I know you are long gone from this episode but I love your laidback narration and video just “this is what it is”. Reminds me of the wonders of the open Pacific. Thanks for the extra work of documenting your days. Btw: it’s going to be hard to beat the Alaska stuff.
It most certainly is. We’re now in Dana point and had an opportunity to meet all the folks at Nordhavn’s home office. It was a real treat. Thanks for watching, Jim
Hi you guys. Enjoyed your Alaska adventures and looking forward to your videos cruising down south. We on a Jefferson 53, and plan to spend a month in the gulf islands mainly by Port McNeil and the Broughton islands. This will be our first summer aboard the Jefferson and would appreciate any of your favorite stops in the Broughton Islands. Pat
Martin, Unfortunately, we are behind, as usual, on getting videos posted. In real time we are now in Ensenada, Mexico. Thanks though. Maybe on the way back at some point. Jim
Question - when filming in the pilot house, we hear short buzzing sounds every now and then. Is that the auto-pilot at work? Or something different? Thank you for your efforts - these videos make me smile nonstop!! :)
Yes, its the auto pilot pump. For some reason its louder in the videos then real life, or maybe we have just gotten really use to it. Thanks for watching,Jim
Another great video. We have completed our circumnavigation of Australia and are at anchor for awhile. We enjoyed 6 hr watches on overnight and multi day passages ,what do you and Rosie prefer. Thanks once again Kindest Regards Brian and Sandra Dorling MV Sealeaf
That’s fantastic! Congratulations. It’s quite an accomplishment. On watches we do not follow a set schedule. Overnight one of us will go asleep and when we naturally wake up we switch. It has worked well for us and avoids alarm clocks. Thanks, Jim
Sea Venture consistently burns 3.15 gallons of diesel per hour. We will use about 16% of our total fuel running from Washington to San Francisco. Thanks for watching, Jim
Sorry if I missed it, but did you ever figure out the affect of the paravanes of your fuel burn? Glad to see you headed south. The northwest has spectacular views, but I bet it's nice to be in some warmer weather. Safe travels.
Thanks for watching. It depends on the sea conditions. If sea conditions are about 3 foot seas or less the paravanes will slow us up about 1/2 of the knot. Above 3 foot seas there is no loss of speed since the reduced rolling offsets the drag caused by the paravanes.
The Dolphins wanted you to go faster! I belive the species of Dolphins pictured are called spinners. The animals like to spin when they breach the water. They are also one of the fastest swimming species of Dolphins in the Pacific. I have to ask why were you at dock for almost a year?
Hi Ken, We stayed in San Francisco for nine months while we enjoyed the birth of our first grandchild and I’ve patiently waited for me replacement surgery and recovery time. Thanks for watching.
Do you keep the rpms the same the entire trip or do you increase for injector cleaning ? Is that a thing ? Have you reduced speed for the long trip? Same as Alaska speed?
We vary it some. We stay between 1500 and 1700. On the passage down we stay closer to 1700 since our friends in the 62 Nordhavn had the throttle back a little bit as it was. Thanks for watching, Jim
It is always very difficult to hear Rosie speak. If you could turn up the volume on your end that would be great or put the microphone closer to you. We have our volume turned all the way up and can barely hear you. Maybe 25% is all.
Because it would not massively reduce our carbon footprint. We have been cruising in Alaska for many years where you will find no sail boats sailing because wind and Sea conditions do not make it viable. Now we’re going down the West Coast of the United States where very few sail boats ever actually sale down the coast, they motor, again, due to sea and wind conditions that are normally off The coast. If you go to our website and the Q&A section there’s a long video discussion that explains in great detail how our carbon footprint living and cruising on our boat is only a fraction of the carbon footprint of someone who lives on land with a car. Thanks for watching, Jim
woohoo! more quality TV to watch. I will go grab some tea.
Sea venture doing what she does best. Sea state looks fantastic and that makes for a happy crew. Love the videos. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for sharing. Love to see the water the skies, the boat moving in the water. You are living the dream guys.
Love the enthusiasm . . . Oh and the video was GREAT!! Fair winds and following seas . . . Peace!
What a beautiful journey! That water is amazing. I love anything boating. So glad you guys take the time to film and share with us!
Goodness. Y'all got a fantastic weather window. Fingers crossed it stays that smooth all the way through the gate. Fair winds!
Beautiful video. Enjoy
Thanks, Jim
I know you are long gone from this episode but I love your laidback narration and video just “this is what it is”.
Reminds me of the wonders of the open Pacific.
Thanks for the extra work of documenting your days.
Btw: it’s going to be hard to beat the Alaska stuff.
We think it might very well be, but I’m determined to go find some warm water for a couple of years, and then decide where to go from there.
Thanks for sharing your night time bridge set up. Thanks also for sharing the information that FLIR is not helpful in the fog. Good to know!
Very cool! Stay safe...
Thank you for sharing your adventures with us.
Keep ‘‘em coming! Looking forward to seeing you go under the Golden Gate!
