I think when people go offshore for the first time that they can certainly get the feeling you described. Being able to see the open expanse stretch out around you in every direction, the way the clouds hang so high above you in a way you never experience on land, surrounded by horizon, seeing isolated rain off in the distance, I recall feeling a sense of awe from it the first time I experienced it so many years ago.
Been following you and Seeker since she was just a bunch of steel sheets in your yard. I'm amazed by everything you've accomplished and how far you've come. I was compelled to write this comment because this video was truly inspirational, all of them are in many ways, but this one is a special one for me. Thanks for taking us with you, Doug
@@SVSeeker And I'm pretty sure that trend will continue. If you ever come to the Mediterranean I'll do everything in my power to come and pay a visit or at least see Seeker from afar! But for now, little steps moving forward, as always.
Hey Ive been following you since the very beginning with the rolls of steel and the bus etc… good to see ya all accustom to all the special seas. I use to commercial fish salmon in northern CA. Just retired and restoring a dump truck and an old 64 chip more wood chipper. You have been an inspiration to me through the years. peace to all of ya. MAB. Helped out the folks with the wrecked boat. They will be fine. Ill send some pics of them when their done
Doug, It is wonderful to see Seeker out there under sail in weather getting some real action 😊. Thank you for taking us all on such a great journey. You are living your dream and we are blessed to be able to come along for the ride.
Hi Doug, good to see you and all your hard work out on the water at last. Paul and I visited you back in 2018 during our R66 road trip as I had followed your build of S V Seekers for years before that. Glad to see you enjoying your fruits of the your labour. Cheers Ian New Zealand
I’ve had some magical night time sails, such as trimming a spinnaker by moon light from the shrouds with wild phosphorescence and seeing mackerel jump all around the boat to some frightening sails in lumpy seas with too much canvas when we’d be better on the engine, but it’d overheated. It takes time when sailing to tune yourself to the boat and how the crew works her. I think this video captured a lot of the processes very aptly and you describe the intimacy and remoteness very well. Looking forward to seeing more about the mad ‘welcoming committee’ in the next episode!
This brought back wonderful memories of serving on a Frigate in the ‘60s. One thing you learn very quickly during heavy seas, and that is waiting for the ship’s movement when going up a deck or lower one. Get it wrong and the ship fights you big time, BUT get it right and it’s like a roller coaster🫡😅 I loved every second I served even during the days when seas where so high the upper decks where OOB as too dangerous. Never sea sick thank goodness. Found out the first time ashore, what the old saying of ‘Sailors gait’ meant, after first week on patrol.
Saint Augustine native and long time subscriber, welcome to my backyard Doug. Are you planning on sailing by the fort? Waters there have such a historical feel to it and would love to see Seeker take a photo op where sailing vessels have journeyed for 500 yrs.
Doug first time commenter i’ve been watching your videos since the very beginning and I hear you talk about being on the water and listening to the sounds of the boat and the quiet of your mind. Reminds me of when I was a kid and I used to go sailing with my grandpa and we would sell fromCalifornia to Ensenada Mexico at night and once you’ve been out on the water long enough, you make peace with your thoughts and just be part of the boat. It’s been too long. I need to get a boat.
I pray you are safe from Hurricane Helene and that she has not caused you to much grief over there on the east coast of Florida. Please pray for those affected by this hurricane. Lord, bless us with a soft heart, peace on Earth, and good will toward men. God bless you and your crew.
A full ocean journey! You talked about listening to the boat and all it's sounds. Every vehicle(/machine) talks to you if you know how to listen. From a very young age I found that I listened to my old junker cars as a teen, I knew their normal sounds and when any new vibration was felt through to the seat and/or was audible through my ears the song had changed and I needed to find out why. Usually it meant an imminent drive train failure of some kind. Fast forward a few decades, I was helping design on a huge machine of about 30tons, with a number of electric motors. At any particular RPM the machine resonated in new and interesting ways. After a while, I could tell the speeds of any motor by audible sounds(resonant harmonic vibrations), without looking at the instruments. SV Seeker's sounds with particular waves would be very interesting to learn. This might sound silly at first, but if you bought a cheap stethoscope off amazon and put that against the hull while sailing you could a whole new of have SV Seeker song, along with audible ocean sounds resonating on the hull. I'm guessing that steel would resonate quite well. The stethoscope can also help you find any odd motor or misc other sounds you wonder about, just be careful if you are anyplace that might make a loud sounds that could hurt your hearing.
