I'm back! It's been a while and there's been loads of amazing adventures since my last post. Be sure to check out my new website 360west.org, which is all about my project to sail around the world and visit every sovereign country. As you can imagine, there will be lots to write about! More to come really soon, but in the meantime here's a few pictures from some of my recent exploits...
Sunday, February 26, 2017
Thursday, February 26, 2015
The Final Countdown
At long last, after more than three weeks of sweating,
cursing and drinking ungodly quantities of Balboa (Panama’s national beer) I am
ready to cross the Pacific Ocean. I’ve been working with Arcturus’ owners Andrew
and Julie to prepare Arcturus, the Matrix 27 sailboat I’ve been hired to
deliver, for her crossing to Tahiti and it’s finally looking like we are ready
to pull up the anchor and point the bow towards the Galapagos, our first stop,
about 800 miles away as the booby bird flies, 1000 nautical miles as the
sailboat sails.
A few of the tasks completed in the time since I arrived
are:
Stip boat of everything, clean boat, restow gear
Check all hardware, chainplates, thru hulls etc.
Paint bottom
New seal for saildrive
Paint bootstripe around waterline
Mount windvane
Repair windvane
Fill gasoline, diesel, propane and water
Provision food, medical supplies, etc…
Rewire electronics
Re-rig forstay
Set up jib furler
Re set sails and test
Several trips up the mast to replace halyards, rigging, etc.
Prepare navigation equipment
Clearing myself and the boat out of the country, always
great fun dealing with Central American beaurocracy (here a few crisp $20bills
and a bottle of whiskey goes really far with getting things done).
The list goes on.
All this has been done in 90 to 100 degree heat in a remote
village up some estuary in western Panama while experiencing the joys of an ear
infection. In the tropics it’s always one thing or another, I can’t complain
seeing as this time I don’t have malaria or giardia. Boca Chica is actually a pretty
sweet place, except whenever you need even the most basic of supplies you must
travel all the way to David, a crazy chaotic city on the Pan American highway
near the Costa Rican border (interesting side note: I once spent New Year’s Eve
in a dodgy Chinese restaurant in David a few years back, I couldn’t tell if
they served me spider monkey or dog…).
Boca Chica is popular
with the sport fishermen who have found some of the best fishing for bonito or mahi
mahi in the world. It’s also popular with cocaine smugglers making the rounds
up from Columbia. The maze of islands and rivers here makes it the perfect
place to drop off a few hundred pounds of blow. Being from Port Scandalous
(Angeles), where plenty of drugs are shipped across the US/Canada border right
under the nose of the resident border patrol, this is nothing new.
I just wanted to get the boat ready to tackle the pacific.
Preparing for a yacht delivery always sucks. You are asked a million times when
you’re leaving, and there is always another problem or challenge which comes up
last minute causing another delay. But there is no point in rushing; one
mistake could cost you the boat, or your life.
There are a few notable challenges on the first leg of the
route to the Galapagos. First, I will have to cross the busiest shipping lanes
in the world, where boats from the entire pacific funnel in heading to or
leaving the Panama Canal. As a singlehanded sailor, this means very little
sleep. Last time I sailed in to Panama, I didn’t get any rest for four days,
and was experiencing sleep deprivation induced mild hallucinations by the time I anchored in Colon.
The second challenge is crossing the ITCZ (Inter Tropic Convergence
Zone), better known as the doldrums. The ITCZ is the gap in the trade wind belt
in the northern hemisphere and the southern hemisphere, and it is an area known
for lack of wind, with the occasional squall brining gale like conditions for
short periods of time. This is where the stories of ships being stuck at sea
for weeks or months, the crew deciding to commit mutiny or dying of scurvy come
from. My secret weapon will be the diesel engine, and lots of extra fuel stored
in jerry cans lashed to the deck.
