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Castaway US yachtsman en route to safety in Chile
05 Jan 2007 17:47:28 GMT
Source: Reuters

By Pav Jordan

SANTIAGO, Jan 5 (Reuters) - An American trying to sail around the world solo was rescued by a fishing boat in the Pacific Ocean off Chile after hitting stormy seas and drifting for nearly three days.

Chilean authorities said Ken Barnes, 47, was in stable condition after being picked up from his disabled vessel early on Friday about 620 miles (1,000 km) west of Chile's Pacific coast by a cod fishing boat.

Barnes left Long Beach, California, in October in a bid to become the first sailor to circumnavigate the world solo from the U.S. West Coast.

Media photos showed his 56-foot (17-meter) yacht, called the Privateer, listing on the open sea with broken masts.

Authorities said Barnes, who had sent a distress signal on Tuesday, had a 3-inch (7.6 cm) cut on his right leg.

"At the start of the rescue he was very nervous, but he is well, he is in good condition," said Capt. Ivan Valenzuela, from Punta Arenas in Chile's southern tip, minutes after speaking to Barnes.

Valenzuela said Barnes would be taken to the Strait of Magellan on Sunday and then airlifted to Punta Arenas for a medical checkup. He will then be flown up to the capital Santiago before returning to the United States.

Barnes, a divorced father of three from southern California, had planned to round Cape Horn, the southern tip of South America, before sailing on to New Zealand.

"For many years, probably from the age of 10, I have liked the solitude of sailing, the adventure, the adrenaline associated with the chance encounter of the unknown," Barnes says on his Web site ((http://www.kensolo.com/)).

Back in California, his family had other plans for him.

"I'm just going to say that I love him and I'm so glad that he's home safe and that he's never leaving again," Teryn Barnes, one of his twin daughters, told CBS' "Early Show."
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A puppy tries to touch a woman's hand inside the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in Santiago, February 28, 2007. Animal rights activists say abuse of dogs is common across Latin America and, despite its reputation as one of the region's richest and most developed countries, Chile is no exception. Picture taken February 28, 2007. To match feature Chile-animals/