Mexican women row across atlantic for inspiration

The Oceánida team, the first Mexican and Latin American group of women to row across the Atlantic Ocean, completed their journey from the Canary Islands to Antigua and Barbuda. The feat, started on December 12, 2025, and finished on January 29, 2026, stands out for its message of determination and overcoming obstacles. The rowers emphasized that the challenge aimed to motivate others to face their own hurdles.

The Oceánida team undertook an extraordinary journey aboard a chalupa, a rowing boat without sails or motor, propelled solely by their physical effort. The expedition began on December 12, 2025, in San Sebastián de la Gomera, Canary Islands, and ended on January 29, 2026, in English Harbour, Antigua and Barbuda. The women rowed in two-hour shifts, always in pairs, facing intense physical and mental demands.

In an event organized by Santamarina y Steta, members including Ana Lucía Valencia, Andrea Gutiérrez, Eugenia Méndez, and Lucila Moriel shared their experiences. "For us, it has been very special to share this story. It's not just a sports adventure, but a message we want to reach more people," said Lucila Moriel.

Ana Lucía Valencia explained the motivations: "Each one had different reasons to embark on this adventure, from the physical challenge to the desire to live something extraordinary. But what united us was the conviction that this journey could represent something bigger: to remind everyone that people have goals that seem as vast as an ocean, and with preparation, support, and determination, it is possible to cross them."

The rowers noted that they did not know how to row at the project's start but learned through training and mutual support. The journey serves as a metaphor for life, requiring resilience, discipline, and teamwork. "If our experience can help someone take the first step toward their own goal, then all the effort will have been worth it," they expressed.

Oceánida aims to inspire women and people in general to overcome everyday challenges, such as professional goals or distant dreams, amplifying the impact of their achievement through their narrative.

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Mónica Oltra, Irene Montero, Sira Rego, and Janja Lula da Silva at an ecofeminist rally in Valencia's Botanical Garden protesting political violence.
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Oltra reappears in Valencia with Montero, Rego and Janja against political violence

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Mónica Oltra has reappeared at an event in Valencia's Jardín Botánico alongside Irene Montero, Sira Rego, and Brazil's first lady Janja Lula da Silva to reject political violence against women. The event, titled 'No to war, no to political violence, for an ecofeminist world', took place on Thursday before about 300 supporters. It precedes a summit of progressive leaders in Barcelona.

Chilean rowers Antonia and Melita Abraham secured the bronze medal in the women's pair event at the first stop of the Rowing World Cup in Seville, Spain. The twins finished with a time of 7 minutes, 12 seconds and 64 hundredths, behind the French and Czech pairs.

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NASA's Artemis II mission, with four astronauts aboard, completed a Moon flyby and is returning to Earth after breaking distance records. Two Colombian engineers, Liliana Villarreal and Diana Trujillo, lead key ground operations. Villarreal oversees landing and recovery, while Trujillo manages flight control.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum arrived in Barcelona, Spain, on Friday, greeted enthusiastically by expatriates who played music and sought photos with her. She is attending the Global Progressive Mobilisation summit to promote world peace and meet leaders like Pedro Sánchez. The trip aims to improve diplomatic ties with Spain after years of tensions.

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