@@SVSeeker My first car was a Chevy Vega Wagon with nearly 200k miles, my Dad's old work commute car. I had wanted an old beat up Ford truck we owned that made Matter from Pixar's Cars movie look almost new. Sadly, that truck did not make to my 16th birthday and for me to pass driver's training and get my license. All my vehicles started off saying nice things to me until the oil filter clogged and the oil went directly to the filter bypass, then they get mean and said dirty things until they died in a fiery metal fusing death. Like the one ring being tossed into the fires of Mt. Doom. Everyone should treat those modern 50-100k+ new trucks very nice. Remember, you could have bought a house instead!
Amazing accomplishment, building that boat. Night vision goggles would be cool in those situations where you want the peace of mind of knowing whats around at night.
Mother, mother ocean, I have heard you call Wanted to sail upon your waters since I was three feet tall You've seen it all, you've seen it all A Pirate Looks at Forty Jimmy Buffett Great video 👍
Sooo sorry Doug, I missed 36 of your videos because UA-cam did not notify me or push your vidz up into my searches. I have a big bunch of catching up that I am going to enjoy. Keep on keeping on good buddy. Last one I saw was I am not your Mum. Thank fuck for that, I was worried for a while there.
No worries. I’ll give you a summary and save you the time. We broke stuff. Fixed it and made it better. And had fun doing it. Check back in a few months. : )
Hey Doug, you know, you describe sailing in a way that reminds me of how a friend once described playing the trombone to me. He said it was like an extension of the body, like he could feel and experience the sound and the air in the instrument like a finger that he could move and tense and feel with.
Doug, you ought to try a couple of different sized storm jibs for when the wind is too strong or erratic for your junk sails. Maybe make use of the stronger winds without risking breakage.
Nice Passage, everyone safe. I too have watched from a pile of sheet iron. Welcome to my home town, St Augustine. If you're still here, or close, I Sure would like to meet you and buy you some beer or Diesel.
I live on the Space Coast. 3 nights ago around 2200, there was a lightning storm offshore like I've never seen. Almost continuous lightning for over an hour. Sure hope y'all weren't out in that.
There's a difference between subjective and objective assessments of weather. If what you consider a "storm" varies depending on the size of your boat, you cannot usefully make sense of information and experience from others. To get around this, sailors and marine weather info sources for the last few centuries have used a standard naming system based on the Beaufort scale. When the maximum true wind speed is in the mid to high thirties, and the average is around 30 knots, this is classed as force 7 (high wind). Force 8 and 9 are gales, force 10 and 11 are storms. (Tagged as "strong" for 9, and "violent" for 11) A useful approximation to convert mean TWS to Force is divide by 5 and add 1. Force 6 is sometimes called a "yachtsman's gale" as a semi-ironic nod to subjective assessments.
@@SVSeeker Lots of sailors get this wrong too. Because today's sailors are yesterdays non sailors... In the '98 Sydney Hobart, competitors blamed the forecasters for luring them out into survival conditions, saying "They said it would be storm force. We thought "That's OK, we're good to go if that's as bad as it gets, because they're not saying anything about gales" ! ! !
That is supremely cool. I felt like I was sailing along with you guys. Really hope you continue to do more like this for us oceanically challenged peeps out here stuck on terra firma . 'May the sea take you away' to new adventures and peaceful vistas of course P.S. maybe a few hours of live stream from the deck 3 times a week. especially during full moons. the midnight cruise series. I am still waiting for you to teach the classes on using a sextant, using rope to gauge speed, knotcraft, sailing basics, catch to cooking tips. all of the cool basic fisherman knowledge you are carrying around in that captain's noggin of yours. thank you for letting us tag along. Pirates Lives Matt-ARRRRRRR
Your ship looks quite capable at sea. Now you are in the Atlantic, you should aim for Bermuda. That was my first offshore passage. Congratulations on making it all work.
I remember a comment awhile ago "yeah just wait till you get it in open water that thing won't survive" or some S... well... seems to be doin purdy good to me. pretty skookum to see ya all putting miles behind you under sail.
good to see that you wear a life vest on deck in sloppy weather, do you have an EPIRB on it, do you drag lines off the stern? I'm interested in how you manage offshore opperations.
Thanks Mom : ) Yes it has an EPIRB. I too often sail with crew that I doubt could turn the boat around of even slow it down soon enough. And I challenge you drag a line and see if you can even find it in rough seas, much less hold onto it and drag yourself back to your boat. I have tried it in clam water. : )
How has your DIY RO watermaker been working for you? Has it been reliable? Is there anything you would do differently if you were to construct another WM? Thanks
Have you ever looked into a gear vendor overdrive unit instead of a transfer case? They’re designed to be used full time unlike a transfer case. I’m not sure if it’s offered as a reduction or could be mounted in backwards.