Great video guys. Looks like you're having perfect conditions. Good to see your furry crew members standing their watches.😂
that was cool, enjoyed that one.
Nordhaven 62 is a highly respected boat.
It most certainly is. We’re now in Dana point and had an opportunity to meet all the folks at Nordhavn’s home office. It was a real treat. Thanks for watching, Jim
Great report, looks like everything is going smoothly.
Have a safe and good trip you guys.
Hi you guys. Enjoyed your Alaska adventures and looking forward to your videos cruising down south. We on a Jefferson 53, and plan to spend a month in the gulf islands mainly by Port McNeil and the Broughton islands. This will be our first summer aboard the Jefferson and would appreciate any of your favorite stops in the Broughton Islands. Pat
Awesome! Really enjoyed the video.
When you make it to Morro Bay, I hope you’ll let me buy you lunch.
Martin, Unfortunately, we are behind, as usual, on getting videos posted. In real time we are now in Ensenada, Mexico. Thanks though. Maybe on the way back at some point. Jim
Question - when filming in the pilot house, we hear short buzzing sounds every now and then. Is that the auto-pilot at work? Or something different? Thank you for your efforts - these videos make me smile nonstop!! :)
Yes, its the auto pilot pump. For some reason its louder in the videos then real life, or maybe we have just gotten really use to it. Thanks for watching,Jim
Lekker man lekker 🇿🇦
How many hours each , what will make waking up the captain , any rules of sea. Venture congratulations
Another great video. We have completed our circumnavigation of Australia and are at anchor for awhile. We enjoyed 6 hr watches on overnight and multi day passages ,what do you and Rosie prefer. Thanks once again
Kindest Regards
Brian and Sandra Dorling
MV Sealeaf
That’s fantastic! Congratulations. It’s quite an accomplishment. On watches we do not follow a set schedule. Overnight one of us will go asleep and when we naturally wake up we switch. It has worked well for us and avoids alarm clocks. Thanks, Jim
What a very nice journey! You are driving so many hours continuesly, aren't there never technical problems during the way?
Not yet. Little stuff, but nothing important.
Awesome! Please provide some fuel usage stats for the trip so far. Did you fill up your large water tanks prior to departing? Thanks for sharing.
Sea Venture consistently burns 3.15 gallons of diesel per hour. We will use about 16% of our total fuel running from Washington to San Francisco. Thanks for watching, Jim
Did you stop the engines to check oil? What was your rate of burn?
Sorry if I missed it, but did you ever figure out the affect of the paravanes of your fuel burn?
Glad to see you headed south. The northwest has spectacular views, but I bet it's nice to
be in some warmer weather. Safe travels.
Thanks for watching. It depends on the sea conditions. If sea conditions are about 3 foot seas or less the paravanes will slow us up about 1/2 of the knot. Above 3 foot seas there is no loss of speed since the reduced rolling offsets the drag caused by the paravanes.
nice
Question. Are you faster than the 62 Nordhavn? It looks like you were ahead of them most of the time.
No, they are faster then us, but the owners had not been in the ocean before so we were helping them out and taking the lead. Thanks for watching, Jim
The Dolphins wanted you to go faster! I belive the species of Dolphins pictured are called spinners. The animals like to spin when they breach the water. They are also one of the fastest swimming species of Dolphins in the Pacific. I have to ask why were you at dock for almost a year?
Hi Ken, We stayed in San Francisco for nine months while we enjoyed the birth of our first grandchild and I’ve patiently waited for me replacement surgery and recovery time. Thanks for watching.
@@CruisingSeaVenture AHHHH...Hip, knee? Congrats on getting back on the water and heading even further south.
Do any fish ever go after there the para-vanes?
Do you keep the rpms the same the entire trip or do you increase for injector cleaning ? Is that a thing ? Have you reduced speed for the long trip? Same as Alaska speed?
We vary it some. We stay between 1500 and 1700. On the passage down we stay closer to 1700 since our friends in the 62 Nordhavn had the throttle back a little bit as it was. Thanks for watching, Jim
It is always very difficult to hear Rosie speak. If you could turn up the volume on your end that would be great or put the microphone closer to you. We have our volume turned all the way up and can barely hear you. Maybe 25% is all.
Will try. Thanks, Jim
Well you really have to trust your instruments in the dark - that would be kind of weird looking out into utter darkness
Why don't you get a sailboat/catamaran to massively reduce your carbon footprint?
Because it would not massively reduce our carbon footprint. We have been cruising in Alaska for many years where you will find no sail boats sailing because wind and Sea conditions do not make it viable. Now we’re going down the West Coast of the United States where very few sail boats ever actually sale down the coast, they motor, again, due to sea and wind conditions that are normally off The coast. If you go to our website and the Q&A section there’s a long video discussion that explains in great detail how our carbon footprint living and cruising on our boat is only a fraction of the carbon footprint of someone who lives on land with a car. Thanks for watching, Jim