Since I was into Astronomy and memorized the Constellations in High School. And also, memorized the names and positions of stars. The first time I navigated a sailboat 40 miles back to port at night on a whim, I nailed it. No GPS, no compass. Just lights on the coast, and primarily, stars in the sky. So much fun.
@twelge15. I am trying to beef up my knowledge of the constellations so I can use them to navigate. Do you have any good books to suggest? Many thanks!!!
I have deep respect for Polynesian navigation and naval tradition. I think the history of Hokule'a and Mau Piailung is a great contribution to human history.
Hugs to my Austronesian Relatives, from a Filipino, We are the "Lima" Gang, We are Builders, Our Ancestors sailed from island to island, We are the people of the Sea ❤️
Gives me chills, the ancient Hawaiian navigators are on par with the astronauts walking on the moon as far as pushing humanity forward. Staggering to contemplate.
If I was in the middle of the ocean and all my nav systems went to shit - I'd REALLY like a Polynesian Navigator in my crew. Kind of like having a Tibetan guide when you're in Himalayas. Respect!
Hokulea is amazing. Also, Great Big Story should reconsider why they said "no tech". Who defines science, innovation, and technology? Our Austronesian ancestors also did that.
It's amazing how Europeans thought they and the Phoenicians invented the ways how to navigate the seas where in fact the Austronesian people have been navigating and exploring the seas millennia before them.
It's about as amazing as Native American appropriation of horse-riding from the Spanish. How do you say "appropriation" in Comanche? Funny how the same people pushing multiculturalism get all bent out of shape when actual cultural borrowing occurs. Can't have it both ways, guy.
The Phoenicians existed 2500 BC, while the Polynesians started exploring the Pacific in around 1500 BC. Technically, your comment is wrong. Actually, the Polynesians and Europeans most probably figured out how to sail by themself, as they come from very different locations of the planet. For example, what the Vikings did was just as impressive as what the Polynesians did, and it's hard to know who discovered sailing first (and who actually cares about who did it first?)
I lived on O'ahu when she was first put into the water and did short trials. I still have clippings from the Honolulu Star & old photos. I can't describe how awestruck I felt. I was also living there when the huge-mouthed shark (I forget the name now, darn it! Not a megalodon.) was identified. Experts from all over were arguing what it was. What a time to be alive & living the island way. (Iz and the Beamers were just kids, and Gabby 'Pops' was still working on the highway crews.
@@fontaneg5476 it was lost because while yall Micronesians kept on practicing it, we were having wars, countries being colonized and many shit lol. But anyways love to the Micronesians.
@@palmtrees2664 are you fucking stupid ya most polynesians stoped doing it but micronesians were not better seafarers than polynesians you guy discovered a little part of the Pacific while polynesians discovered almost all of the Pacific and some of america not micronesians clown
If this is sailing with No Tech on board, then what is that white dome at 2:55 on that mast at the back. The backing insurance scheme/premium, I take it!
shmander They sleep in the hull - where the quartermaster keeps day to day supplies. There is always an escort boat with Hokulea called Hikianalia whic; is crafted as a modern technology based sailing canoe. The Pacific Voyaging Society has grown magnificently.
@@kahalaopuna1 reason is the w never existed in the original Hawaiian language...Hawaiians used v’s like other Polynesians. The missionaries that arrived in the islands changed it to w when they were trying to create a written Hawaiian language with English letters. Same for the letter t was changed to k. The original Hawaiian language used t and v instead of k and w just like the Ni’ihau Hawaiians today. The Hawaiian language that exists outside of Ni’ihau today is a altered version of the original Hawaiian language.
Bruh by the way they drew the map they went right by my house. I don't remember seeing them though, must have missed it. Only people I remember going past is a group of people on these massive kayaks with little sails for when they get tired and everything.
hugh smith probably for light and their camera, food etc but the point Is to navigate without gps otherwise how else did the Polynesian islands get populated with shared culture ?
@@wheeliewheelie1 very few did. Because it was said that whenever they traveled, they made sure that they have alot of food on board. No diseases aloud on board too.
