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The question of how much one should carry around takes a special significance for me this summer. I am sailing accross the Atlantic. With such a trip come a lot of limitations. As we made a list of what we were going to need, we didn't realize that there were principles that guided our choices. We need to respect the constraints of being on a boat, of being safe, and of having fun.

Clothes: Foul weather stuff (1boots 1pants 1jacket 1polar 2socks) Normal weather stuff (1pants 1shorts 2tshirts 3underwear 1pullover 1shoes) +hat, 2sunglasses (with the reflection of the sun on the water, not wearing sunglasses would be very dangerous. So since they're easy to loose...)

Food:muesli in the norming, salad for lunch, hot meal for dinner (dryfried stuff). 3liters of water per persons. A fifth of this water will be sparkling becasue it tastes less bland. It seems that after a while you crave for strong tastes, so we will bring strong spices as well.

The rest: there will be three of us on board, we will therefore have time offduty to enjoy ourselves alone. We can each bring books, probably three or four (we will share them! so that's 12 already).
There will be music available through ipods.
We will have two GPS, one just in case, a computer in order to receive weather forecasts, a VHF radio, a normal BLU radio, a sextan (or whatever  the name of the thing we use to get the angle between the horizon and the stars )

We have an autopilot so we can share meal together as well (otherwise someone always has to steer).

The fact that we have electronics on board means that we need to bring in some fuel, and charge up our batteries for about two hours a day.

We have no showers, no toilets. We just bought a bucket.

That's pretty much it. We were thinking of bringing a chess board, but i'm not sure it is going to happen. Aside from the risk of loosing pieces, it's not sure that this is the sort of way you want to escape the reality of being on a boat. We will bring paper and pens.

No alcohol or tobacco.

a satellite phone, so that I can call my mother and tell her how well things are going. And it will be great to receive text messages! this will probably our only way to communicate with the rest of the world, and a limited one because of costs. The phone will not be hookedup to the computer, so no internet. And that's good.

This is pretty much all you will be able to find on the boat. Between space available and maximum weight, we cannot take much more with us.
What decided me to talk about this trip is Nomad's talk about the need for showers... Our only way to shower for 3 weeks will be through rain, that is to say, by hanging out naked on deck. It will also be the only opportunity to clean our clothes. So we will always be on the look out for rain... it will put some rythm , it will become an important element of our days. Will it rain, will it not? Will we be able to get rid of all this salt we see on our arms, legs, faces?

I'm really excited... a boy's dream coming true.

For those you interested, I'm leaving from NY on JUly 13th. Look for a pink sailboat.... or, on the 12th, look for a big party at North Cove! (the marina next to battery park)

I will be happy to answer questions you may have... thanks for the diary... i think the word that rules our trip is 'spartiate'. I remember this book about greece that I read as a kid... one of the pictures was a boy, naked, cleaning himself in the river, with snow on the banks...

Rien n'est gratuit en ce bas monde. Tout s'expie, le bien comme le mal, se paie tot ou tard. Le bien c'est beaucoup plus cher, forcement. Celine

by UnEstranAvecVueSurMer (holopherne ahem gmail) on Wed Jun 13th, 2007 at 08:32:00 AM EST
Where do you intend landing?
by Colman (colman at eurotrib.com) on Wed Jun 13th, 2007 at 09:37:03 AM EST
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There are going to be two legs... I will stop in the Acores for a week, and then to Douarnenez, France.
Anybody has advices on what to in the acores by the way?

I realize that I am not exactly on spot for this diary. When sailing autarcy dictates a lot of things.. But maybe it's also a small scale experiment on what we will all need to do soon...

Rien n'est gratuit en ce bas monde. Tout s'expie, le bien comme le mal, se paie tot ou tard. Le bien c'est beaucoup plus cher, forcement. Celine

by UnEstranAvecVueSurMer (holopherne ahem gmail) on Wed Jun 13th, 2007 at 09:44:42 AM EST
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I would have thought that after sailing the atlantic what you'd want to do in the Azores is sleep.

Sounds like fun.

by Colman (colman at eurotrib.com) on Wed Jun 13th, 2007 at 10:14:25 AM EST
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I think after 3 weeks on the water I will rush to the mountain and put my face in the basalt! I will welcome the mineral world of volcanoes I think...

Rien n'est gratuit en ce bas monde. Tout s'expie, le bien comme le mal, se paie tot ou tard. Le bien c'est beaucoup plus cher, forcement. Celine
by UnEstranAvecVueSurMer (holopherne ahem gmail) on Wed Jun 13th, 2007 at 12:20:15 PM EST
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UnEstranAvecVueSurMer:
I realize that I am not exactly on spot for this diary. When sailing autarcy dictates a lot of things.. But maybe it's also a small scale experiment on what we will all need to do soon...