And the final main challenge for this leg is head winds and
counter currents, including the famous Humboldt Current, which rushes north
from Antarctica, fueling the fisheries off South America, and giving life to all the crazy marine life in the Galapagos, including penguins on the
equator. This is truly wonderful, but it also means that for much of the
passage I will have to battle one of the strongest currents in the world. Yay. Also,
the Galapagos are known as the enchanted islands, and are famous for bizarre
fogs and for disappearing and reappearing mysteriously.
But I have a brave little ship to take me across the oceans.
She is beautiful and strong, her design incredibly well thought out and she is fully
equipped for the challenges encountered along the way. In case of emergency,
she has a brand new liferaft, ERPIRB, ditch bag with survival equipment, a sat
phone, InReach communication device and two handheld VHF radios. Onboard is
enough food for three months, with survival rations for up to six, as well as
fishing gear.
The difference between this passage and ones I have made in the past, is I essentially will be connected to Babylon (the "real" world, or air conditioned nightmare, as I like to call it) via my InReach. I can receive short messages, just like texts to a cell phone. Anyone who is curious about life at sea can feel free to contact me via share.delorme.com/RyanLangley.
The difference between this passage and ones I have made in the past, is I essentially will be connected to Babylon (the "real" world, or air conditioned nightmare, as I like to call it) via my InReach. I can receive short messages, just like texts to a cell phone. Anyone who is curious about life at sea can feel free to contact me via share.delorme.com/RyanLangley.
I am ready. Arcturus is ready. The ocean is ready, and soon
we sail west.
Monday, February 9, 2015
Monday, February 2, 2015
Houston, we have a problem
I'm now officially on my way! On my way to being on my way, in any case...at this moment I'm in a hotel room (classy for a sailing vagabond, eh) in Humble, Texas, of all places.
How does a sailor from Washington preparing for a voyage from Panama to Tahiti find himself in the middle of Texas, might you ask? I was wondering the same thing myself a few hours ago. Following the typical craziness during the last few days before departure, my older brother drove me to SeaTac at 1 am this morning, where I was to fly to Panama City.
The authorities had other ideas, evidently, (I swear anyone with a badge can smell me five miles to windward) and upon discovering that I had no return flight from Panama informed me I needed to purchase an onward ticket. A cheap bus ride to Costa Rica took care of that problem, and I flew down to Houston, my only connection on my way south.
As usual, the Texans had their own ideas, and that bus ticket wasn't quite good enough to warrant passage through their airport...I needed a flight out of Panama. Meanwhile I missed my flight, which I rescheduled the last minute for tomorrow morning. So I'm spending one night back in Texas figuring out my travel plans. It's a very different atmosphere from the last time I was in the state, hitchhiking and hopping freight across the south. Although that trip was only two years ago, it feels like decades. Lets hope my next flight works out, because it's a long hitch to Panama!
If all goes well, tomorrow I arrive in Panama City and soon after will begin to prepare Arcturus for her voyage to Polynesia. I would like to thank my wonderful friends and family back home for making my time back in Washington so memorable, and for helping me to prepare for what will hopefully be one of my most exciting adventures to date! Your support makes all the difference, and I could never have done it without you!
Cheers,
Ryan
How does a sailor from Washington preparing for a voyage from Panama to Tahiti find himself in the middle of Texas, might you ask? I was wondering the same thing myself a few hours ago. Following the typical craziness during the last few days before departure, my older brother drove me to SeaTac at 1 am this morning, where I was to fly to Panama City.
The authorities had other ideas, evidently, (I swear anyone with a badge can smell me five miles to windward) and upon discovering that I had no return flight from Panama informed me I needed to purchase an onward ticket. A cheap bus ride to Costa Rica took care of that problem, and I flew down to Houston, my only connection on my way south.
As usual, the Texans had their own ideas, and that bus ticket wasn't quite good enough to warrant passage through their airport...I needed a flight out of Panama. Meanwhile I missed my flight, which I rescheduled the last minute for tomorrow morning. So I'm spending one night back in Texas figuring out my travel plans. It's a very different atmosphere from the last time I was in the state, hitchhiking and hopping freight across the south. Although that trip was only two years ago, it feels like decades. Lets hope my next flight works out, because it's a long hitch to Panama!