I’d say you have to admit that as you travel across the water, the horizon just continues to render in front of you as if on a plane. At no point will you be positioned in a different degree from, say, two days prior. You are sailing over a plane.
This still doesnt explain to me how this is done without some form of 'time piece' Even the vikings had a Sunstone. How do you know the time of the sun in the sky in conjunction with your whereabouts? Can anyone help me with this, show me a link to a clip that explains this please? I just dont see how its possible without some form of albeit ancient form of time piece.
I don't think they are navigating with time. I think they use the sun to figure out where they are currently maybe and then the stars for where they need to go? I'm not sure... there is a ted talk on UA-cam tho 🤗
Its a mystery only the elders can ever and only know. Not every ancient history has an explanation and not every ancient history has to be explained. But I will say this, The time is not all in the sun, it is also in the pattern of the ocean and the feeling of it. Compare the Vikings to the Pacific Navigators. They both have different methods and different uses but, of the same object. Not all is the same.
@@potatoeskimos But you need to know the time of day it is as the planet constantly is moving, what did they use to allow them that knowlege? Also, what about when the weather was bad, when they couldnt see the stars, then what?
@Alana Schneider If you watch ua-cam.com/video/3kmrO9ct8qw/v-deo.html at around 17:00 onwards. Although the clip doesn't go into detail most likely because most navigational techniques are kept within families very jealously the ones seen in that clip are the universal basics at least in Kiribati.
@@TM686K Thanks supremely interesting. Can you please tell me what the name of the root is. I've tried googling around but nothing comes up. I want to research more about this captivating root.
It's also important to remember that not everyone made it, a lot was lost at sea, and never heard of again, and some of these brave men was only out day fishing, and got lost, and ending up half a world away, You can populate the entire planet, just by putting people on raft, and pushing them of the coast, no means of propulsion, no navigation, just pure luck, just send enough, and some will make it, and they will be big heroes, even when they're just lucky to survive, history is funny, obviously we will never hear of majority that got lost, but then again, that's not the great story
the sooner we stop talking about discovery the better.....it was ALWAYS there and we KNEW IT was there...there are no flukes if you found it already knowing its more like proof of what you already knew.... somehow
They are training to navigate without the use of GPS for the sake of keeping tradition and history alive but that does not mean they need to be stupid about it.
The crazy thing is due to recent dna testing I’m dominant Polynesian dna with a small amount of Norwegian. I can trace my genealogy back many generations and it seems the Norwegian came into my genetics during the great migration meaning one of my ancestors was a Viking/ Polynesian that voyaged all the way to hawaii 😂
@@goukhanakul I know my history which is why I thought your main comment was a Joke of some sorts. if it was, it's the type which is an insult to history in connection to some Polynesian origin theories
But alas...this was cutting edge tech up to the 1700s or so for most the Pacific Basin..tech that made the Polynesians more capable of Pacific navigation than anyone else until world War 2..until half the world made the Pacific a theater of war nobody else had the ability to island hop without the logistical constraints of the time but the Polynesians...even the sea planes that first connected the Pacific to the mechanical world required fuel depots and extensive facilities and infrastructure that the Polynesians smaller numbers and dependency on their knowledge of weather and currents allowed them to be more mobile and able to thrive on what the sea and islands provided
This in not Polynesian voyaging this is Micronesian voyaging. These are just a bunch of Polynesian appropriating our voyaging techniques. If you want to see a real navigator look up Mau Piailug from the Micronesian altol of Satawal.
@@islandguy6928 of course you settled first but you guys don’t navigate the sea like austronesian.Most Melanesian or some Micronesian only hunter gatherer
Cool, but personally I would be more interested how they keep all those people fed and hydrated without modern food preservation or preparation methods or modern water storage.
They have some pretty big solar panels hanging off the back, and what looks like a couple of chest freezers on the deck, but from what I've read most food is canned or tinned, and there is always a fishing line in the water for the catch of the day. For a 30 day trip they load enough fresh water for 40 days, and can ration to make it last longer.
They have some pretty big solar panels hanging off the back, and what looks like a couple of chest freezers on the deck, but from what I've read most food is canned or tinned, and there is always a fishing line in the water for the catch of the day. For a 30 day trip they load enough fresh water for 40 days, and can ration to make it last longer.