Thank you for sharing your journey, Doug! Just curious about your tender on deck. Do you periodically start the motor or can you, or do you do even need to? Don't know about a water hose and "earmuffs" to be able to do that. It was in most of the shots in this video so it peaked my curiosity if that tender needs any kind of routine maintenance to ensure it is ready if needed.
One thing I've learned, if you say it do it , its that first thought that works, 99%of the time, never hesitate! when you do, its allways hits the deck. Code Red Out!
I’m not convinced of that. When the boat rolls it was nice that the yard battens did not hit the mast. Not sure that would be the case with a yard hauling parrel. And if I don’t need another line, then why?
@@SVSeeker Nice! Maybe I’ll get lucky! Safe travels! I’ve been watching for a long time! It’s so awesome to see y’all( you and Seeker) out in the ocean sailing!🤘🏼
I wish I had watched when you passed Flagler Beach but now I’m going to have to see if you’re in the bay at St. Augustine. Not to stalk you but just want to get a glimpse of the boat I watched you build from when you had steel plates dropped out front of your house in Tulsa.
How did you shake sea sickness? Just get used to it? You mentioned your trip out awhile back being seasick, but you seemed ok on this rough ride. What changed? Experience?
I started flushing my sinuses with saltwater and my ears with hydrogen peroxide. That and more time on the water I suppose. But I took no drugs and have not had any problems since.
Spoken like a true landlubber. The dangerous nuisance items are not the sails, but all the protruding gubbins the sheets keep wrapping around. If that had been an actual storm (which means up to twice the windspeed and four times the wind pressure) things would immediately have gotten extremely ugly and unsafe.
@gottenhimfella221 I love land, I cannot lie but I've done my time Ocean sailing, owned my own 42 ft racer and currently own 2 flying dutchman. I maintain, those sails and all that rigging will be a huge problem for small crew if weather turns as it does.
@SVSeeker I know, I know, watched you long enough to know you will "hold fast" . I've lost a friend to the sea and been through a few storms. Maybe I'm not so confident anymore but I really enjoy your channel and am hoping to see many more. Sail safe 👍
Sailing . . .to St Augustine, oldest continuously inhabited European settlement in the USA. Brilliant, thanks Doug from one of your crew of thousands of people. You are taking us all with you . . .
That's not the way it works. You have to get the offshore experience before you can upgrade. And you don't need a license to sail a boat. You only need the desire.
Hi 👋 I was watching your video, and noticed your cannon on deck. How about printing a cover for it? Doesn't it collect rainwater in the barrel? All the best from Greenland 🇬🇱
i baught a sailboat this summer, havent got it launched though.... i dont drive and couldnt get anyone to tow it to the launch.... an 88 laguna 22. i wounder how many blind folks sail.
Would you be allowed to have red flood lights on the deck? To help the eyes to see in the dark when looking away from the sail. Really poetic and pleasant monologues there. Thank you!
No you really should not have red on deck. But consider this. It's overcast, pouring rain, no moon, and about a quarter mile of visibility for lights, and you have radar and AIS. What are you saving your night vision for? If there is another boat out there I hope they turn their deck light on too.
@@SVSeeker touché. I haven't sailed, but as an armchair observant I would like all senses I can have if something goes wrong. But maybe you have those things called "flashlights". ;)
There is a down haul on the forward sail. I need to strengthen that and I also want to redo the parrels on the forward sail too. Those are the lines the hold it to the mast. I don't think I want them much tighter as I do not want the battens slapping the mast when the boat rolls, and right now they are not doing that at all.
Seasick for 3 days ? Ouch. Fight off the urge to puke at all costs - ending up with dry heaves is the worst. Do whatever makes you feel better - go below, lay down, sleep if you can. Or stay on your feet and keep busy. There are no absolutes. I've had good luck with ginger capsules, have used the 'scope patches on long trips. Big swells don't bother me, 4-5' closely spaced stomach-flippers do.
Yeah it was closer to 2 but my approach was indeed to avoid puking. Ended up not very useful to anyone, unfortunately :( I think if I had been able to eat anything I may have been acclimating a bit but who knows.
@@VoxMot I was a useless pile on night one, captaining my 1st canyon tuna trip, then recovered and kicked ass for 24 hours straight. I don't eat, but have food in case I feel hungry. Coffee churns my guts offshore, so I go with hot tea.
