Survive the Savage Sea

by Dougal Robertson

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Description

After their 43-foot schooner was stove in by a pod of killer whales, the six members of the Robertson family spent 37 days adrift in the Pacific. With no maps, compass or navigation instruments, and rations for only three days, they used every survival technique they could as they battled 20-foot waves, marauding sharks, thirst, starvation and exhaustion.

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6 reviews
A rip-snorter. I've read it many times since discovering it as a teenager and still love its immediacy, urgency and unquenchable human spirit. Especially noteworthy is the way the writer does not attempt to hide the inevitable tensions between the adult castaways, including some really knock-em-drag-em-out arguments with his wife. These people really were literally on the edge of death every minute of every day of their ordeal and the rawness of their plight is eloquently captured. Fantastic book.
Good read covering a sailing disaster in the early 1970’s. Scottish family’ vessel hit and sunk very rapidly by a pod of orcas. They kept their heads (mostly) and survived 38 days on the Pacific. Written soon after and with benefit of keeping records while adrift. Good story well told.
½
The amazing story of a family's 38 day survival on the 'savage seas' following a collision with a pod of killer whales. As luck would have it, the author was a qualified merchant seaman and his wife a qualified nurse. The author's account wastes little time on character development, throwing the reader almost immediately into the family's predicament. The family's spirit, discipline and ingenuity with little resources is remarkable. Every detail of the family's struggle is evoked with gritty realism.

I don't usually talk about particular editions. However, the 1974 paperback is a wonderful pocketbook size and includes sketches of the boat and wildlife, and photographs from their rescue.
Unbelievable that they survived. Dougal had so much knowledge and discipline that allowed them to make it to safety. Too bad they got divorced afterwards.

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Dougal Robertson was born in Scotland in 1924 and spent the war in the Merchant Marine. He and his wife, Lyn, lived on a farm in England for a number of years before deciding to go on a circumnavigation with their children. He died in 1991.

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1973
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, Biography & Memoir, Travel
DDC/MDS
910.45History & geographyGeography & travelmodified standard subdivisions of Geography and travelPirates & ShipwrecksOcean voyages, pirates
LCC
G530 .L8615 .R62Geography, Anthropology and RecreationGeography (General)Adventures, shipwrecks, buried treasure, etc.
BISAC

Statistics

Members
316
Popularity
100,555
Reviews
5
Rating
(3.80)
Languages
7 — Dutch, English, Finnish, French, Hungarian, Spanish, Swedish
Media
Paper
ISBNs
17
ASINs
14