They do it the same way the Polynesians did, they have Taro, Fruit, they catch fish, etc... They even have a place for cooking over fire. the Ancient Hawaiians brought live animals on these voyages with them too, Chickens, Pigs, etc...
hmmm... why is there a gps satellite receiver at 2:53? also wrist watches? they weren't around back then & keeping time is very important when navigating by sun&stars... the positions of these objects are relative to time. so it's kind of cheating to have a modern timekeeping device.
the gps receiver is there because they're using the world wide voyage as a huge teaching tool for kids, in Hawaii and around the world, who are able to track and follow the voyage online and talk to crew members live because of that receiver. It's not for the crew.
"with no tech" Well that's a ridiculous lie, literally everything about it is "technology." From rope to lashings to wood and treatment and the architecture and material craft. "no nails or steel" doesn't mean "no tech".
Title is misleading. Catamaran design itself employs technology. Anything man has created is a technological improvement over nothing at all. To say "no tech" is a very uninformed uploader.
White Dacron sail, synthetic ropes, watches, modern clothing, tinned food getting towed by a powerboat etc. mmmm Modern foods and water storage solar panels communication equipment gps and other safety equipment I can understand because this is a reenactment there is little risk compared to the original. Well done on your adventures but people see all the above and don’t believe you.
That's why sailors and ships go missing. They fall off the edge into space. The Polynesians though, they were way ahead of their time. They developed a catamaran that could travel through space.
Since I was into Astronomy and memorized the Constellations in High School. And also, memorized the names and positions of stars. The first time I navigated a sailboat 40 miles back to port at night on a whim, I nailed it. No GPS, no compass. Just lights on the coast, and primarily, stars in the sky. So much fun.
@twelge15. I am trying to beef up my knowledge of the constellations so I can use them to navigate. Do you have any good books to suggest? Many thanks!!!
@@fmagalhaes1521 hey just get the apps startracker and others.
You’ll master them in less than a month :-)
Damn, that’s very cool man, kudos.
I have deep respect for Polynesian navigation and naval tradition.
I think the history of Hokule'a and Mau Piailung is a great contribution to human history.
Glad someone is keeping the old ways alive. Thank you guys!
The Hokulea crew visited my school on their way up the east coast. Great people.
I sailed across the Atlantic when I was 17 and now live in Australia. It's fantastic to see these methods working and kept alive
Uncle Bruce steered our outrigger canoe in a race around the cliffs of Oahu and it was pumping and he was incredible.
My Hawaiian studies teacher sailed on this ship as a kid
Prove it...
@@sunnyofabish7835 bro do u need really need prove
How is he or she going to get prove if it was back then huh?
Use ur brain stupid
Hugs to my Austronesian Relatives, from a Filipino, We are the "Lima" Gang, We are Builders, Our Ancestors sailed from island to island, We are the people of the Sea ❤️
Ay Lima gang. Don't forget Måta lmao
bobo pinoy
@@yeetfeet731 mata 😂, in indonesia mata - mata is Spy 😎
Bali here, yeah the lima gang
Yeah we all the same people just on different islands and coast
One day, we'll see a fleet of these. Polynesians, Micronesians and Melanesians.
....Maritime Southeast Asia as well as Madagascar. These are all one family of oceanic peoples. Similar language, similar boat building, etc.
@@islandvibez yeah bro! And them too
Polynesians taught Melanesians how to sail tho
@@mrfin02 idk if that is true but melanesians we’re here way longer than us Polynesians. If that’s true then cool if not then that’s ok too
We should keep the tradition of sea faring alive in Oceania. A way to reconnect to our ancestors that had been lost to colonization. Maybe as a sport?
Gives me chills, the ancient Hawaiian navigators are on par with the astronauts walking on the moon as far as pushing humanity forward. Staggering to contemplate.
If I was in the middle of the ocean and all my nav systems went to shit - I'd REALLY like a Polynesian Navigator in my crew. Kind of like having a Tibetan guide when you're in Himalayas. Respect!
Get a Micronesian the Polynesian doo doo in navigating . But we won’t teach you tho. You gotta be a islander 😂😂
The story of the Kon Taki is even more amazing and a bit more primitive! This one is also cool though.