I think when people go offshore for the first time that they can certainly get the feeling you described. Being able to see the open expanse stretch out around you in every direction, the way the clouds hang so high above you in a way you never experience on land, surrounded by horizon, seeing isolated rain off in the distance, I recall feeling a sense of awe from it the first time I experienced it so many years ago.
It's not my first time and I do hope it never gets old. : )
Been following you and Seeker since she was just a bunch of steel sheets in your yard. I'm amazed by everything you've accomplished and how far you've come. I was compelled to write this comment because this video was truly inspirational, all of them are in many ways, but this one is a special one for me. Thanks for taking us with you, Doug
Thank you. I'm glad you enjoyed it. It has done nothing but changed my life for the better.
@@SVSeeker And I'm pretty sure that trend will continue. If you ever come to the Mediterranean I'll do everything in my power to come and pay a visit or at least see Seeker from afar! But for now, little steps moving forward, as always.
Being out on the "big water" and the local wind finally gives you a push in the right direction, it is just sweet.
Actually I think that push came about 15 years ago. : )
Hey Ive been following you since the very beginning with the rolls of steel and the bus etc… good to see ya all accustom to all the special seas. I use to commercial fish salmon in northern CA. Just retired and restoring a dump truck and an old 64 chip more wood chipper. You have been an inspiration to me through the years. peace to all of ya. MAB. Helped out the folks with the wrecked boat. They will be fine. Ill send some pics of them when their done
SV Seeker off shore, amazing,. You must be very proud with an amazing sense of accomplishment that you very much deserve xx
Thank you so much!
Ocean passage--so many systems working well on Seeker congrats! And great description of the sailing experience. 30 knots w/ sails up--excellent test.
Thanks I was surprised to 9 knts with two reefs in the forward sail and the mizzen up.
Doug,
It is wonderful to see Seeker out there under sail in weather getting some real action 😊. Thank you for taking us all on such a great journey. You are living your dream and we are blessed to be able to come along for the ride.
10 years of waiting for this video. Nice!! It is great to see this accomplishment.
Great to see SV Seeker on the open ocean, I've been watching for years. Seems to be sailing well.
It was a pleasure. Looked up once to see us doing 9 knots with a reefed foresail and mizzen.
Hi Doug, good to see you and all your hard work out on the water at last. Paul and I visited you back in 2018 during our R66 road trip as I had followed your build of S V Seekers for years before that. Glad to see you enjoying your fruits of the your labour. Cheers Ian New Zealand
Thank you!
I’ve had some magical night time sails, such as trimming a spinnaker by moon light from the shrouds with wild phosphorescence and seeing mackerel jump all around the boat to some frightening sails in lumpy seas with too much canvas when we’d be better on the engine, but it’d overheated. It takes time when sailing to tune yourself to the boat and how the crew works her. I think this video captured a lot of the processes very aptly and you describe the intimacy and remoteness very well. Looking forward to seeing more about the mad ‘welcoming committee’ in the next episode!
Thank you, I’m glad you enjoyed it. Looking forward to more as well.
Great segment, and sage advice for calming our fears over new endeavors and experiences
Glad you enjoyed it!
There is nothing like staring into the sea as the sun rises. The shades of blue are just mesmerizing as they chase away the shadows of the night.
What an adventure!!!! Keep the good ship in shape and enjoy the ride.
Thanks! Will do!
This brought back wonderful memories of serving on a Frigate in the ‘60s.
One thing you learn very quickly during heavy seas, and that is waiting for the ship’s movement when going up a deck or lower one. Get it wrong and the ship fights you big time, BUT get it right and it’s like a roller coaster🫡😅
I loved every second I served even during the days when seas where so high the upper decks where OOB as too dangerous.
Never sea sick thank goodness.
Found out the first time ashore, what the old saying of ‘Sailors gait’ meant, after first week on patrol.
What a great video, fantastic commentary. Well done Seeker!
Thank you
Saint Augustine native and long time subscriber, welcome to my backyard Doug.
Are you planning on sailing by the fort? Waters there have such a historical feel to it and would love to see Seeker take a photo op where sailing vessels have journeyed for 500 yrs.
SV SOUGHT, And FOUND !! Congratulations Doug.
Thanks
Good to see your having fun. Thanks for sharing....
As another that has pretty well watched this from day one, amazing to watch this!
