Four British rowers have set a record for crossing the Atlantic Ocean after reaching land in the Caribbean.



George Biggar, Dicky Taylor, Peter Robinson and Stuart Watts spent 29 days and 15 hours crossing the 3,000 miles from La Gomera in the Canary Islands to Antigua. The previous race record of 35 days was set last year by the Anglo-American quartet Latitude 35.

The “Four Oarsmen” completed the Talisker Whisky Atlantic Challenge early on Saturday to raise awareness of mental health – and about £250,000 for the charity Mind – after Biggar’s mother, Anne Fisher, died in 2011 after struggling with mental illness for most of her life.



After arriving in the harbour, Biggar said: “I always felt a need and desire to do something to commemorate Mum, and to bring that to fruition and to complete it; to do it such justice, in such style, with such great support is amazing.”

Biggar, 32, a London lawyer; Robinson, 32, a farmer from Alnwick, Northumberland; Watts, 34, an account director from Gloucester; and Taylor, 32, an IT consultant from Corbridge, Northumberland, led the 25-team fleet from early on in the race.

The rowers, who had been expected to take 40 days to cross the Atlantic, battled sea sickness, 12-metre (40ft) waves, hallucinations and chronic fatigue in their eight-metre fibreglass vessel.

Race organisers said they believed it was the fastest Atlantic row of all time, as well as in the history of the race.

The funds raised will be split between Mind and another charity, Spinal Research, in support of Robinson’s friend Ben Kende, who sustained a spinal cord injury while representing Hong Kong at the Asian rugby junior championship in 2010.

Biggar’s mother died after a boating accident in the Lake District in January 2011. After a career as a solicitor, Fisher had retrained as a mental health and addiction counsellor and became a trustee for her local branch of Mind.