I think you're exactly spot on and it wouldn't surprise me if De would agree. I would actually think it could be a "dry-run" for things to come.

This sounds like a grand undertaking, I hope you and the two others will enjoy it to the fullest. Although I don't really understand why you wouldn't bring a small hand-pump with an interconnected hose and you make your own little shower on the deck. Then again, I also can relate to the sheer exhilaration when it does rain.

by Nomad (Bjinse) on Wed Jun 13th, 2007 at 10:57:33 AM EST
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From what I had on board when I sailed across, here is what I'd add to your list:
  • The book(s) I never got to read (Proust, A la recherche du temps perdu).
  • A star atlas and navigation tables so as to learn sextant navigation. We had competitions to produce the most accurate positionning, and we learnt the stars in the process.
  • A waterproof camera, still and movie capable.

Pencil and paper were heavily used.

We decided not to give news to anyone, since when the system doesn't work, everyone worries.

Keeping batteries charged for electronics is a real pain unless you have wind/solar chargers. We had very little electronics; a wind vane steered the whole way.

Hot meals (pre-cooked at home) were much appreciated.

High quality waterproof 7x50 binoculars are a must. But you know that.

by balbuz on Wed Jun 13th, 2007 at 10:57:22 AM EST
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Proust, A la recherche du temps perdu
Yes, this is good! You should definitely bring some very long, very boring book you have never read but always felt like you ought to... At some point you might become desperate enough to actually open the darn thing.
by someone (s0me1smail(a)gmail(d)com) on Wed Jun 13th, 2007 at 11:05:56 AM EST
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You're right, I forgot to mention the star atlas. There will ample to learn how to use how to use a sextant, which will be great. The name of the navigation tables, ephemerides is already poetic...

There was some discussion as the books we would need... we agreed that we should bring one Dumas classic, for the flow of the narration, the epicness... but then, we don't really know what to bring. I have tried reading Man Without Qualities  4 times already, so that's going to be one. But after that... Advice?

We don't really plan on using the autopilot aside from having dinner altogether, so it's not what's going to use too much power. I plan on having the worst callouses...

How long did it take you? where did start from and arrived? How many were on board?

Rien n'est gratuit en ce bas monde. Tout s'expie, le bien comme le mal, se paie tot ou tard. Le bien c'est beaucoup plus cher, forcement. Celine

by UnEstranAvecVueSurMer (holopherne ahem gmail) on Wed Jun 13th, 2007 at 12:17:45 PM EST
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Today, I'd most definitely take along all of Julien Gracq. Why Gracq, that'd be the subject of a whole essay : for the same reasons I carried Proust the first time I crossed an ocean.
An ocean is not a sea, it breathes, it has a long rhythmic swell. And when you read, you want something that will carry you along the same ryhthm. And that is why Proust. And why Gracq, this prodigious creator, this perfectionist, who will polish each word till perfection; the subject of his novels is the language itself; litterature honed to perfection. Just right for an ocean passage.

There were, just like you, three of us. Getting into the watch rhythm was not easy at the beginning, and we would have hated having to steer : star gazing, reading, having a cup of tea, watching the boat ploughing through the waves, trimming the sails are more fun.

We started in the Mediterranean and arrived in the Carribean, stopping over in Gibraltar, Madeira and the Canaries. Took us maybe 3 weeks, I can't remember. This is one of the most treasured voyage I have taken.

by balbuz on Wed Jun 13th, 2007 at 12:47:51 PM EST
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Ah so you took the trade winds... I do envy you. There will be no flying fishes on our route.

The only book from gracq that i've read is... la forme d'une ville. I only remember the depiction of thursday afternoons that he would spend as a kid in the nearby countryside... I was way to young to understand what I was reading, but I see why he would be a great choice. I remember the rare pleasure of reading the same sentence over and over, for the sake of it and to thank him for his work.

I somehow look forward to this enless steering, to the moment where I won't have to think of what I am doing to do it. When it will be natural, like a second nature... BUt maybe gracq, musil, will make their force be felt....

Rien n'est gratuit en ce bas monde. Tout s'expie, le bien comme le mal, se paie tot ou tard. Le bien c'est beaucoup plus cher, forcement. Celine

by UnEstranAvecVueSurMer (holopherne ahem gmail) on Thu Jun 14th, 2007 at 08:32:57 AM EST
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