How to Sail Your Boat Across an Ocean - Seminar
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- čas přidán 16. 01. 2018
- Sail Away Weeks with Paul and Sheryl Shard 🏝
Join Paul and Sheryl for a sailing experience in the world’s top cruising destinations. Get an introduction to the sailing lifestyle, build new skills, make new like-minded friends! Cabins still available for British Virgin Islands, February 20-28, 2022.
We gave this seminar at the Toronto Boat Show 2018... hopefully it will answer some of your questions about what its like on the ocean, and if you would like to try a passage...
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Featured in this video:
Distant Shores II and III Southerly Yachts
Bluewater 50 catamaran: bluewatercats.com/bluewater-5...
Discovery Yachts Group / Southerly Yachts: discoveryyachtsgroup.com/
World Cruising Club, Atlantic Rally for Cruisers (ARC): www.worldcruising.com/index.aspx
PredictWind Weather Forecasting, Route Planning and Tracking App: www.predictwind.com/
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Own the whole Distant Shores collection:
All 130 full half-hour episodes of the Distant Shores Sailing Adventure TV series are available as a collectors set as HD downloads and also on DVD through the Distant Shores website. The Distant Shores DVD Super Pack box set is perfect for binge-watching and makes a great gift for the sailor in your life! Info and order here:
distantshores.ca/sailingdvds/...
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You can also connect with us on:
FACEBOOK: / distantshorestv
INSTAGRAM: / distantshorestv
TWITTER: / distantshorestv
BUSINESS INQUIRIES: distantshores@rogers.com
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Check out these other videos:
ATLANTIC CROSSING: • Atlantic Crossing 3000...
BEACHED IN THE BAHAMAS: • Beached in the Bahamas...
STORMS, MUD AND SAND - FORTRESS ANCHOR TEST: • Storms, Mud and Sand -...
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THANKS FOR SUBSCRIBING!
/ distantshores1
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Thank you for watching!
Sheryl and Paul
Really great advice! The Bilge alarm, route recommendations, and typical problems to look out for were key pearls of wisdom for me. Thanks!
Thank you for posting this valuable information. As a relative newbie to "true" sailing (not motoring), I found it very useful.
Thank you very very much for posting this! As usual you stick to the important stuff and present in an extremely entertaining manner.
Great job on going over safety things, the alarm on the bilge pump great idea! Checking every 10 to 15 minutes for ships great idea! Running the bilge occasionally great idea!
If you could go over the rudder system and explain the stresses and how to feel or know them how to check them would be great!!!
VERY HELPFUL
Thank you for sharing. Good information. Egar to see your new Distant Shores III. 😍⛵⛵⛵⛵⛵⛵⛵⛵😊👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Thank you for sharing all those wonderful information...🎶👍
Very helpful information!
Thanks Paul.....I always learn something new in your interesting talks. That video clip of the Lagoon off your port side showed the best relative wave size that I've yet seen. The waves didn't appear large large until I focused in on the Lagoon cat.
You're welcome Ed! Yes we were lucky he came by in a squall too :-)
Excellent presentation! I am retired and want to start sailing. Learning a lot from the two of you.
Very informative , Thanks guys
Excellent and some great route and trip advice and kit tips. It should be required viewing for anyone considering a Transatlantic crossing or any ocean crossing in fact.
Love your seminars! Cannot wait to watch your adventures on the new boat!
Glad you enjoyed it Doug. We cannot wait either :-)
Missed you guys at the show. Thanks for posting this.
Very helpful, you are clearly living your best life. Looking forward to seeing how the new boat works out, lots of electrical stuff to go wrong is my feeling, hope I am wrong
I watched you on television for years. I am in the field, so CZcams is perfect! You both inspired many of my photographic adventures;)
Thanks Julie! Glad we could help :-)
Love this video...very informative. Thank you once again.
You're welcome guys!
Thank you for sharing! Great information. Appreciate it! :)
Very informative, appreciate your reference to "Go small, go now" because next year may be too late! Thank you for sharing.
Yup. Endless dreamers buying 40'+ boats and never leave the marina.
Informative and helpful presentation! I’m learning to sail and would eventually like to do crossings. This is very helpful in terms of the things I need to learn and do to get there.