I can't comprehend other navigation ideas but this is the one. I pray 8 years later these young people are doing great.
Hokulea is amazing. Also, Great Big Story should reconsider why they said "no tech".
Who defines science, innovation, and technology?
Our Austronesian ancestors also did that.
No fancy navigational instruments involved, so no tech
It's amazing how Europeans thought they and the Phoenicians invented the ways how to navigate the seas where in fact the Austronesian people have been navigating and exploring the seas millennia before them.
Well... it’s not just navigation. AND they probably knew. Appropriation is a real thing my friend.
It's about as amazing as Native American appropriation of horse-riding from the Spanish. How do you say "appropriation" in Comanche? Funny how the same people pushing multiculturalism get all bent out of shape when actual cultural borrowing occurs. Can't have it both ways, guy.
They did invent it completely independently from each other like a lot of things.
@@fanilo95 Wayfinding = Stellar Navigation + tracking
The Phoenicians existed 2500 BC, while the Polynesians started exploring the Pacific in around 1500 BC. Technically, your comment is wrong. Actually, the Polynesians and Europeans most probably figured out how to sail by themself, as they come from very different locations of the planet. For example, what the Vikings did was just as impressive as what the Polynesians did, and it's hard to know who discovered sailing first (and who actually cares about who did it first?)
this has been known since the time of the builders of the pyramids.
I lived on O'ahu when she was first put into the water and did short trials. I still have clippings from the Honolulu Star & old photos. I can't describe how awestruck I felt.
I was also living there when the huge-mouthed shark (I forget the name now, darn it! Not a megalodon.) was identified. Experts from all over were arguing what it was. What a time to be alive & living the island way.
(Iz and the Beamers were just kids, and Gabby 'Pops' was still working on the highway crews.
THE VERY BEST!!!!! Godspeed to your adventures! Just found this today and Love the Way!!!!
Amazing, thank you for sharing.
Man anyone that sails in the way that was used during the age of sail is amazing. I am a sailor, but I can not yet sail by just the stars and moon.
Polynesians were truly master seafarers.
You mean Micronesians. All the techniques they show her are from MICRONESIANS not Polynesians.
search up Mau Piailug, Micronesian master navigator that helped the Polynesians rediscover their lost seafaring ways
@@fontaneg5476 it was lost because while yall Micronesians kept on practicing it, we were having wars, countries being colonized and many shit lol. But anyways love to the Micronesians.
@@palmtrees2664 are you fucking stupid ya most polynesians stoped doing it but micronesians were not better seafarers than polynesians you guy discovered a little part of the Pacific while polynesians discovered almost all of the Pacific and some of america not micronesians clown
@@dalastkanakamaoli9058 but the ancestors of them all, The big islanders of Austronesia.
I have been following Hokule’a for a while when SV Luckyfish met up with them.
Amazing
If this is sailing with No Tech on board, then what is that white dome at 2:55 on that mast at the back. The backing insurance scheme/premium, I take it!
Is it even on board?
All because of papa mau
i really wanna see a follow up of this
Great experience!
Impressive, what was used to protect the wood from sea water ingress?
i'm just wondering where you sleep on a boat like this
I'm sure it has a lower cabin of sorts, if not you could sleep on a makeshift mattress anywhere....good question!
shmander They sleep in the hull - where the quartermaster keeps day to day supplies.
There is always an escort boat with Hokulea called Hikianalia whic; is crafted as a modern technology based sailing canoe.
The Pacific Voyaging Society has grown magnificently.
Hammocks.
just pure nature....just mills cuted wood, modern paint and glue, miles of modern syntthetic cable and sails etc ....golf clap
Show us Te Lapa. There are no videos of it.
1:11 is that the actual pronunciation of Hawai'i? never heard it before
Jose Carvajal, yes, it is the proper way to pronounce it. In brief, the alpha character "w" is pronounced with a "v" sound in the Hawaiian language.
yes the correct pronunciation . the "w" is pronounced as a "v" :)
@@kahalaopuna1 reason is the w never existed in the original Hawaiian language...Hawaiians used v’s like other Polynesians. The missionaries that arrived in the islands changed it to w when they were trying to create a written Hawaiian language with English letters. Same for the letter t was changed to k. The original Hawaiian language used t and v instead of k and w just like the Ni’ihau Hawaiians today. The Hawaiian language that exists outside of Ni’ihau today is a altered version of the original Hawaiian language.
