Please select your home edition
Edition
Hyde Sails 2022 One Design LEADERBOARD

Indomitable spirit - Another bolt out of the blue

by Jack and Jude 24 Mar 2019 08:03 UTC
Indomitable spirit - Another bolt out of the blue © Jack and Jude

Roger Wooller, now 75 years, was born in Kenya and contracted polio at aged two while living with his parents at Lake Victoria. From that young age, without the use of his legs, he remembers being carried about on the shoulders of native servants.

Roger's married to Jan, and together they have two children; Ben and Renee.

Our first encounter with Roger came about in 1978 in Rabaul, Papua New Guinea when he was our neighbour on a sailboat anchored close enough for us to see him hauling himself about the vessel using only the strength in his shoulders and hands. To say we were amazed would belittle how astounded we were to see a man without the use of legs, with a toddler, manage a ship while we were having a fair bit of difficulty doing the same with full capable bodies. Like Tarzan, he'd fly from rigging to railing to handholds as fast, if not faster, than we could. Then gobsmacked we'd watch Roger sit himself in the anchor well to bodily pull his ship up to the anchor, hand over hand, then stow the great beast, before swinging aft to conn his ship out the harbour.

Years went by and we lost contact with Roger and Jan, until by chance, after enrolling our two sons in the Queensland Correspondence School for their high school years, a note came along from the school asking us if we remembered meeting the young Wooller family many years earlier, because Roger was one of our boys' tutors. Amazing, hey!

The life of a traveller is such that we never had an opportunity to meet them again, except through Roger correcting our son's school lessons. Then, after we'd completed our world circumnavigation and their terms had finished, our lives moved at a rapid pace and we lost all contact. And that's how it's been until just the other day when a camper-van pulled up near Banyandah, standing high and dry on hard stand, midway through a major refit.

Busily getting ready to apply our first coat of topside paint, we paid little attention to the man behind the wheel of a rented camper van pulled up behind our vessel, until he called out to Judith to ask if we'd ever been to India, or some such place that we'd never been. Shaking her head, from behind the wheel the man said, "I once knew a boat named Banyandah. Can't recall exactly where?"

Jude walked over to the driver's window and while I casually watched as I readied the brushes and paint pots, she leaned through the window to give the man a kiss fair on his cheek.

You could have knocked us both over with a feather when we discovered that it was Roger from 1978. Polio stricken Roger who had so impressed us with his steel nerves and gritty determination raising a one-year-old son on a small sailboat called Thurloo.

Naturally, our paint job had to wait while Roger laboriously extracted himself from the van with the aid of crutches and steel leg braces, and then over a cuppa we heard his most extraordinary story. In those days, it was tough even for able bodied folk to sail a boat with kids on board, so to hear that Roger and Jan with Ben had sailed Thurloo around the Pacific before Roger took a desk job to fund their growing family, impressed us greatly knowing how demanding it was to raise a family afloat. Then Roger disclosed that after tutoring our sons on their sail around the world, he and Jan got the hankering to do the same, so the family of four bought a boat called Hagar the Horrible, an Adams 40, which Roger told us was a dream to sail. All aboard! The four of them then took off around the world with Roger in his forties, still lacking the use of his legs.

Wow! Doesn't Roger illustrate what a determined person can do. Over dinner that night at the local pub, while each of us exchanged story after story, we saw what this man has achieved and we continually encouraged him to write a book on his experiences. But Roger's rather modest. Unbelievable we think, and you might agree. So if you'd like to read his story, send us a note, and we'll pass it on to inspire and motivate this fine gentleman. Jack and Jude believe the world needs to hear of such a man as he, and we think you'll agree.

This article has been provided by the courtesy of jackandjude.com

Related Articles

Jack and Jude: April 2024 update
Maintaining Banyandah is a labour of love Maintaining Banyandah, the vessel we launched in 1974, has become ingrained in our very being. It's not just about keeping her seaworthy; it's about nurturing a connection that runs deeper than the ocean itself. Posted on 15 Apr
Jack & Jude: A sea of beauty
We no longer visit what was once one of the world's seven natural wonders We first took our sons to explore the Coral Coast and Great Barrier Reef in the 1970s, when we were often the only vessel in an anchorage, and catching a fish dinner was so easy, we simply jumped over the side to pick which one. Posted on 4 Jul 2021
Jack & Jude: Closing the ring
Leaving Orford, our next few voyages were a treat It's a misty wet Sunday morning and I'm finding it hard to leave my cosy bunk after a long healing sleep. But I'm going to sit up, pull the doona up with me, and tell you about our great escape from Port Davey on Tassie's SW coast. Posted on 1 May 2021
Jack & Jude: Flying high at George Town
We've notched up plenty of sea miles since our last report Have to be swift. Tomorrow, we're sailing off into the never-never. Goodness knows when we'll have communications again. Next stop the fabulous Furneaux Group of islands in Bass Strait off Tasmania's Northeast tip. Posted on 24 Feb 2021
Jack & Jude: A year like no other
We cannot change the past, but the future is within our reach When you last saw a shooting star, did you make a wish? Or wonder what it's like to zoom towards Earth at a zillion miles a second? Well, it's something like that around here right now! Posted on 20 Jan 2021
Amateur radio expeditions to Spratly Islands
We took a group there in 1979 and nearly got blasted out of the water Way back when we were raising two children afloat, we earned our keep by taking brave Amateur Radio Operators to faraway mid-ocean pinpricks of land, where we set up base stations to talk around the world - sometimes contacting upwards of 30,000 stations. Posted on 10 Aug 2020
Jack & Jude: Reflections
An attack waiting behind thick Congo jungle In many ways living through this pandemic is similar to a life-threatening event Jack and Jude survived when just newly wedded kids looking for a place to live our lives. Posted on 31 May 2020
Jack & Jude: Voyage planning rules our lives
Sail through Hells Gate 250 Nautical miles in less than two days, from 10 AM Monday to 3 AM Wednesday, plus another hour to sail through Hells Gate after daylight. Posted on 7 Apr 2020
Four J's Around the World Trilogy
Break the boredom with a great book free from Jack and Jude Break the boredom with a great book free from Jack and Jude. Designed to cure the lockdown blues by reading family fun in exotic places overcoming life-threatening events. Posted on 26 Mar 2020
Where does the time go?
The years whisk past like autumn leaves in a gentle breeze When we sail across an ocean, each day will last a week - until we make port and then the voyage becomes a blip that's hard to remember. The years whisk past like autumn leaves in a gentle breeze. Posted on 5 Aug 2019
Hyde Sails 2022 One Design FOOTER2024 fill-in (bottom)Henri-Lloyd - For the Obsessed