Navigator
Because you don't seem like a prank poster and are truely interested in that boat and sailing, let me try to clear some of this up. If you are going to cross an ocean, it will take many many many more days then you can get a weather forcast. If you pick the right weather window, then odds will be on your side but even then you have a good chance of running into a gale (35+ knots). Now 35 knots is very serious anywhere, but out on the high seas where the waves can get pretty big, the importance of the boat being able to handle it has to do with two things 1) the pounding the deck and cockpit will take from the waves crashing onto it. 2) the yanking back and forth the rigging, mast and chainplates will take as the boat rocks back and forth and side to side due to the large waves. You don't have these problems in protected waters.Now lets say you lost your mast 2,000 miles from land because the rigging broke or the chainplates came through the deck and you call for help on the VHF. If no boats are within a 50 mile radius then it's likely nobody heard you. If you called from an SSB then somebody will hear you but how far are they from you? USCG may dispatch a C130 but they are usually just for visual contact only. It would take a very long time for a helocopter to reach you and a couple of refills of the gas tank too. The UCCG would try to find a ship near you that would offer help and that may take days. In the meantime, your boat would be beam to the waves and sure to capsize if the waves got steep. Now comes into play how strong everything else is that Hunter didn't make to handle this type of conditions. Would a hatch break?