13 comments

  • CharlesW 2 hours ago
    It's kind of buried here, but Kelsey is the fastest human to do this. She beat the male record holder's time by 6 days.
    • js2 1 hour ago
      In endurance running, the longer races become, the more competitive they are for women. Women semi-regularly win multi-day and 100+ mile races, even if women don't have course records at these times/distances. In an event of sufficient time/distance, factors besides strength dominate the outcome.

      So, (and knowing very little about rowing), I am not surprised that a woman could take the record here. You can only row so fast. Other factors like weather, currents, nutrition, mental fortitude, navigation, and boat design overcome muscle strength.

      All that said: props to Kelsey Pfendler! She definitely knows how to embrace the suck.

      Here's a nice diary of her trip:

      https://www.kcra.com/article/kelsey-pfendler-record-breaking...

      Love these updates:

      > Day 21: Kelsey gave an update on a lesson learned about her mental state, saying she had beaten herself up for sleeping in. But she realized that wasn't productive thinking. "When you're out here, you're not in control," she said. "You are in control of you." She said she realized that the way to respond to problems is much more important than the problem itself.

      > Day 44: Kelsey could see O'ahu as she closed in on her goal. "If any part of this made at least one person feel a little bit more powerful in their own skin, I couldn't ask for anything else and I'm happy," she said. "Think about trying to find your own big, hard, scary thing. You might not think that you are strong enough to finish it right now, but you're definitely strong enough to start it and you'll find everything else along the way."

      • stackghost 1 hour ago
        >Other factors like weather, currents

        I'd be interested to know how much progress she made/lost due to drifting overnight. I feel like that alone would have a drastic impact. It would really suck to check your GPS track in the morning to discover you'd lost a day's progress overnight.

    • Someone 1 hour ago
      It’s quite an accomplishment, but this is done rarely (https://oceanrowing.com/statistics lists less than a thousand completed rows world-wide), and the weather hugely affects how long it will take to do it.

      Also, my geographical knowledge may be lacking, but it appears “to Hawaii” is essential here.

      https://oceanrowing.com/filter?id=1415 shows a row from Monterey to Hanalei, Kauai in 32 days. That’s in the state of Hawaii, too, but about 200km closer.

  • vmg12 2 hours ago
    I used to row and even the tiniest of waves could make it annoying. You'd slide to the front of your seat and try to insert your oar and catch air instead of water. Then if you overcompensated by trying to insert your oar farther in you'd catch a crab (having the oar ripped out of your control). This is on a lake with tiny waves.

    Rowing across an entire ocean is absolutely amazing.

    • herodoturtle 2 hours ago
      Fellow rower here, affirming the above.

      Thought folks would be interested in her boat, built for ocean rowing:

      https://yourowkelsey.com/about/

      • 3eb7988a1663 42 minutes ago
        That page was disappointingly sparse. I wanted pictures of the interior - what does it look like to sleep, how much space when it is fully packed with food, is there any accommodations for the bathroom, or do you just go over the edge, etc.
    • AlotOfReading 1 hour ago
      I wonder if it's as much of an issue with those big boats at sea. The wavelength gets pretty long off the continental shelf, so I imagine it's a lot less adjustment than lake waves, with the exception being storm conditions you should probably avoid anyway.
  • koolba 25 minutes ago
    That’s incredible.

    What does one eat and drink on a trip like this? The article talks about her cooking. With a fire or one of those little butane stoves?

    Can a small canoe carry enough water for a trip like this or do you rely on rain water too?

    • FeteCommuniste 1 minute ago
      Portable desalinators exist.
    • bluGill 11 minutes ago
      I don't know how to verify it, but I've been told that drinking seawater is acceptable to do and is just enough to keep you alive.

      If I were to do it though, I would invest in some water filters which are fairly cheap and can remove a lot of things that you wouldn't want to be drinking.

      • eichin 1 minute ago
        I recall one article mentioning that there's desalination gear on board (that's what the solar panel is for?)
      • varenc 5 minutes ago
        This is false. Sea water is >3% salt and human kidneys can't produce urine with that much salinity or greater. Since they need more water to extract that much salt, the net effect is dehydration. This rower probably had a desalination machine, or just a big reservoir of fresh water.

