Well, it looks as if Rowing to the Moon is a lot harder that the organisers expected, even with large numbers on board it takes patience and determination, and a bit more that three weeks!andreacs wrote: ↑May 24th, 2020, 2:52 amThanks for the info Andrew!Shabana wrote: ↑May 23rd, 2020, 2:57 amI think at one point during the spring challenge one of my rows actually counted towards FOUR different events!
If you are thinking of entering this one, don't do it from an Android device, date of birth is a mandatory field that defaults to today and can only be changed one month at a time! Use a PC, then you can type in the year.
EDIT - Just checked out the leaderboard, and Australia is in first place thanks to a large number of participants. The US is a little under represented, in sixth place behind Peru, who have an enthusiastic team of 14.
Jantuut, you could make a valuable addition to the Dutch contribution, so far two team members have contributed a total of 10m.
I am not planning to join if there are no other lunies interested,
but if we do not help them they do not have the "speed" to get to the moon in time IMHO .
I looked at the numbers and they are interesting, as some entries have decimals for total meters (the Concept2 erg showing less than 1m...) Maybe some folks enter km in lieu of meters (hence the small numbers), others use the "," and "." delimiters reversed...
NB: The US is now slightly ahead of Peru .
The diagram may be hard to read, the top line is the target number of metres against elaspsed time, the lower one is the number achieved at each date. 332,417,135.5 meters to touchdown -- 51,982,869.5 total meters rowed.