Wonderful video. Just found you guys. Love the videos. Very calm and knowledgeable. P.S. I LOVE THE LIFE VESTS U WEAR!!!
Great as always, enjoyed very much
Great video as Always. Cheers from Sweden
very useful information, I took several notes into my own plan - many thanks for sharing
Leanne and I were disappointed that we were unable to go to Saturdays seminar so very excited
you were able to upload it. It really did turn out well. The video as well as audio was perfect.
Safe travels in Germany. So glad we were able to meet up on Sunday.
Yes it was great to meet and put faces to the names. We did go to some effort to record the seminar using our professional camera. We set up our own wireless sound system to capture the audio and then edited in the show visual elements as well. Glad you enjoyed it !
This is great . Thankyou.
The nuts and bolts with some great video and narration!
Thank you. I always enjoy your videos. I kind of envy you guys for all your adventures. I constantly dream of an opportunity to do some sailing at least through the winter months down in the Caribbean. Living in the midwest is not fun when its cold and snowy. Thanks again!
Thanks Ron! Definitely a great idea to try to get down to the south for a sailing break in the winter if you can :-)
Good video. Looking and seeing. What I never ceased to be amazed at, while sea kayaking, is seeing something in the distance and it's either a boat 2-3 miles off or a sea gull sitting on the water 100 yards out. I've got 15 years of experience. I know that I could paddle my kayak 1-3 miles off shore and no one on land would see me, even though if they looked and understood how, they could easily see me.
As a kayaker I and my friends always wear a PFD (life jacket). Coast Guard rules for small craft is to have one in reach. Almost everyone who dies in a boating accident was not wearing that life jacket that had been within reach.
Thanks for this. So I need to work on my skills so I can crew a boat and be more than just ballast.
Guys!!!! I love your videos ! I can’t wait to meet you on person anytime anywhere on the oceans! Keep it going!!!! Greetings from Cuba ❤️❤️❤️❤️
Great info thank you. 😊
Super video !!! Thanks.......
Glad you liked it Mike!
Loved it good information and it gives me more ideas about what to do with my spinnaker.👍🏿🌊⛵🌬️
This was very interesting and useful! Thanks
Looks like a lot of fun. Can't believe the most valuable part of the video was about a 2 dollar alarm. Thanks for that. VERY good piece of knowledge.
I have indicator lights for each pump and a high water alarm on my bilge pump that usually kicks on last.
THNX.. great info
Nice talk show, very useful information. Nor covered is security, piracy, defence.
Great info!
I was a little sad that you guys didn't come to the Chicago show this year, but now we at least get to see one of your seminars online instead. Thank you for sharing on CZcams.
Yes we were sorry we missed Chicago! Glad you liked the CZcams!
This is our last season here. We hope to never need to over-winter in the Midwest ever again, so this should be our last Chicago boat show. We would like to maybe hit the fall Annapolis show on the way down the East Coast this year, waiting for the hurricane season to end before heading further South and over to the Caribbean.
Congratulations and good luck with your cruising plans! The Annapolis Show is a good waypoint on the way south. Enjoy!!
Your voice sounds exactly like Brian from SV Delos. Your both pure awesome.
Thanks lots of good info if I can ever convince the better half to go long haul. Fingers crossed
Great info Thank you
Y'all have always been great. We just went to the Houston boat show. Y'all have inspired us
Glad we could help out Knapps! Perhaps we'll get to Houston sometime!
Thanks guys for all the valuable information and tips that teach me what I need to better
prepare for when time comes.
question. do you have more tutorial videos?
thank you very much.
God bless
36:30 You would not have problems with the forestay if you had hank-on instead of roller. Some people have to learn the hard way. For offshore passages, hank-on is the way to go.
Thank-you:)
bilge pump alarm. Wow, that sounds like good advice. Can't remember reading that before.
Glad to help Dan. Its certainly an inexpensive safety upgrade :-)
I ordered One after watching this video. Thank you :)
Head South until the butter melts, then head West. So butter is indeed very important.
I wish I could travel the ocean as you guys do. Unfortunately for me my time has passed. But if you are a lot younger go for it . I would if I had a longer life and a wife who liked the sea.
Trade the wife for a boat, life is short.