If all goes well, tomorrow I arrive in Panama City and soon after will begin to prepare Arcturus for her voyage to Polynesia. I would like to thank my wonderful friends and family back home for making my time back in Washington so memorable, and for helping me to prepare for what will hopefully be one of my most exciting adventures to date! Your support makes all the difference, and I could never have done it without you!
Cheers,
Ryan
Sunday, February 1, 2015
The Wonders of Technology
Thanks to the wonders of technology, you can now stalk me even while I'm at sea. I have acquired a nifty new device called a Delorme InReach, a small satellite communication device used by sailors, adventurers and fishermen to communicate with aliens (and occasionally their families). Along with being able to send and receive texts, and having the capability to send a distress signal in an emergency, the unit can send my position to an online map. You can also request my location online, and when the unit is on it will update the map upon request. The site to find me or send a message is share.delorme.com/RyanLangley.
I'm off at 2AM to the Seatac airport, where I'll board my flight to Panama. The ocean awaits, and I couldn't be more happy to be headed to sea.
I'm off at 2AM to the Seatac airport, where I'll board my flight to Panama. The ocean awaits, and I couldn't be more happy to be headed to sea.
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Toward the Next Horizon
As I write these words, I have less than a week before I fly down to Panama to begin another sailboat delivery, this time toward the mysterious palm fringed shores of the South Pacific Island known as Tahiti.
It's hard to believe that four years have passed since the last time I was in the beautiful, green, wonderfully crazy land that is Panama.
This next trip, I'll be making my way to Bocas Chicas, in the far west of the country on the Pacific side, where my home for the next four months waits; the Matrix 27, Arcturus. The Matrix 27 has been described as a faster, more modern version of the Flicka 20, a strong and capable boat, and very accommodating for a 27 footer.
Possible stops along the way to Tahiti include such destinations as the Cocos Islands, the Galapagos, Easter Island, Pitcairn Island, the Gambiers, and Raivavae. So many new islands await my shadow and I'm excited to return to Panama.
Matrtix 27
LOA: 27'3"
LWL: 23'2"
Beam: 8'5"
Draft: 3'5"
Displacement: 6,800 Lbs.
Ballast: 2,800 Lbs.
Year: 1987
Designed by Lou Nagy
It's hard to believe that four years have passed since the last time I was in the beautiful, green, wonderfully crazy land that is Panama.
This next trip, I'll be making my way to Bocas Chicas, in the far west of the country on the Pacific side, where my home for the next four months waits; the Matrix 27, Arcturus. The Matrix 27 has been described as a faster, more modern version of the Flicka 20, a strong and capable boat, and very accommodating for a 27 footer.
Possible stops along the way to Tahiti include such destinations as the Cocos Islands, the Galapagos, Easter Island, Pitcairn Island, the Gambiers, and Raivavae. So many new islands await my shadow and I'm excited to return to Panama.
Matrtix 27
LOA: 27'3"
LWL: 23'2"
Beam: 8'5"
Draft: 3'5"
Displacement: 6,800 Lbs.
Ballast: 2,800 Lbs.
Year: 1987
Designed by Lou Nagy
Saturday, January 10, 2015
Snapshots from the Apocalypse
Here's a few pictures from some of my most recent travels across the US as far east as Cleveland between early November and late December. I hitchhiked through Portland, Corvallis, and Boise (with a few stops along the way) to Salt Lake City, where I caught a rideshare with three cats, two dogs, three people and a turtle named Hudson all the way to St. Louis, Missouri. I definitely got along best with Hudson by the end of the ride.
From Missouri I caught a greyhound to Ohio, and after visiting a friend ended up in Detroit, cleaning out houses that had been flooded out during a storm in August and spending some time in that city that has suffered so much but has so much potential. I was in Detroit through Christmas eve, when I caught a flight back to Washington.
I'm turning back to the water on my next trip, which is coming up in early February. I will be delivering a 27 foot sailboat from Panama to Tahiti, hopefully stopping at places like the Galapagos and Easter Island along the way! More about that to come.
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