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#1
posted to rec.boats
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On Oct 19, 3:15?pm, Wayne.B wrote:
On Fri, 19 Oct 2007 20:58:40 +0200, (Martin Sch n) wrote: Two guys sailed through the NW passage in the mid 1980s on a Hobie 18. Yes but they did a lot of "over ice" portages if my memory is correct, not exactly an open passage. Your memory is correct. Here's a link to a page with news about that Hobie 18 voyage. (scroll down to the bottom of the page). It took them a total of three summers to make the trip- it didn't really include all of the NW Passage, and there's a photo of them building an "igloo" enclosure around their pup tent with the Hobie high and dry on an ice floe. http://www.latitude38.com/LectronicL...14/Sept14.html It's a stretch to claim that people "sailed" the NW Passage in a Hobie 18. |
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#2
posted to rec.boats
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Chuck Gould writes:
On Oct 19, 3:15?pm, Wayne.B wrote: On Fri, 19 Oct 2007 20:58:40 +0200, (Martin Sch n) wrote: Two guys sailed through the NW passage in the mid 1980s on a Hobie 18. Yes but they did a lot of "over ice" portages if my memory is correct, not exactly an open passage. Open enough to take it on in a beach cat. http://www.latitude38.com/LectronicL...14/Sept14.html Here is a better url: http://www.helmdesign.com/polar-01.html -- Martin Schöön "Problems worthy of attack show their worth by hitting back." Piet Hein |
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#3
posted to rec.boats
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On Oct 21, 2:16?am, (Martin Sch??n) wrote:
Chuck Gould writes: On Oct 19, 3:15?pm, Wayne.B wrote: On Fri, 19 Oct 2007 20:58:40 +0200, (Martin Sch n) wrote: Two guys sailed through the NW passage in the mid 1980s on a Hobie 18. Yes but they did a lot of "over ice" portages if my memory is correct, not exactly an open passage. Open enough to take it on in a beach cat. http://www.latitude38.com/LectronicL...14/Sept14.html From the link: "The pair spent three summers sailing, pushing, paddling and tugging their 450-lb boat across 2,500 miles of ice-clogged Arctic water, from the Mackenzie River on the west end of the Passage to Pond Inlet on the east end. MacInnis later wrote about their experiences in Polar Passage." So in addition to sailing, the voyage included "pushing, paddling, and tugging their 450-lb boat" across miles of ice-clogged Arctic water. Not really an open voyage. The news about the NW Passage is that it is opening up to the point where people can simply navigate through it, without any need to break ice or resort to pushing and tugging a lightweight vessel across vast expanses of ice. *If* recent trends continue, the NE Passage will also be entirely open fairly soon, and it will be possible to navigate, at least during the summer months, from Scandinavia to Alaska through the Arctic north of Europe and Asia. Talk about unspoiled, uncrowded, cruising.....wow! Here is a better url:http://www.helmdesign.com/polar-01.html -- Martin Sch n "Problems worthy of attack show their worth by hitting back." Piet Hein |
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