Wonderful. And come to Portugal, my contry must be bring you luck. And protection from out saints..
Interesting, having sailed a Discovery 55 with similar Solent rig, we adopted the exact-same rig, but from advice in Las Palmas before departure, rigged a block on the end of the pole to minimise chafe
Great seminar!
May I ask why you guys didn't try to put holes into that floating chunk of steel? Drill/bits? Cold chisel & hammer? Anything to help scuttle/sink that hull killer debris.
Easier said than done.
Thank you guys for your share...Sorry for my bad english.
Martial Fortuney LONGANGUE Your English is fine.
I'm glad you enjoyed it Martial!
Thanx4 the U-Tube. A sailboat is quite slow (8 knt = 15km/h) and a cat about 12knt (20km/h).
Strange that why?
I like that catamaran very much let us see if all goes right I get own one.
👍👍👍excellent
The Rival you are showing is a Rival 32. I should know as I have one.
Thanks Wayne! Very pretty boat!
I'm new to all this and considering a brand new sailboat like the Hanse 458. Are the newer boats more automated where you don't necessarily need all these people doing various tasks? It would be only my wife and I. Just trying to learn and get an idea about all this stuff. Great video.
What an adventure! You should sail out to Taiwan some time!
I have had a lot of Sailing Experience on the Great Lakes and one Passage to Bermuda on a very old boat in the 1980's It was a 28 foot Cutter built in 1947, Oneida II and was 7 tons displacement. None of the modern navigation stuff at all. Big difference from today. But I am now land locked living in Saskatchewan. At 67 I would still like to do some serious sailing but do not have the finances for it any more. I had a career as a Machinist/Millwright so I am very mechanically minded. So now my question. How would I go about connecting with a boat that is looking for a crew member?
I noticed some of the boats you talked about are pretty expensive! What's your thoughts on the MacGregor 65?
Actually its surprising how inexpensive boats are if you're in the right place and willing to put some elbow grease/ time in. Some people actually give them away because of illness or the passing of a family member
How would I get info for joining a crew for the ARC ?
it's called a wisker pole.
What a blast to be able to sail around our wonderful flat earth ))
With just Cheryl and ME.
Her voice is so crisp.
watched this twice for our upcoming transatlantic. two questions. 1-would you still buy a SSB? 2- are you doing the Med again with the new boat prior to heading around the blue ball. hope to see you in the greek islands this summer.
I cant speak for them but I'd never go offshore without a ssb.
SouthJerseySound can you justify that statement with good reasons? Or is this your opinion? I can understand why we used to use them. They gave you weather and communicated across the ocean. But now with an iridium go and a sat phone they made the SSB redundant like the toaster oven. I like new tech for ease of use, cost and capability, 28 years of racing and I think we used the SSB 5 times. And it never worked right. The sat phone and iridium go just work. And they are a fraction of the cost. On my new boat the SSB instal would be almost $8,000 when done with antenna, tuner radio and ground plane. I can buy 5 iridium go systems with money left over for airtime.
And I never even included the modem and membership for sail mail for the SSB.
In the forces we have gone away from HF for digital satellite.
Now I was just wondering if Paul felt he needed to keep one foot in the past like people still carrying a sextant.?
Sorry had to be a cheeky old sailor. Normally people are calling me the old crusty one at the club. But I like hearing good reasoning.
If you want to possibly bet your life on a sat phone then by all means go ahead and do so.People these days seem to think SSB is dead but the truth is most of them have no clue as to what a modern DSC capable ssb like the Icom-802 is capable of especially in a emergency.
I actually find it hard to believe someone sailing offshore questioned having redundancy especially in the communications department.Part of being a safe and prudent sailor is having redundant systems and gear to mitigate the dangers of being so far from safety .How many times have you used your life raft,flares,fire extinguisher and so on??Heck you could save another few grand by getting a few more life preservers and ditching the raft too.Does that sound wise to you?
I've had quite a few instances over the years when I was not able to get reception due to weather,thankfully none of them emergencies............But hey,what would I know.I'm not a member of a yacht club,I just have my 100 ton masters,have been part of at least 20 trans Atlantic deliveries and even spent a few years working for SeaTow.
