Oskar Speck

Oskar Speck (1907–1995) was a German canoeist who paddled by folding kayak from Germany to Australia over the period 1932–1939. A Hamburg electrical contractor made unemployed during the Weimar-period Depression, he left Germany to seek work in the Cypriot copper mines, departing from Ulm and travelling south via the Danube. En route, he changed plan and decided to "see the world", continuing to Australia via the Middle East, India, and Southeast Asia. On his arrival in Australia, shortly after the start of World War II, Speck was interned as an enemy foreigner. He remained in prisoner-of-war camps for the duration of the war. On release, Speck worked as an opal cutter at Lightning Ridge, before moving to Sydney and establishing a successful career as an opal merchant.[1][2] In later life he lived with his partner, Nancy Steel, in Killcare, New South Wales.[3]

A map showing Oskar Speck's route from Germany to Australia

2011-16 recreation

On 2 November 2016, Western Australian woman Sandy Robson (aged 48), finished her recreation of the Speck journey, completed in just over 5 years, making landfall in Australia at Saibai Island, Torres Strait. She visited 20 countries, and paddled 23,000 kilometres (14,000 mi).[4]

References

  1. Oskar Speck's 50,000 km voyage to Australia...by kayak, 25 October 2006, Australian National Maritime Museum
  2. Incredible Journey #1#2#3, Duncan Thompson, NSW Sea Kayaker Magazine Issues 50-52, reprint from Australasian Post
  3. The House of Oscar Speck, 2005, The Bouddi Society
  4. WA woman avoids pirates and crocodiles during 23,000km solo paddle from Germany to Australia, ABC News Online, 2 November 2013


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