3eb7988a16631 day ago
So many practical questions about how this worked. Sleeping, food/water (cooking the fish, seasonings?, did they have stretches where they failed to catch anything), boredom - did they have a radio/podcast library, how much rowing per day, how are the bowels after five months of hardtack and fish, how does your skin handle constant saltwater exposure without showering, etc

Also - I want to see a before photo. They all look pretty slim, but I imagine anyone would after five months of rowing and eating nothing but vitamins and fish.

jonah1 day ago
At the bottom of the article there are links to two related articles from before they started out and when they were halfway through. They answer many of your questions.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-02-22/scottish-maclean-brot...

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-06-08/scottish-maclean-brot...

squigz1 day ago
Pretty interesting stuff. I'm a bit surprised with the food choices, although to be fair they didn't elaborate too much. But just freeze dried and store-bought foods? And they were talking about eating it cold! Someone needs to show them MREs and flameless ration heaters!
esseph23 hours ago
The version of MREs before the current tan bags, the brown bags (Desert Storm era), were freeze dried meals.

They also come with a lot of stuff you don't want to eat for an extended period of time, and a lot of trash waste.

lazide17 hours ago
It appears that space was at an extreme premium - and remember, if they rowed, weight matters as well. MREs work in an environment where you have trucks (or planes) dropping off pallets of them on the regular, not where you need to bring 6 months of them along on something you are moving under your own power.

Long distance ultra light hikers and expedition type folks tend to bring freeze dried food (either way they can’t carry enough water so need to figure that out). Vitamins to avoid any weird effects from missing nutrients from ‘found food’ was also a good idea.

xarope23 hours ago
For talisker, most/all the rowers will have freeze dried food (store bought or self-made). The boats have a desalination plant (the boats have solar panels) so they do have fresh water, but only enough for drinking/eating, they would normally jump into the ocean to rinse themselves.

yes, they bring they own electronic devices, but you do have to be judicious in usage due to the aforementioned solar panels not being very big. Here's a picture (to be clear, this one used for the talisker, the ABC articles have a better image of the one specifically used by the brothers):

https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSmNq8z...

LandR1 day ago
I saw an interview with them on the news here. Im sure I heard one of them say one of somehow managed to gain weight during it!
tonyedgecombe1 day ago
I'll file that fact away for the next time I hear somebody here say "all you need is exercise to lose weight".
stavros1 day ago
I have ~never heard anyone say this. All I've heard here is fighting about whether it's just a pure caloric deficit that helps you lose weight, or if it's other things as well.
speed_spread23 hours ago
Muscles weigh more than fat. Training doesn't make you lose weight, it makes you denser.
jjensen1 day ago
Two English women are close to accomplishing the same feat.

https://www.seasthedayoceanrowing.com/

schaefer19 hours ago
That’s a strong pun: seas the day.
gcanyon1 day ago
I’ve rowed a marathon ( several, actually) on a concept 2. I’d even say I’m pretty suited to long distance rowing, since I usually don’t drink or eat while doing a marathon.

That said, the idea of going much longer than that — like an eight hour shift, or even two four hour shifts in a day, day after day… that’s insane.

And that doesn’t even begin to account for the difference between the erg and ocean rowing. Double insane.

bob10291 day ago
After about 45 minutes of rowing on the C2 I don't register that I am exerting myself anymore. I could probably go all day if the boredom wasn't so intense. The danger of the open sea would help a lot with this.
gcanyon18 hours ago
Wow, and I thought I was suited to long distance :-) I definitely tend to row longer -- from 5Ks to an hour -- but I can't say I don't feel it.

Sanity-checking: what pace are you setting? Or: what distance are you covering in 45 minutes? The Concept2 has almost no floor, so it's possible you almost aren't exerting yourself.

bob102918 hours ago
I can do 10k in 45 minutes but I wouldn't be able to sustain this all day. If I reduce the intensity by 20~30%, I could go indefinitely.
stavros1 day ago
Can you not listen to an audiobook? It's done wonders for my driving boredom.
bob102918 hours ago
I usually watch cab ride videos of European trains on youtube while I am rowing.
3eb7988a166314 hours ago
This is a new one to me. Is there audio of the outdoors or the cabin car? Are these urban trains or more long distance rural vistas?
bob102913 hours ago
3eb7988a166311 hours ago
Alright, that was more relaxing than I expected.
gcanyon18 hours ago
When I go longer I set up a laptop beside me and watch something. It does require wireless headphones, or a long cord, since you're going back and forth through 3-5 feet.
hydrogen78001 day ago
"You can take all the boys and the girls in the world I wouldn't trade them this morning for my sweet Ocean Cloud I've seen too much of life So the sea is my wife and a sweet Ocean Cloud is a mistress I'm allowed"

Ocean Cloud by Marillion, written about a solo rower who crossed the Atlantic.

highwaylights1 day ago
For a second I read "row" as in argument rather than boat/oars and my brain went straight to this:

https://spookyscotland.net/benandonner/

Absolutely incredible achievement.

spauldo8 hours ago
I envisioned one of those cartoon fight clouds with the occasional fist or foot sticking out of it on the deck of a ship.
alex11381 day ago
"No u"

"No u"

"No u"

"No u"

For 139 days

With probably a lot of drinking involved

gentooflux1 day ago
They're Scottish, your script is missing the f word
stavros1 day ago
"No, you first"? Now I'm imagining them being too polite to pass through a door for 139 days.
FiatLuxDave1 day ago
OMG, they made it! My sister knows these guys! They became friends when she was working at an NGO in Madagascar. They also make whiskey.
wmichelin1 day ago
Incredible achievement. I'd love to read a bit about their communications. I noticed their rowboat had a bunch of solar panels on it.
jemmyw1 day ago
I get angry with my siblings too.
ares6231 day ago
What a disconnected piece of writing. It's like every paragraph is it's own separate topic, with topics alternating between different paragraphs.

Super cool achievement, regardless.

fernly1 day ago
> three Scottish brothers have set a new world record by completing the first and fastest unsupported row across the Pacific Ocean... > The previous record of 159 days had been set in 2014 by Russian rower Fedor Konyukhov.

Um, if they are the first to do it, how can there be a previous record? I guess the Konukhov trip was "supported"? Or not "full"?

alexey-salmin1 day ago
tasn1 day ago
I also found it confusing, the way I ended up interpreting it: they are the first unsupported team, and was also unsupported but did it solo.
rietta1 day ago
I am confused. How can they be the first when there is an existing record? So fastest time but not first? An absolutely awe inspiring accomplishment!
dsp_person1 day ago
First time they used a mammoth
Retric1 day ago
I think it’s the first unsupported team. Where someone else did an (unsupported?) solo trip.
OJFord21 hours ago
Their voices must be very hoarse.