It's your choice but the old adage of it's better to have it and not need it then it is to need it and not have it truly applies here.I personally consider it a safety requirement in most cases and about the only time I'd consider not having one is if I was part of something like the ARC or traveling in a pack etc..
I think some one touched a nerve. unfortunately i dont see a great argument here for installing one on the new boat. yes redundancy is very important. but you have to draw a line. i have a Gperb. Sat AIS, Spot, Iridium go, Sat phone by inmarsat so not the same as Irideum constellation and PLBs. not to mention life raft and all the gear to go with it. I may not have my 100 ton licence yet but i dont see a need since im retired and im not working for anyone. I am a sailing instructor and like you have thousands of miles under the keel. so if you can have more reliable comms and its cheaper a and clearer why would you not go digital? give me a good reason to spend another $10,000 on a system i dont trust or think i will ever use. and lets keep this civil. lets stick to facts and not opinions please. and please remember i am an old retired mechanic from the Army and im not made of money.
i should add that a SSB would be nice to pick up the BBC world service from time to time. we get tired in some country's of not hearing English.
how do you guys train your spine for such a trip? i am a newbie who just came from a RYA Competent Crew 5 days sailing course, and as a adventerous almost 44 years old, realised that if i would do an ocean race some day, i would need to train my spine a lot. maybe "plank" for XX min or something. how do you train your spine as a 40+ guy/woman?
31:29 I think the lady in the front row is dead.
I guess we have to expect that in COVID times...
What purpose do you achieve by bobbing up and down for umpteen days to cover distance for no apparent reason? 'Fun'?? How?
👍👍👍👍👍
Hi .. how much practice do you recommend , I am going to buy a sailboat and I want to cross the ocean on long term voyages by myself in a 30-ft sailboat... It's been a dream..I have 30 k for a boat...used of course,.. it's it a bad idea to want to sail alone. ?
I'm planning on sailing from Texas to the Philippines so any info would be appreciated
@@Code-jr5wf that's to much
Your crew lay in their bunks if sea sick? I was sea sick as a young cabin boy in the merchant navy. I took to my bunk feeling really yuk. The second office" second M8" was very understanding and ask me if he could get me a cup of tea or some fresh fruit. When I said no thank you. I got the full force of his wrath. He told me in no uncertain terms others were not going to do my work when I was laying in my bunk feeling sorry for myself. That was the best cure for sea sickness I ever had.
Hi, at 9:20 you show a boat that is a seafarer 34.
I have a question regarding bad weather safety in a power boat crossing and hope there is someone who can answer this or at least has a better idea than myself. At the beginning of the trip obviously you can store fuel weight in a low central position and keep the center of gravity low. However approaching destination the boat will become lighter, the center of gravity rises and depending on the heel angle the COG moves easier outside the center of buoyancy, resulting in negative righting momentum and a potential capsize. I guess this is a different story with a sail boat that has deep keel ballast. Therefore my question is: does anybody have an idea what kind of heel angles realistically should be expected in a power boat in offshore bad weather? Of course the capsize angle in concrete numbers is different from boat to boat, e.g. depending on the freeboard, but I'm wondering how much room for error there is between actual heel angles in typical storm conditions and given numbers of design capsize angles.
36:00 "chaffe.. this line is nearly chaffed through.." no it is not, that is just the sleeve, the strength is in the core, that is still a working line, definitely not "chaffed through"
I probably missed it, yet is the old boat sold? I am sure I would not be able to afford - I know it survived - seemingly in good condition the biggest hurricane, ever ...
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What is a fair market price for an old Southerly? 40ish feet...
Yes we sold her more than a year ago now. There are a few of the Southerly 42’s come up for sale and they are a great boat imho 👍
You neglected to mention what happens when a rogue wave hits your boat and knocks it over
Not to mention the keel will prevent this
@Kaptain Kid What's a good boat to use for the Caribbean? 35K buget
Nice I wonder if there is anything that can get across rough waters, as a sail boat for £10K UK selling? I liked this video yes!!!!👍😅
I was thinking if shanghai techniques to acquire me crew... think that'll work out? j/k... That Rival, though, was it really British? If so, why didn't she borrow a little of the British science fiction technology and make it bigger on the inside?
Nice video well done
But a small item I don’t know about ....I wonder if AIS does work in the middle of the ocean having no shore internet connected stations.