Doug first time commenter i’ve been watching your videos since the very beginning and I hear you talk about being on the water and listening to the sounds of the boat and the quiet of your mind. Reminds me of when I was a kid and I used to go sailing with my grandpa and we would sell fromCalifornia to Ensenada Mexico at night and once you’ve been out on the water long enough, you make peace with your thoughts and just be part of the boat. It’s been too long. I need to get a boat.
Outstanding video and love to see you all out in the ocean enjoying the fruit of your labor!
Thank you. I love being there.
i am glad all went well and your safe on anchor. take care and have a wonderful weekend
Thanks
I pray you are safe from Hurricane Helene and that she has not caused you to much grief over there on the east coast of Florida. Please pray for those affected by this hurricane. Lord, bless us with a soft heart, peace on Earth, and good will toward men. God bless you and your crew.
You're up late praying. And I'm up late watching an anchor. : )
Doug - Really good to see you sailing, It is part of the human psyche "did I weld the keel properly" - break a leg!
A full ocean journey!
You talked about listening to the boat and all it's sounds. Every vehicle(/machine) talks to you if you know how to listen. From a very young age I found that I listened to my old junker cars as a teen, I knew their normal sounds and when any new vibration was felt through to the seat and/or was audible through my ears the song had changed and I needed to find out why. Usually it meant an imminent drive train failure of some kind.
Fast forward a few decades, I was helping design on a huge machine of about 30tons, with a number of electric motors. At any particular RPM the machine resonated in new and interesting ways. After a while, I could tell the speeds of any motor by audible sounds(resonant harmonic vibrations), without looking at the instruments.
SV Seeker's sounds with particular waves would be very interesting to learn. This might sound silly at first, but if you bought a cheap stethoscope off amazon and put that against the hull while sailing you could a whole new of have SV Seeker song, along with audible ocean sounds resonating on the hull. I'm guessing that steel would resonate quite well.
The stethoscope can also help you find any odd motor or misc other sounds you wonder about, just be careful if you are anyplace that might make a loud sounds that could hurt your hearing.
a underwater mic would be cool so we could hear the sea life
I know what you mean. My first car was a trunk about 6 years older than me. I just turned up the radio because it was telling me all shorts of things.
@@SVSeeker My first car was a Chevy Vega Wagon with nearly 200k miles, my Dad's old work commute car. I had wanted an old beat up Ford truck we owned that made Matter from Pixar's Cars movie look almost new. Sadly, that truck did not make to my 16th birthday and for me to pass driver's training and get my license.
All my vehicles started off saying nice things to me until the oil filter clogged and the oil went directly to the filter bypass, then they get mean and said dirty things until they died in a fiery metal fusing death. Like the one ring being tossed into the fires of Mt. Doom.
Everyone should treat those modern 50-100k+ new trucks very nice. Remember, you could have bought a house instead!
Awesome attention to detail!!
Thanks
Steering with your feet, been there and done that. So many happy memories.❤
Wow, it’s so nice to see the boat in Saint Augustine
You have done a fine job Doug
Thanks
Absolutely fantastic video, memories you will have forever, thankyou for taking us with you mate ❤
yay Gulf Stream time- it’s a force & full of tasty fish - why not be trolling?
a nice shiny mylar lure for mahi or occasional wahoo
Rig one of those flying fish with the wings open, then troll the same as a bird.
Thank you my friend
Always welcome
Wow, it’s so nice to see the boat in Saint Augustine I hope you went downtown and enjoyed yourself at all the nice restaurants and bars
Not yet. Been busy installing the new torque converter eliminator. But we will....
Nice work Doug!! Great video!!
Thanks 👍
i must say, i love the custom fire ext holders, draws attention, wont forget where they are!
Those are the work of @Maker238DeLoach Check him out.
Hope you are able to check out the town of St Augustine and the Fountain of Youth 😊
Amazing accomplishment, building that boat. Night vision goggles would be cool in those situations where you want the peace of mind of knowing whats around at night.
FLIR thermal imaging cameras are now affordable, input on the main display looks amazing.
Yes, but that is expensive stuff. The radar I think actually does a better job.
Ah yes, sailing! Not building, not fixing, not planning, just sailing. Im sure the boat is more at home going there than being there.
Mother, mother ocean, I have heard you call
Wanted to sail upon your waters since I was three feet tall
You've seen it all, you've seen it all
A Pirate Looks at Forty Jimmy Buffett
Great video
👍
Awesome!
Beautiful boat
Thank you very much!
Cool video! Keep em coming!
I be following since day one awesome
Sooo sorry Doug, I missed 36 of your videos because UA-cam did not notify me or push your vidz up into my searches. I have a big bunch of catching up that I am going to enjoy. Keep on keeping on good buddy. Last one I saw was I am not your Mum. Thank fuck for that, I was worried for a while there.
