The Lost Isle of Podestá
After a 5,000-mile expedition in search of a once-charted island clearly identified on Google Earth, the skipper of Wanderer III still can’t say with certainty whether or not the landfall exists.
After a 5,000-mile expedition in search of a once-charted island clearly identified on Google Earth, the skipper of Wanderer III still can’t say with certainty whether or not the landfall exists.
A boatyard isn’t just a yard. It’s a kingdom of creative adventure for liveaboard kids.
Around the Horn, down the coast, or around the buoys, the iPad can help the sailor to navigate the course, communicate key ideas, coordinate the details of the trip, and ensure a literate voyage.
For this family of liveaboard sailors, “home” proves to be a fluid concept. Under Way from our November 2012 issue.
A New England yacht designer sets his sights on the Chilean channels as the locale for the sea trials of his latest 57-foot cat. From our June 2012 issue.
What does a sailor look like after more than 260 days at sea? Check out this (very) quick video of the solo sailor taken during his resupply off Recife, Brazil.
The schooner Anne departs for a six-month voyage through the jungles of South America, the Caribbean, and back to its home base of New York City.
The passage from the Caribbean to Brazil was perhaps the most arduous of all for the crew aboard Cloud Nine.
In this book excerpt from Herb McCormick’s One Island, One Ocean—the story of the 2009-2010 Around the Americas expedition—the crew of Ocean Watch calls at the fragile, challenged, and astounding Galápagos Islands.
Necessity is indeed the mother of invention, and it prompted this cruising cook to look at canned corned beef in a whole new light.
Feeding the boat’s pet gecko leads to an unexpected cultural exchange.
With diapers to wash and bedtime stories to read, novels and boat projects may get neglected, and that’s OK.
After a 5,000-mile expedition in search of a once-charted island clearly identified on Google Earth, the skipper of Wanderer III still can’t say with certainty whether or not the landfall exists.
A boatyard isn’t just a yard. It’s a kingdom of creative adventure for liveaboard kids.
Around the Horn, down the coast, or around the buoys, the iPad can help the sailor to navigate the course, communicate key ideas, coordinate the details of the trip, and ensure a literate voyage.
For this family of liveaboard sailors, “home” proves to be a fluid concept. Under Way from our November 2012 issue.
A New England yacht designer sets his sights on the Chilean channels as the locale for the sea trials of his latest 57-foot cat. From our June 2012 issue.
What does a sailor look like after more than 260 days at sea? Check out this (very) quick video of the solo sailor taken during his resupply off Recife, Brazil.
The schooner Anne departs for a six-month voyage through the jungles of South America, the Caribbean, and back to its home base of New York City.
The passage from the Caribbean to Brazil was perhaps the most arduous of all for the crew aboard Cloud Nine.
In this book excerpt from Herb McCormick’s One Island, One Ocean—the story of the 2009-2010 Around the Americas expedition—the crew of Ocean Watch calls at the fragile, challenged, and astounding Galápagos Islands.
Necessity is indeed the mother of invention, and it prompted this cruising cook to look at canned corned beef in a whole new light.
Feeding the boat’s pet gecko leads to an unexpected cultural exchange.
With diapers to wash and bedtime stories to read, novels and boat projects may get neglected, and that’s OK.
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