Does AIS work between ships in the middle of the ocean.. ?
Thanks Victor!
Yes AIS works between ships using a VHF type radio, so the range we see ships at sea is up to 25-30 miles typically. Internet is not used except for the apps you see such as MArinetraffic using shore receivers so people can view their websites.
Doozledorf?
Düsseldorf, Germany. boot Düsseldorf 2018, starts on January 20
Hello Sir, I am interested in signing up for crew. Any help please?
You need to build a giant long faced statue facing the ocean before you leave.😁
Never in the Pacific? You missed the best bit
The caviar was better in the Atlantic...
سلام أريد أن اشارككم هذآ الموضوع
You should drill a hole in that box ad sink the thing next time! Great video otherwise :)
⅞⅞78888
who just leaves a danger to mariners in the middle of the ocean??? idiots
After watching some of these, I see much red meat eating and remember being told that if you eat much red meat or bird the fish won't attack your ship as much if any, do you find this true?
Cats are always more comfortable and faster
Distant Shores II looked better in that squall than the cat.
Someone once told me: "If your boat can hold the food, water and bed to do it, it can do it." While we were talking about ocean crossings.
The guy sailed across the Atlantic in a 27 feet boat.
But still, I wouldn't want to do that.
Sorry, but I'm falling asleep watching this.
I would rather surf at 20 Knots than 12
I have never gone 20 knots but it does sound exciting! What boat did you sail on that could get going that fast?
28:44 - Watch - So, you have this $$ ship and you still need to physically watch the horizon - ok fair enough, but why don't you have a periscope fixed to your mast? Before you had Crows-Nets, why not use a camera or something else (Periscope) to scan the horizon (from a much better vantage point, ontop of the Mast) ? Food for thought, Right?
@kurtis howard If I'm solo sailing .. The only reason to watch is to go out side and look at the stars. A periscope is 2 mirrors at specific angles (simple) or you can run IR camera (add a simple rotation) to the top of the mast, you can 'See' all within your own bed (if required). Why wake yourself up every 3 hours ... sounds like misery.
This is so strange to hear when every other sailing channel I watch sails 30 year old boats and fixes everything themselves.
Have you noticed the timelines they have ? Have you noticed how much they struggle ?
Which ones? I'm trying to learn sailing & I'm not finding too much on how to get started.
Atkrdu
Go to any yacht club. In the summer most will do short races or cruising days/ weekends. Most are looking for crew. Especially racing.
That’s what I did 30 years ago. Spent the first few weeks just sitting on the rail watching and listening. Then got the odd job to do. Ending up doing two handed race with an owner. Then to now where I go on my own. Look, listen and ask questions. 😁
@@Pete-qo7bv yacht clubs are for alcoholics
@@Atkrdu czcams.com/video/WjBYRUZbU4Y/video.html
For the rich this one
This "rich" thing always come up. Learn to sail and join somebody as a crew member. That way you don't has to buy a boat nor maintain it.
You will need to have a certified life jacket, life line, and an emergency transmitter (so you can be found in the sea/ocean), and clothing, Those things aren't inexpensive, but you can do without them if you want to has a *much* higher chance of dying.
Why do North American’s think you need such large boars for ocean crossings. Plenty of 29s cross and are two handed. You can easily cross with 3-4 people on a decent 34.
Nice explanation. But all your experiances are based on the barefoot routes for beginners. We crossed the atlantic from Scotland to Newfoundland twice. For that crossing you need other skills.
Nice André, give us more capt.
I am just exploring sailing experience in you tube and it was shocking to see that dangerous metal floating in the middle of the ocean. An accident could cost some one a boat and life. What can one do, to help recuce such human made accidents.
Hi I am Jamshed from India - Mumbai. I liked the idea of accompanying as a crew member initially. I am 47 and I do mind shelling out 35000 for 12 day training programs, that teach you basics of module 1, then for module 2 & 3 another 35000 rupees.
I believe sailing can be learnt within a week or two by learning practically by sailing witha crew.
Please can you sugges what once needs to learn to be a part of sailing crew. I believe if we want to learn, we need to do o er time at times to perfect our skills. There is no shortcuts to any thing.
Thanks for giving an amazing walk through.
Once you get old, cats are better.