No worries. I’ll give you a summary and save you the time. We broke stuff. Fixed it and made it better. And had fun doing it. Check back in a few months. : )
Moving aboard in the next year. Can't wait.
Hey Doug, you know, you describe sailing in a way that reminds me of how a friend once described playing the trombone to me. He said it was like an extension of the body, like he could feel and experience the sound and the air in the instrument like a finger that he could move and tense and feel with.
We all have to find our thing. And when we do, it's special.
Love it 🤩
Awesome trip video ❤
Glad you enjoyed it!
So very happy for you, Doug and Seeker, living your dream!
I wish we could see the waves better. Great episode.
You have to be in them to appreciate them. : )
I wish I hadn’t started hearing Christopher Cross singing in my head watching this one. 🤭🤘✌️
: )
Doug, you ought to try a couple of different sized storm jibs for when the wind is too strong or erratic for your junk sails. Maybe make use of the stronger winds without risking breakage.
No way to fly a any jib without a long bow sprit.
@@SVSeekerI have done it, flying it like a spinnaker. Use one or two spinnaker poles flying 4 to 6 yards of sail.
@@franksprecisionguesswork501 A storm jib on a spinnaker pole. I'd like to see that video.
Sail on Captain Doug
Nice Passage, everyone safe. I too have watched from a pile of sheet iron. Welcome to my home town, St Augustine. If you're still here, or close, I Sure would like to meet you and buy you some beer or Diesel.
Just drop me an email. svseeker@ymail.com I can pick you up from the Vilano Beach Fishing Pier. Saturday is best between 10 and 2.
I live on the Space Coast. 3 nights ago around 2200, there was a lightning storm offshore like I've never seen. Almost continuous lightning for over an hour. Sure hope y'all weren't out in that.
Missed that.
You never realize how small you are until your in the open sea... good job Doug in explaining sailing and anxiety, fear, joy and piece of mind
There's a difference between subjective and objective assessments of weather. If what you consider a "storm" varies depending on the size of your boat, you cannot usefully make sense of information and experience from others.
To get around this, sailors and marine weather info sources for the last few centuries have used a standard naming system based on the Beaufort scale. When the maximum true wind speed is in the mid to high thirties, and the average is around 30 knots, this is classed as force 7 (high wind). Force 8 and 9 are gales, force 10 and 11 are storms. (Tagged as "strong" for 9, and "violent" for 11)
A useful approximation to convert mean TWS to Force is divide by 5 and add 1.
Force 6 is sometimes called a "yachtsman's gale" as a semi-ironic nod to subjective assessments.
True that. And the vast majority of my audience are not sailors. : )
@@SVSeeker Lots of sailors get this wrong too. Because today's sailors are yesterdays non sailors... In the '98 Sydney Hobart, competitors blamed the forecasters for luring them out into survival conditions, saying "They said it would be storm force. We thought "That's OK, we're good to go if that's as bad as it gets, because they're not saying anything about gales" ! ! !
Been amazing to watch you over the years!!! One question, are you curious to sail south? See if you can sail to Antartica ?
We will see.
That is supremely cool. I felt like I was sailing along with you guys.
Really hope you continue to do more like this for us oceanically challenged peeps out here stuck on terra firma .
'May the sea take you away' to new adventures and peaceful vistas of course
P.S. maybe a few hours of live stream from the deck 3 times a week. especially during full moons. the midnight cruise series.
I am still waiting for you to teach the classes on using a sextant, using rope to gauge speed, knotcraft, sailing basics, catch to cooking tips.
all of the cool basic fisherman knowledge you are carrying around in that captain's noggin of yours.
thank you for letting us tag along.
Pirates Lives Matt-ARRRRRRR
Thanks. I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Welcome to the bug of open water, or Blue water traveling, especially when sailing. It humbles you! And it never really leaves you
Well said!
Your ship looks quite capable at sea. Now you are in the Atlantic, you should aim for Bermuda. That was my first offshore passage. Congratulations on making it all work.
a few of my ancestors used bermuda as a base for their ocean business about 300 plus years ago. always wanted to check it out
Thank you. And that my be are course. We shall see.
This must have been last week because I live just south of St. Augustine and all it did last week was rain all day and all night!!
Yup. We came in on the tail end of that. And my water tanks are full. : )
Hello from Siesta Key Florida
You will like St Augustine.
