
A British sailor is preparing to embark on an extraordinary solo journey across the Atlantic Ocean in a vessel so small it has been compared to a wheelie bin.
Andrew Bedwell, from Lancashire in north-west England, hopes to sail nearly 2,000 miles from Newfoundland, Canada, back to the United Kingdom in what he believes could become the shortest boat ever to complete the crossing.
His specially designed micro-yacht, The Big C Version Two, is little more than a floating capsule — barely large enough to contain him, his supplies, and the equipment needed to survive one of the world’s most unpredictable oceans.
For the 6ft sailor, the journey is expected to take around three months.
Inside the vessel, there is no room to lie flat. During rough seas, Bedwell will remain strapped in, harnessed tightly to withstand violent waves and relentless motion. Only in calmer weather will he be able to stand briefly through a hatch for movement and essential maintenance.

Despite its extreme limitations, the yacht has been carefully engineered for endurance. Food supplies, including dried meat, raisins, and compact high-fat ration bars, have been integrated into the boat’s structure to maximise both storage and insulation.
Bedwell, who runs a boat repair business, says the voyage is as much about purpose as adventure.
He is undertaking the challenge partly to raise money for Cancer Research UK, following the deaths of both his parents from cancer.
It is also a second chance.

In 2023, his first attempt ended almost immediately when his original vessel developed a leak shortly after launch. The setback worsened when the damaged boat was accidentally dropped during recovery and destroyed.
For many, that might have marked the end.
Instead, Bedwell returned home, rebuilt the boat from scratch, and committed himself once more to the challenge.
He is no stranger to difficult expeditions, having previously completed a solo Arctic voyage in another small craft. But the Atlantic presents a different level of physical and mental strain — prolonged isolation, unpredictable storms, and the constant reality that survival depends entirely on preparation and resilience.

Yet Bedwell says the wider goal extends beyond records.
He hopes his attempt will inspire others to challenge themselves in their own lives, however large or small that challenge may be.
For him, crossing an ocean in an exceptionally small boat is not simply about proving something extraordinary can be done — it is about showing that setbacks need not define the limits of ambition.
As Andrew Bedwell prepares to set sail alone across one of the world’s most formidable oceans, his voyage represents more than a record attempt. In a craft dwarfed by the Atlantic itself, he carries a message of perseverance, grief transformed into purpose, and the enduring belief that even after failure, rebuilding and trying again can be the greatest journey of all.

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