Facing the Atlantic has raised more than 350,000 GBP for Facing the World! “When the chips are down that’s why we’re doing it and we bear that in mind and that keeps us going. We can’t lose sight of why we’re here in the first place and that’s a big, huge piece for us.”

Bertie laughed when King made a comparison between the premiere of “The Iron Lady” and Bertie’s current location. “Yeah, my Iron Lady days seem a long way off out here. I’m sitting here I haven’t got a stitch of clothing on, it’s all been lost or disintegrated, I’m peeling a bit and I’ve got a huge beard so it’s not the most attractive …”

Is it the film remake of “Castaway”? “Castaway 2 maybe!”

sam and bertie on launch day

Bertie with Sam on launch day

In more good news, the boys may get some visitors in the form of an independent Atlantic rowing team called “Prostate Marksmen.”

prostate marksmen facebook post

Things are looking up for Bertie and James and we couldn’t be more excited for them! Remember to follow them on the Talisker tracking site and send ‘em a message or two.

January 5th, 2012

Atlantic Rowers Stranded After Oars Snap

When you open today’s London Evening Standard you’ll find a story about our rowing heroes, Bert Portal and James Cash, that describes their ordeal at sea. Here’s the entire story with screencaps taken from the video at the end. This poignant video was made on launch day, December 5, and produced by James’ uncle.

Two rowers taking part in a charity boat race are set to be stranded in the Atlantic for days after all their oars snapped.

Actor Robert “Bertie” Portal, who features in Margaret Thatcher biopic The Iron Lady, and his rowing partner James Cash, a personal trainer, have already been drifting for several days as they attempt to complete the 3,000-mile Talisker Whisky Atlantic Challenge for charity Facing The World.

When their third and last pair of oars snapped in strong waves, the pair tried unsuccessfully to fix them with tape.

Determined to complete the challenge, they have ordered a new set but they cannot be delivered until Sunday at the earliest.

bert portal in patience's cabin on launch day

Bertie in the cabin, preparing for launch

The pair, whose team name is Facing The Atlantic, are doing the expedition in a bid to raise £300,000 (for Facing the World children’s charity). Speaking from the 23ft boat by satellite phone, the 44-year-old actor from Clapham told the Standard it was “frustrating”.

He said: “We’re drifting about 1,000 miles from nowhere so it’s quite uncomfortable. We will have been here a week by the time the oars get here.

“It’s really hot in the cabin. If we want to go on deck we risk getting swept off because the waves are so big. It’s really frustrating because we want to get it done.”

sam and bertie on launch day

Sam and her Bertie on launch day

Their expedition came to a halt when they were capsized by huge waves and they are trying to dry out their food. They expect their journey to last about another five weeks.

Portal, who also appears in the film My Week With Marilyn, was unable to attend the film’s premiere in order to take part in the expedition and has been training for two years.

Portal’s distraught partner Sam Scott Thomas, 46, sister of actress Kristin, said: “Their boat capsized three days ago and could have sunk. The boat is designed to right itself and they were both in the cabin with the door shut when it turned over. Had they not been, the cabin would have filled with water.”

A crew of disabled war veterans also attempting the Atlantic race have vowed not to give up despite being forced to ration their food and water supplies after a mechanical failure.

The Row2Recovery yacht still has another five to six days before it can rendez-vous with a yacht carrying emergency water supplies.

Notable in the video is Sam’s advice as Bertie and James take off: “Don’t roger the cabin boy!”