I remember a comment awhile ago "yeah just wait till you get it in open water that thing won't survive" or some S... well... seems to be doin purdy good to me. pretty skookum to see ya all putting miles behind you under sail.
Yeah, those losers said it would never leave my front yard too. For those still around it's time to promote them to Varsity Losers. : )
And there you are Dug out in the sea in a home made boat amazing
I have to pinch myself. : )
I bought a 22' single mast sailboat. I am going to learn to sail next summer.
Have fun!
Good job sailor
good to see that you wear a life vest on deck in sloppy weather, do you have an EPIRB on it, do you drag lines off the stern? I'm interested in how you manage offshore opperations.
Thanks Mom : ) Yes it has an EPIRB. I too often sail with crew that I doubt could turn the boat around of even slow it down soon enough. And I challenge you drag a line and see if you can even find it in rough seas, much less hold onto it and drag yourself back to your boat. I have tried it in clam water. : )
There is nothing like dry land to cure sea sickness immediately!
Ture that.
Any plans heading up to Jacksonville/St.Johns river?
Not at this time. But should a hurricane come this way...
Ok this is what I wanted to see , the ship in open water .
great video
Glad you enjoyed it
@@SVSeeker fun seeing you going past palm coast/ st Augustine. love that area.
Hey dude, love what you do. Met you and Betsy about 7 years ago when I passed through Tulsa. Nice to see you on the water. Where's Betsy these days?
Good to be on the water. Betsy has a home in Tulsa.
I loved watching this sail! Just was glad I wasn't in the boat !🤢
How has your DIY RO watermaker been working for you? Has it been reliable? Is there anything you would do differently if you were to construct another WM? Thanks
Have you ever looked into a gear vendor overdrive unit instead of a transfer case? They’re designed to be used full time unlike a transfer case. I’m not sure if it’s offered as a reduction or could be mounted in backwards.
Yes and we did not see a good fit. And there are plenty of folks besides me that run a T-case full time.
Thank you for sharing your journey, Doug! Just curious about your tender on deck. Do you periodically start the motor or can you, or do you do even need to? Don't know about a water hose and "earmuffs" to be able to do that. It was in most of the shots in this video so it peaked my curiosity if that tender needs any kind of routine maintenance to ensure it is ready if needed.
Not often. We started it up a few months ago and it started and ran like a champ so we then drained it dry for storage again.
One thing I've learned, if you say it do it , its that first thought that works, 99%of the time, never hesitate! when you do, its allways hits the deck. Code Red Out!
My experience has been different. I like to slow the problem if possible, access the options, and then act. : )
why was the top of the sail blowing away from the mast? There should be a yard hauling parrel & luff parrels on there to control that.
I’m not convinced of that. When the boat rolls it was nice that the yard battens did not hit the mast. Not sure that would be the case with a yard hauling parrel. And if I don’t need another line, then why?
@SVSeeker you've got a Lot of tweeking to do on those sails
@@kabuti2839 That's why we have boats.
yus! finally sailing !
I’d love to snag a pic of SV Seeker! I don’t live far, how long will y’all be in the area?
We'll be here for a least a couple of weeks.
@@SVSeeker Nice! Maybe I’ll get lucky! Safe travels! I’ve been watching for a long time! It’s so awesome to see y’all( you and Seeker) out in the ocean sailing!🤘🏼
Go Doug Go!!
I wish I had watched when you passed Flagler Beach but now I’m going to have to see if you’re in the bay at St. Augustine. Not to stalk you but just want to get a glimpse of the boat I watched you build from when you had steel plates dropped out front of your house in Tulsa.
Come out on Saturday and we’ll give you a tour. Details on the Facebook group.
@@SVSeeker how does one get aboard today?
@@gordonwd2 We'll you walk out on the dock and happen to bump into me. : ) Thanks for the visit.
know how you feel,took my com pac 16 out the other day
How did you shake sea sickness? Just get used to it? You mentioned your trip out awhile back being seasick, but you seemed ok on this rough ride. What changed? Experience?
I started flushing my sinuses with saltwater and my ears with hydrogen peroxide. That and more time on the water I suppose. But I took no drugs and have not had any problems since.
Well done on your offshore shake up 🎉. Those sails are a dangerous nuisance imo. Feelnunsafe watching them in offshore winds.
Spoken like a true landlubber. The dangerous nuisance items are not the sails, but all the protruding gubbins the sheets keep wrapping around. If that had been an actual storm (which means up to twice the windspeed and four times the wind pressure) things would immediately have gotten extremely ugly and unsafe.
