Community Corner
Monroe Father, Son Encounter Whales During Atlantic Ocean Race
The Monroe pair were competing in a 3,000-mile transatlantic rowing race when a group of 30-foot sperm whales surfaced near their boat.

MONROE, CT — From Monroe to the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, a father and son had a once-in-a-lifetime encounter with a group of 30-foot sperm whales during an international rowing race.
Greg Collins, 62, and his son Elliot, 29, both of Monroe, competed in the World’s Toughest Row last year, a 3,000-mile race from San Sebastián de La Gomera in Spain’s Canary Islands to Nelson’s Dockyard in Antigua.
The pair were part of a four-person team, Get Busy Rowing, that spent more than 45 days at sea completing the journey. Near the end of the race, a family of sperm whales surfaced close to their boat.
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“After more than a month at sea, each of us rowing 12 hours a day, you start to feel like you have some control over your environment,” Elliot Collins said. “When a group of 30-foot sperm whales breached right beside our boat, that illusion disappeared instantly — reminding us we’re just guests in their world.”
The team completed the race in 45 days, nine hours and 23 minutes, finishing 30th out of 43 boats.
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Over the course of the journey, the crew logged more than 1.5 million oar strokes.
The team also raised money for The Matt Hampson Foundation, a charity that supports young people with serious sporting injuries.
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