Wilfried Erdmann

Wilfried Erdmann (born April 15, 1940 in Czarnikau, Posen Province, Prussia) is one of the most famous German sailors. He is known for his single-handed, non-stop circumnavigations. He also is a successful author, some of his books (describing his sailing trips) became bestsellers in Germany. His nephew Martin Erdmann is a professor for experimental particle physics at the RWTH university in Aachen.

Biography

Erdmann was born in Posen Province, Prussia but grew up in Karstädt in East Germany. After finishing school he worked as a carpenter before relocating to West Germany at the age of 17. From 1958 to 1959 he traveled alone to India by bicycle via Southern France, North Africa, the Near East and Afghanistan. It was in India that he first encountered the idea of sailing across the oceans. Because he couldn't afford a boat he made his living for a couple of years as a seaman in the Merchant navy. In 1967 Erdmann embarged to his first circumnavigation. In Alicante, Spain, where he bought his first boat, a used 25 ft wooden ship, he met Bernard Moitessier, who also introduced him to the art of astronavigation. Erdmann renamed the boat Kathena and arrived on May 7, 1968 after 421 days in Helgoland. He was the first German sailor who sailed across the world alone. Because of the size of his boat, nobody in Germany believed him first. Erdmann was able to give proof of the visited ports of call, though.

1969 to 1972 he spent his honeymoon with his wife Astrid on a 1011-day long journey, which eventually became his second circumnavigation. Having sold Kathena, his first boat, they traveled with his second boat Kathena 2.

References

  1. ^ CV on his homepage (German)
  2. ^ Article about his circumnavigation (German)
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