Yes. Anytime you see a diacritical mark there is a slight pause, as if it were two words. :)
And the apostrophe in between the two "i"s indicate a vocal break, or pause. Similar to the Chamorro "Glota" which is pretty interesting
Bruh by the way they drew the map they went right by my house. I don't remember seeing them though, must have missed it. Only people I remember going past is a group of people on these massive kayaks with little sails for when they get tired and everything.
of course there is a gps inside a backpack, just in case.
You will not use, but it is good to know it is there.😃
what is the solar panels for?
gps radio and all that.... you dont really believe anything those people are saying rigth?
hugh smith probably for light and their camera, food etc but the point Is to navigate without gps otherwise how else did the Polynesian islands get populated with shared culture ?
The polynesians did it alright. But more than half of them.probably died doing it.
safety regulations dont fuck around, so they do probably have a gps and such, whether they use it is a different story
@@wheeliewheelie1 very few did. Because it was said that whenever they traveled, they made sure that they have alot of food on board. No diseases aloud on board too.
There is no way in hell Columbus was first
Columbus was widely known as the first "European" in America but the viking had acctually settled in America long before him.
@@tytoalba4794Vikings aren’t real
Where do they sleep?
I’d say you have to admit that as you travel across the water, the horizon just continues to render in front of you as if on a plane. At no point will you be positioned in a different degree from, say, two days prior. You are sailing over a plane.
This still doesnt explain to me how this is done without some form of 'time piece' Even the vikings had a Sunstone. How do you know the time of the sun in the sky in conjunction with your whereabouts? Can anyone help me with this, show me a link to a clip that explains this please? I just dont see how its possible without some form of albeit ancient form of time piece.
I don't think they are navigating with time. I think they use the sun to figure out where they are currently maybe and then the stars for where they need to go? I'm not sure... there is a ted talk on UA-cam tho 🤗
Its a mystery only the elders can ever and only know. Not every ancient history has an explanation and not every ancient history has to be explained. But I will say this, The time is not all in the sun, it is also in the pattern of the ocean and the feeling of it. Compare the Vikings to the Pacific Navigators. They both have different methods and different uses but, of the same object. Not all is the same.
The Austronesians look up to the stars to know where we are or the time.
@@potatoeskimos But you need to know the time of day it is as the planet constantly is moving, what did they use to allow them that knowlege? Also, what about when the weather was bad, when they couldnt see the stars, then what?
@Alana Schneider If you watch ua-cam.com/video/3kmrO9ct8qw/v-deo.html at around 17:00 onwards. Although the clip doesn't go into detail most likely because most navigational techniques are kept within families very jealously the ones seen in that clip are the universal basics at least in Kiribati.
It not really a boat but a modern day indestructible raft of some kind? It could not carry much cargoes?
How about rations?
Coconuts, preserved pandanus, the seafood all around you and a special root you chew that allows you to drink seawater. At least in my island though.
@@TM686K Thanks supremely interesting. Can you please tell me what the name of the root is. I've tried googling around but nothing comes up. I want to research more about this captivating root.
Great navigators, we are the Austronesians
That boat is all tech lol
So what are the solar panels for???
Microwave, smartphone, heater
Health and safety maybe?
It's also important to remember that not everyone made it, a lot was lost at sea, and never heard of again, and some of these brave men was only out day fishing, and got lost, and ending up half a world away,
You can populate the entire planet, just by putting people on raft, and pushing them of the coast, no means of propulsion, no navigation, just pure luck, just send enough, and some will make it, and they will be big heroes, even when they're just lucky to survive, history is funny, obviously we will never hear of majority that got lost, but then again, that's not the great story
2:53 No modern technology?
the sooner we stop talking about discovery the better.....it was ALWAYS there and we KNEW IT was there...there are no flukes if you found it already knowing its more like proof of what you already knew.... somehow
GPS Ball at 1:08?
