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THE INVESTOR

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23

INTERVIEW

F

rances Davies

believes everyone

has their

ownAtlantic

Challenge. Hers

was literal – she spent 67 days

with three friends rowing the

3,000 miles across the Atlantic

from the Canary Islands to

Antigua, becoming the oldest

female crew to row any ocean.

At the presentations and

speaking engagements she has taken part in since completing

the challenge, she has been urging people to write their

ambitions down on a piece of paper – and to work out how

to achieve them.

Frances is someone who relishes a test: she has completed

two London marathons and a Scottish coast-to-coast challenge

that involved cycling, running and kayaking. But the Talisker

Whisky Atlantic Challenge was of a different order; more

people have been into space than have rowed the Atlantic.

None of the four-strong crew were seasoned rowers.

Indeed, they only met four years ago when they joined their

local rowing club. Frances suggested the challenge to the other

three – Janette Benaddi, Helen Butters and Niki

Doeg.As

part of the training, the crew rowed the North Sea. Frances

thinks they were the first female crew ever to do so, although

she admits that completing the 100-mile journey ‘was a

bit like training for a marathon with a 100-metre sprint’.

Otherwise, their training mainly involved one-hour daily

gym sessions on weights or rowing machines.

Teamwork and co-operation were crucial. Each crew

member had an allocated role – Frances was in charge of

navigation while Janette acted as skipper – and there were

ground rules, including saying ‘just saying’ if any of them

wanted to mention something that was irritating them, to try

to depersonalise

things.An

important piece of advice came

from Charlie Pitcher, a veteran of rowing challenges who

designed and built their boat,

Rose

.‘He told us that, collectively,

we should not think about ourselves,’ says Frances.‘You should

think your job is to look after the others on the boat. If you all

do that, you will not have to think about yourselves as you will

have three other people doing it for you.’

That philosophy helped them through periods

of homesickness,

claustrophobia, fear of the

dark and giant waves.Two

of them rowed in two-hour

stints while the other two

slept. However, that routine

was abandoned for the

final 1,000 miles when the

automatic rudder broke,

meaning two had to row and

one looked after the steering

while the other one slept.

‘There were tensions but we tended to find that, if one

person was irritated with the others, someone else had

patience and empathy in that moment,’ says Frances.‘We

learned to embrace all difficulties.

‘I actually felt less stressed than normal. It was so peaceful

– most of my responsibilities had gone.All I had to look after

was this group of people.’

The actual row may have taken 67 days, but the journey to

the starting line took two and a half years.The four of them

organised a fundraising drive in order to get the £100,000

needed for the cost of entry, the boat, equipment and expenses.

They also aimed to raise money for two charities –YorkshireAir

Ambulance and Maggie’s Centres, for cancer care – and expect

to be able to divide more than £100,000 between the two.

DianeWatson, the St. James’s Place Partner who has been

advising Frances for 20 years, was one of the first to donate,

an illustration of the close and co-operative relationship

between the two. ‘She knows my work, my family and my

relationships inside out. I see her as a friend,’ says Frances.

‘She makes the effort to go the extra mile to understand what

I want; I am not just a set of numbers on a piece of paper.’

She also had to have absolute support from her family

and employer, Progeny Private Law. The latter had to be

particularly understanding as she established it with three

colleagues in July 2015, just five months before the race

was due to start.

Frances confesses that she and her three rowing mates are

now looking for a new challenge.‘I do not want to take three

months out again until my children, who are aged 13 and 15,

are older,’ she says.

However, she is determined to rise to another challenge

with the three women she now calls her sisters.

Completing the 100-mile journey

‘was a bit like training for amarathon

with a 100-metre sprint’

Ben Duffy, Lorne Campbell/Guzelian