@gottenhimfella221 I love land, I cannot lie but I've done my time Ocean sailing, owned my own 42 ft racer and currently own 2 flying dutchman. I maintain, those sails and all that rigging will be a huge problem for small crew if weather turns as it does.
Sorry. Love those sails and love them pulling Seeker along. Don't fear what you do not yet know. Life is too short for that.
@SVSeeker I know, I know, watched you long enough to know you will "hold fast" . I've lost a friend to the sea and been through a few storms. Maybe I'm not so confident anymore but I really enjoy your channel and am hoping to see many more. Sail safe 👍
LEFT and RIGHT hand sides of the boat!?!?!?! That's what landlubbers say!!! :-) I never noticed, do you have radar, Doug?
And depending on the audience those are the right words to use. : ) And yes we have an awesome radar.
@@SVSeeker Good point. I keep forgetting that most people live on land.
wait why does your autopilot need gps? Why doesn't it work from the magnetic or gyro compass?
I know right! And the dam thing acts like it's working. ...but it is not! Good times. : )
Sailing . . .to St Augustine, oldest continuously inhabited European settlement in the USA. Brilliant, thanks Doug from one of your crew of thousands of people. You are taking us all with you . . .
Glad you enjoyed it
Dam, I was just in St Augustine on Friday. Have Dinner at Harry's Seafood, highly recommend. How long you staying there?
Not yet. And maybe a couple weeks. Depends on the wind.
Whats the Caliber of the Optic equip pew pew stick you got there? 😊
Oh, that’s just a pellet gun.
Captain Doug, have you got your upgraded Captain's License, to go out over 100 miles from shore yet?
That's not the way it works. You have to get the offshore experience before you can upgrade. And you don't need a license to sail a boat. You only need the desire.
@@SVSeeker OK let us know, I have been waiting 4 months since you got your Captain's License to here the rest of the story!
Hi 👋 I was watching your video, and noticed your cannon on deck. How about printing a cover for it? Doesn't it collect rainwater in the barrel?
All the best from Greenland 🇬🇱
Actually we are planning on printing a dragon to cover it. : )
i baught a sailboat this summer, havent got it launched though.... i dont drive and couldnt get anyone to tow it to the launch.... an 88 laguna 22. i wounder how many blind folks sail.
I worked with a blind guy that sailed. Only thing he needed once in the water was someone to tell him how far it was to the shore.
Would you be allowed to have red flood lights on the deck? To help the eyes to see in the dark when looking away from the sail.
Really poetic and pleasant monologues there. Thank you!
No you really should not have red on deck. But consider this. It's overcast, pouring rain, no moon, and about a quarter mile of visibility for lights, and you have radar and AIS. What are you saving your night vision for? If there is another boat out there I hope they turn their deck light on too.
@@SVSeeker touché. I haven't sailed, but as an armchair observant I would like all senses I can have if something goes wrong. But maybe you have those things called "flashlights". ;)
Is there a way to tie the batons down on your sail like you would reef a Bermuda sail on a regular monohaul? That way, it would flatten out some.
There is a down haul on the forward sail. I need to strengthen that and I also want to redo the parrels on the forward sail too. Those are the lines the hold it to the mast. I don't think I want them much tighter as I do not want the battens slapping the mast when the boat rolls, and right now they are not doing that at all.
Seasick for 3 days ? Ouch. Fight off the urge to puke at all costs - ending up with dry heaves is the worst. Do whatever makes you feel better - go below, lay down, sleep if you can. Or stay on your feet and keep busy. There are no absolutes. I've had good luck with ginger capsules, have used the 'scope patches on long trips. Big swells don't bother me, 4-5' closely spaced stomach-flippers do.
I was sick for 21 days to Antigua. You can get over it. I always recommend a trip to an ENT first.
Yeah it was closer to 2 but my approach was indeed to avoid puking. Ended up not very useful to anyone, unfortunately :( I think if I had been able to eat anything I may have been acclimating a bit but who knows.
@@VoxMot I was a useless pile on night one, captaining my 1st canyon tuna trip, then recovered and kicked ass for 24 hours straight. I don't eat, but have food in case I feel hungry. Coffee churns my guts offshore, so I go with hot tea.
You looked great out there even with sails flapping. Do you have any plans you’re ready to share?
Yes. I going to finish installing the torque converter elementor tomorrow.
😂@@SVSeeker
Never been sea-sick - I get all wobbly when I come back to shore :/ !!
You have not missed anything fun.
How efficient are the sails vs traditional sails?
They are real efficient down wind. Good on a reach too.
That is it. And they look really cool. : )