Building Ceiba's Galley - SAILCARGO INC.

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
  • SUBTITLES AVAILABLE IN (CC) CAPTIONS SETTINGS.
    Carpenters Eugenio Salvavto and Alejandro Solis were born on opposite sides of the Atlantic, but these two worked together to build the four walls of Ceiba's galley and perfectly fit them to the ship's curved weather deck. The galley will be Ceiba's kitchen, responsible for feeding all her guests and crew, making it the heart of the ship. Follow the construction team, from the earliest designs of the galley, to the completion of the structure, where it is now used as a workshop for Ceiba's shipwrights.
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    Ceiba is a 46-meter, 3 masted, top sail cargo schooner currently under construction in Sailcargo´s green shipyard in Costa Rica. When she is complete, she will carry 250 metric tonnes of cargo between the Americas.
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    Sailcargo Inc. is a pioneering clean shipping company, constructing and operating a world-leading fleet of zero-emission cargo ships. Follow along as we build towards a future to proud of.
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    Plant a tree with us through the UN Trillion Tree Campaign. donate.plant-f...
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    Learn more: www.sailcargo.inc Daily Photo Updates: / sailcargo Newsletter Signup: eepurl.com/gGKmRT

Komentáře • 56

  • @ctown6971
    @ctown6971 Před rokem +37

    I wish you showed more details of the actual construction of the ship with longer viewing time.

    • @vogs72
      @vogs72 Před rokem

      Which bits did you miss over the years?

    • @ctown6971
      @ctown6971 Před rokem +4

      @@vogs72 a haven't missed any. I was talking about any upcoming episodes. This one didn't really show any construction of the walls just you putting them up. I really like watching the total construction of the ship not just little pieces of completion of phases of the build. Did I explain that right? Not sure if that came out right.

    • @Ryan_hey
      @Ryan_hey Před rokem +1

      For a commercial shipping company, I think they showed quite a bit here. If this was more of a channel run specifically for boat building, then I'd definitely expect more, but that's certainly not the goal here.

    • @ctown6971
      @ctown6971 Před rokem +1

      @@Ryan_hey ok I get that. In my opinion if they showed more of the construction of the ship it might bring more traffic to the channel therefore bring more awareness to there cause and maybe more income. Just my opinion.

    • @jonnenne
      @jonnenne Před rokem

      ​@@Ryan_heythe reason why they have challenges with profitability is that they have not attracted enough interest in the project which is a direct result of their bad presence ok youtube

  • @kirkyorg7654
    @kirkyorg7654 Před 7 měsíci

    wish i was young man again i would have loved to come and work on a project like this sadly we had no YT back in my day well always have the next reincarnation to give it a go hopefully i will be good working with my hands again lol

  • @mitfreundlichengrussen1234

    It is always a special day for me when you post a video - thank you!

  • @stephenlee62
    @stephenlee62 Před rokem +8

    This is such a special project. You deserve way more than 21K subscribers. I know your focus isn't videos, building the ship, but you could generate so much greater interest and investors/patrons if you put out more videos more often. I love seeing the progress, but from video to video there is such a vast amount of progress it would be great to see how that happened.
    Keep doing what you're doing. It is amazing.

  • @bobbyfocking8323
    @bobbyfocking8323 Před rokem +3

    I Love the haircuts

  • @abrahamtov364
    @abrahamtov364 Před rokem +2

    Nice but to short not enough content. Everything is looking great, looking forward to seeing her in the water!

  • @slowerpicker
    @slowerpicker Před rokem +1

    That was an interesting tour of the full scale mock-up of the galley.

  • @avonneave2131
    @avonneave2131 Před rokem +3

    Amazing progress, She's starting to take shape, very nice, all the best regards from here on the West Coast side of Australia 🌏 Batavia Coast 🙏🖖🤟🐨🇦🇺

  • @SarahTingen
    @SarahTingen Před 4 měsíci

    Taking the spot :)

  • @refiii9499
    @refiii9499 Před rokem +3

    I’ve been watching these videos on here since day one. Incredible how well this ship is looking. I wish their was subtitle for the language barrier we have tho. I didn’t understand a word he was saying lol. Usually their is a subtitle at the bottom for that instance. She’s looking great and hopefully more videos will be coming out on the regular soon.

    • @sailcargo
      @sailcargo  Před rokem

      If you turn on subtitles in the lower right had corner of the video screen, we've translated everything. :)

  • @ocendo1
    @ocendo1 Před rokem +4

    Great work

  • @garnierchristian3589
    @garnierchristian3589 Před rokem +2

    Bravo pour ce travail magnifique,,vos videos sont attendues impatiemment, verra t on bientot quelque chose sur Vega ? Courage !