        (Though there might be some obscure edge case, and if you're about to die of dehydration that a little bit of seawater will buy you a minuscule amount of more time? doubt it)

  • a-uz 2 hours ago
    Kārlis Bardelis has rowed the Pacific, India and South Atlantic Oceans and cycled everything in-between. https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/news/2025/11/record-bre...
  • mobilemidget 1 hour ago
    All i think about when people row, kayak or swim these distances in these waters is 'SHARKS'. Which i read and saw enough about that the chances of meeting one isnt that big, but my brain still associates these activities/areas with it.
    • ludwigschubert 17 minutes ago
      (I was replying to a child comment on fear of deep waters, seemingly deleted?)

      I’ve heard this sentiment before, and can sort of intellectually follow, but man. I love scuba diving, I love the ocean and its varied and alien and multi-scale inhabitants. I’ve spent weeks on a live-aboard boat explicitly to seek out megafauna like sharks and rays (same subclass as sharks).

      When I start my descent, I love to turn around and see my exhaled air bubble up, up towards the sun rays in the top layer of the water that slowly fade further away as the pressure on my ears builds and I enter the unknown ocean. It’s the most relaxing feeling, and I often remember it to go to sleep.

      How beautifully individual our preferences can be. :-)

    • echoangle 1 hour ago
      I thought sharks only attack stuff that looks like wounded animals. Would a shark really attack a boat?
  • reenorap 1 hour ago
    I happened upon her via Instagram around day 10 and watched her every day. It was really interesting watching her go through this every day and her authentic posts about what she was feeling. It’s truly great seeing people achieve their goals like this, she is amazing!
  • ProjectArcturis 1 hour ago
    I wonder what was going on in her life that made her say, "I want to spend the next 43 days rowing alone across the ocean."
    • bluGill 5 minutes ago
      If you're young and not married, it sounds like a fun trip I'd love to make. I've done various canoe trips through like the Boundary Waters, but I've never been able to take off enough time from work to pull this off.

      This is one of those cases where getting started is hard, but once you get started you probably can do more if you want it because you get a reputation and people will sponsor you. You end up in a lot of cases your job is to get sponsors for this trip and you live in the meantime cheaply just earn enough money that you can afford to take off a couple months to do these things.

      That said, it probably isn't all that expensive. You do need to get a canoe, but those are not terribly expensive. You need enough food to last this long. The ideal way is if you're living with your parents or some other situation where you can just stop paying rent while you're on the trip. A large part of living expenses are things that she would not have when she's out on the ocean. Also, if th if this is your goal you're probably living for that so you might be working two jobs to raise money for the trip and then you quit both jobs, take your trip and then you go back to work.

    • fasterik 4 minutes ago
      "Because it's there"

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Mallory

      Some people are just driven to do things for the thrill of accomplishment. I don't think we need more psychologizing than that.

    • lkjdsklf 1 hour ago
      This isn’t the first time she’s done it.

      She spent 41 days making the same trip with 2 other people

    • fuzzfactor 1 hour ago
      I admire the ambition which likely preceded the trip over a long enough term to make the conclusive 43-day journey end up as the smaller amount of calendar time.

      But that which obviously means the most from the standpoint of fulfillment :)

    • rr808 1 hour ago
      Usual answer is to get away from the wife (or partner), but she doesn't seem married so I'm baffled...
  • justinhj 2 hours ago
    There's a good book "The Pacific Alone" about a guy that did this in a kayak
  • yieldcrv 2 hours ago
    Why do these extreme rowing and sailing boats look so weird

    Its always a form factor I’ve never seen before

    Where can I learn more about this scene?

    • thephyber 2 hours ago
      It’s an ocean-going row boat with 2 cabins. Most row boats you’ve seen are probably hyper-light and designed for still water.

      The model of this boat:

      https://www.rannochadventure.com/boats-2/r25

    • jtokoph 1 hour ago
      I always assumed it was because they had storm resistant cabins for sleeping and supply storage.

      Daily use boats probably don’t need as much in that respect.

    • nephihaha 1 hour ago
      Because there are big waves in the open ocean and people need to sleep?
  • ChrisArchitect 2 hours ago
  • mailship 1 hour ago
    kelsey still holds the record btw, but yeahh another runner up is insane
  • drsalt 2 hours ago
    great how the article doesn't explain any of the interesting aspects of this