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sandingblock
11-01-2008, 04:43 AM
I'm not sure if this has been covered in the forum but Hal Roth has passed away. Never met him but I think his books are some of the best cruising books published in the second half of the 20th.


Hal Roth, the 3-time circumnavigator and prolific author of practical cruising books, has died. He died on Saturday aged 81, after a long battle with lung cancer.

Born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1927, Roth saw service as an aviator during World War II and the Korean war. In 1962 he and his wife Margaret started small-boat sailing and five years later embarked on a series of voyages in an 11m yacht.

They sailed around the Pacific via Tahiti, Japan, the Aleutian islands, and Alaska and then on to South America, logging some 150,000 miles.

In 1986, Roth entered the BOC Around Alone solo round the world race (now the Velux 5 Oceans) in a Santa Cruz 50, American Flag, and completed the circumnavigation in 171 days to finish 4th in class. In 1990, hereturned to compete in the race again after lightening the boat, adding water ballast and a taller rig but this time took 211 days after suffering a major knock-down. Roth wrote: "The capsize in the Indian ocean was both the high and low point in my life. To see the keel pointing straight up when I was alongside in the water was something I won't forget. And when the yacht rolled back up and the mast appeared unbroken with the water streaming off, seemed like a biblical experience."

Hal Roth's books included Pathway in the Sky (1965), Two on a Big Ocean (1972), Two Against Cape Horn (1975), After 50,000 miles (1992), and Handling Storms at Sea (2008). A book he was working on before he died, We Followed Odysseus, will be published next year.
Yachting Monthly, 30 October 2008

Vince Brennan
11-01-2008, 06:11 AM
Read two of his books. A man who did what he wanted to to do while he could, indeed. Sorry to hear he went so hard.

MiddleAgesMan
11-01-2008, 08:52 AM
His most indelible story for me was the tale about dragging ashore in Chile, holing the boat, patching the holes, then waiting for help. He was using CQRs at the time and the wind had shifted suddenly by 90 degrees and the anchor failed to reset. When the same thing happened to me we landed on a mud bank and no harm was done but the CQR was retired.

RIP Hal.

Does anyone know if Margaret survived him?

paladin
11-03-2008, 11:45 PM
Where did he pass away.....the last time I spoke to him they were at St. Michaels.