  • @itsfonk
    @itsfonk Před rokem

    This has been a joy to observe! Thank you for sharing!

  • @mikepeuker
    @mikepeuker Před rokem

    geat vid as always

  • @kevin-vt7dw
    @kevin-vt7dw Před rokem

    I agree you are missing out with not video documenting this build, and your mission is a great story from the cooks to the carpenter's your are all dependent on each other and do important jobs to reach your goals of a better world

  • @waynocook53
    @waynocook53 Před rokem

    Beutiful jungel and bots 🤙

  • @canyonhaverfield2201
    @canyonhaverfield2201 Před rokem +1

    Beautiful thoughtful camera work & sound editing..wow ! Are you as a team tuning in to watch online utube segments of the building of Tallyho up in Washington state, and the building of Ran 3 in Sweden , My best to all

  • @cogs2971
    @cogs2971 Před rokem +7

    MORE CONSTRUCTION VIDEOS

  • @SarahTingen
    @SarahTingen Před 4 měsíci

    Waba waba

  • @billwlod
    @billwlod Před rokem

    love this

  • @patrikcalloch7953
    @patrikcalloch7953 Před rokem +1

    pour répondre a ceux qui voudraient une vidéo chaque semaine : s'ils souhaitent voir le processus complet de la construction traditionnelle en bois , il existe le projet sampson boat " tally ho" qui avec plus de 160 enregsitrements décrit précisément tout ce que l'on peut voir dans la charpenterie et la quincaillerie navale mené par une équipe de bénévoles dans un coin de l"Oregon . Ici il semble que ce soit un projet de professionnels et mes souvenirs perso de marin de commerce me rapellent que lorsqu'on est au travail on n'a pas forcément envie d'etre dérangé trop souvent par des communiquants , leurs caméras et les ralentssements nécéssités par une production dans un univers plein de dangers et d'inconforts en tous genres .

    • @jonnenne
      @jonnenne Před rokem

      Is that the reason they are running out of money? This logic makes no sense. You need to generate cash flow and reduce costs even if your goal is to transport stuff in the future

  • @Bruin4Life
    @Bruin4Life Před rokem +5

    I have been subscribed and watching the construction of this ship since the beginning and am enjoying seeing the progress and cannot wait to see the ship at sea hauling it’s first cargoes. It is amazing to see the care that is being taken to ensure that the ship is strong and safe for the crews who sail her and work on her. Keep up the great work and you will succeed in helping to make this a greener world!

  • @user-ny3sm5ov7t
    @user-ny3sm5ov7t Před měsícem +1

    I really enjoy watching your videos because I'm a woodworker, however I question the future of the project. I suspect that you have run headlong into reality. You have purchased another ship and yet we haven't seen a video showing it delivering products yet. There are many good reasons that shipping went away from wind power and it seems very idealistic of you to think you can make this efficient enough to turn a profit. I could be wrong, but where are the numbers that you have come up with? Goods need to be delivered in a timely manner or customers will stop using your services. I know that you are planning electric power in Ceiba as well as sails, but both are very expensive. Has any ship of Ceiba's size ever been made all electric? How far will you be able to travel on a charge and how and where can you recharge that many cells cost effectively and fast enough to turn around for the next load? What is the projected average speed of Ceiba under electric or sail power and how does this compare to modern shipping? I think you need to produce a serious video that deals with projected costs of maintenance, recharging, number of deck hands and pay, insurance, estimated time of completion, cost of rigging etc. I think the major question is profit margin. Many are now donating their time, but a business can't sustain itself long term that way. How many trips each year and amount of cargo transported will you need to turn a profit? The more I think about this the more questions I come up with. In short you need a business plan video with real world numbers to help us understand how this will work and be sustainable.

  • @tommooe4524
    @tommooe4524 Před 8 měsíci

    It has been a year since i saw the last video and it doesn’t seem like much progress has been achieved

  • @patrikcalloch7953
    @patrikcalloch7953 Před rokem +1

    dans cette affaire les investisseurs motivés par un projet de " fair marine transport " n'ont pas forcémenent besoin de regarder des films de 50 min .

  • @deepdivedelight
    @deepdivedelight Před rokem

    It's growing like a Tree

  • @charlesolson9019
    @charlesolson9019 Před rokem

    What are they doing at 8:45? I couldn't figure that part out. (And the commentary from Alejandro made me wish I knew Spanish.)

    • @sailcargo
      @sailcargo  Před rokem

      Hi, Thanks for raising this. We do have English subtitles build into the video. You just need to turn them on in captions settings at the bottom right of the video.

    • @sailcargo
      @sailcargo  Před rokem

      And they are opening the steam box we use to steam our planks before we bend them onto the ship.

