Fishermen on the vessel Lundey NS were located South-West of the Faroe Islands and were heading back to Iceland this morning when they met the row-boat team. They said that the rowers were in good spirits, but Lundey is the first ship they’ve seen on their row since they left the Faroe Islands on Sunday morning.
If everything goes according to plan, the team still has about a 130 nautical miles to row until they reach Hornafjörður Fjord in Iceland. The row is expected to take a week, but the distance between Iceland and the Faroe Islands is 240 nautical miles total.
You can keep track of the rowers here.
At around 4am GMT this morning the vessel Lundey NS sailed passed the four-crew row-boat as it reached Icelandic territorial waters.
Fishermen on the vessel Lundey NS were located South-West of the Faroe Islands and were heading back to Iceland this morning when they met the row-boat team. They said that the rowers were in good spirits, but Lundey is the first ship they’ve seen on their row since they left the Faroe Islands on Sunday morning.
If everything goes according to plan, the team still has about a 130 nautical miles to row until they reach Hornafjörður Fjord in Iceland. The row is expected to take a week, but the distance between Iceland and the Faroe Islands is 240 nautical miles total.
You can keep track of the rowers here.