  • @DarienDrakee
    @DarienDrakee Před rokem

    How many endangered trees were harvested haha

  • @ehrenfriedklemt4031
    @ehrenfriedklemt4031 Před rokem

  • @brucerazor5202
    @brucerazor5202 Před rokem

    What happened to all the work being done on the ship?
    They had dozens of people, must have ran out of financing

  • @MrWiljem
    @MrWiljem Před rokem +1

    Hello. I have aquestion: i have participate as help on design and build several wooden boats. I never see this heavy double botom inner cover. Looks strong and non removable by any sircunstances. So, how you will find and repair any water leak when you have it? Sure you know, wooden boats allways need leak repair. Wood expands and shrink and also twist during sea motion. I am corious about this. Thank you

    • @lucianopereira3793
      @lucianopereira3793 Před rokem

      I have the same question. And wonder how to fix the outer planks, with inner cover installed?

    • @refiii9499
      @refiii9499 Před rokem +1

      They explain why it was done in an earlier video. I can’t remember why but the reasoning sounded logical at the time lol

    • @oliverwatson1567
      @oliverwatson1567 Před rokem +1

      The ceiling (inside) planks are just as structurally important as the exterior planking on a vessel of this size. They are standard on any vessel over ~80 tons. There's a 6 inch gap between the ceiling planks and the keelson (longitudinal structural timber bolted to the top of the keel and frames) so leaks can be located. The gap will be covered by removable boards during normal operations.

    • @oliverwatson1567
      @oliverwatson1567 Před rokem +1

      ​@@lucianopereira3793 The ceiling (inner) planks are fastened minimally on the forward part of the frame with spikes and trunnels, the outside planking layers will be fastened with spikes, and through bolts that will sandwich the ceiling, frames and planks together

    • @patrikcalloch7953
      @patrikcalloch7953 Před rokem

      ce recouvrement total dans le cas d'un navire de charge est appelé le vaigrage , il sert à éviter que le charement n'aiile dans les recoins des couples , à isoler la marchandise des eaux évacuées par les anguillets , et puis ca renforce la structure .

  • @matthewwillis4892
    @matthewwillis4892 Před rokem

    Monell and/ or bronze fastened?

    • @oliverwatson1567
      @oliverwatson1567 Před rokem

      The fastenings are all galvanized steel. Bronze or monel would be too expensive for a vessel of this size

    • @matthewwillis4892
      @matthewwillis4892 Před rokem +1

      @@oliverwatson1567 I have heard that galvanized fastenings last 30 years at best.

    • @framegrace1
      @framegrace1 Před rokem

      Stainless steel for real marine environment, Galvanized steel for less important stuff... I guess.

    • @matthewwillis4892
      @matthewwillis4892 Před rokem

      @@framegrace1 That makes sense, thanks!

    • @oliverwatson1567
      @oliverwatson1567 Před rokem

      @@framegrace1 stainless steel isn't an option. Even 316 grade will corrode unpredictably and quickly in this application

  • @atxsailor452
    @atxsailor452 Před 4 měsíci

    Bad placement for a galley! It would have been much better if it had been set in lower in the boats hull.

  • @gentlegiants1974
    @gentlegiants1974 Před rokem

    At the current pace of construction it should see blue water in approximately 2050... This method of building is not a viable business model for anyone interested in actually opening a shipyard to produce sailing vessels of a commercial size. This is just a glorified backyard hobby build. I hope the people running the company have a better head for sailing the ships than they do for building them.

  • @user-ny3sm5ov7t
    @user-ny3sm5ov7t Před měsícem +1

    I really enjoy watching your videos because I'm a woodworker, however I question the future of the project. I suspect that you have run headlong into reality. You have purchased another ship and yet we haven't seen a video showing it delivering products yet. There are many good reasons that shipping went away from wind power and it seems very idealistic of you to think you can make this efficient enough to turn a profit. I could be wrong, but where are the numbers that you have come up with? Goods need to be delivered in a timely manner or customers will stop using your services. I know that you are planning electric power in Ceiba as well as sails, but both are very expensive. Has any ship of Ceiba's size ever been made all electric? How far will you be able to travel on a charge and how and where can you recharge that many cells cost effectively and fast enough to turn around for the next load? What is the projected average speed of Ceiba under electric or sail power and how does this compare to modern shipping? I think you need to produce a serious video that deals with projected costs of maintenance, recharging, number of deck hands and pay, insurance, estimated time of completion, cost of rigging etc. I think the major question is profit margin. Many are now donating their time, but a business can't sustain itself long term that way. How many trips each year and amount of cargo transported will you need to turn a profit? The more I think about this the more questions I come up with. In short you need a business plan video with real world numbers to help us understand how this will work and be sustainable.