They are training to navigate without the use of GPS for the sake of keeping tradition and history alive but that does not mean they need to be stupid about it.
Probably as a fail safe just in case something goes wrong.
Nick Macedo that's the paddle for boat
We got clickbaited like everybody else.
wow
The crazy thing is due to recent dna testing I’m dominant Polynesian dna with a small amount of Norwegian. I can trace my genealogy back many generations and it seems the Norwegian came into my genetics during the great migration meaning one of my ancestors was a Viking/ Polynesian that voyaged all the way to hawaii 😂
why do i think you're trying to make a joke out of history. if you are, get out of here
@@OperationHawaiiana excuse me?
Would you approach someone in real life and speak to them like that? Just an honest question? And if so where are you from?
@@goukhanakul I know my history which is why I thought your main comment was a Joke of some sorts. if it was, it's the type which is an insult to history in connection to some Polynesian origin theories
I know my history and genealogy as well and make know jokes about it.
But alas...this was cutting edge tech up to the 1700s or so for most the Pacific Basin..tech that made the Polynesians more capable of Pacific navigation than anyone else until world War 2..until half the world made the Pacific a theater of war nobody else had the ability to island hop without the logistical constraints of the time but the Polynesians...even the sea planes that first connected the Pacific to the mechanical world required fuel depots and extensive facilities and infrastructure that the Polynesians smaller numbers and dependency on their knowledge of weather and currents allowed them to be more mobile and able to thrive on what the sea and islands provided
Looks like 6 solar panels on her stern ? No tech ?
I want to sail the great Oceans
You have to Raghav.
This in not Polynesian voyaging this is Micronesian voyaging. These are just a bunch of Polynesian appropriating our voyaging techniques. If you want to see a real navigator look up Mau Piailug from the Micronesian altol of Satawal.
Lmao our polynesian ancestors did it better
D*** right!!!.
DA LAST KANAKA MAOLI After Micronesians and Melanesians settled their region's wayyy before you guys? Lol ok.
@@islandguy6928 of course you settled first but you guys don’t navigate the sea like austronesian.Most Melanesian or some Micronesian only hunter gatherer
@@zairatulumierah9436 if they don’t navigate the sea then why is their navigation still alive? Stop talking out your ass
Moana taught me they’re called wayfinders.
Just curious how they use bathroom
ocean is the bathroom..
Cool, but personally I would be more interested how they keep all those people fed and hydrated without modern food preservation or preparation methods or modern water storage.
i don't know, but i think they don't. after all, it's a matter of staying healthy and alive
They have some pretty big solar panels hanging off the back, and what looks like a couple of chest freezers on the deck, but from what I've read most food is canned or tinned, and there is always a fishing line in the water for the catch of the day. For a 30 day trip they load enough fresh water for 40 days, and can ration to make it last longer.
They have some pretty big solar panels hanging off the back, and what looks like a couple of chest freezers on the deck, but from what I've read most food is canned or tinned, and there is always a fishing line in the water for the catch of the day. For a 30 day trip they load enough fresh water for 40 days, and can ration to make it last longer.
Vern C Thanks for the explanations!
They do it the same way the Polynesians did, they have Taro, Fruit, they catch fish, etc... They even have a place for cooking over fire. the Ancient Hawaiians brought live animals on these voyages with them too, Chickens, Pigs, etc...
I saw a radar
How r u alive?
Austronesian boat
There is metal and screws on that boat, except on the video you can see accurate modern watches, and even what seems to be radar.
USS Constitution
My school showed me this video of the native of Americans
Mr.Moana???
The Trip Proves the world is a ball
Yes but they're wearing watches.
@east coast republicans and solar panels? LOL. Click bait
@@wheeliewheelie1 lmao your a clown haole
Moana
hmmm... why is there a gps satellite receiver at 2:53? also wrist watches? they weren't around back then & keeping time is very important when navigating by sun&stars... the positions of these objects are relative to time. so it's kind of cheating to have a modern timekeeping device.
the gps receiver is there because they're using the world wide voyage as a huge teaching tool for kids, in Hawaii and around the world, who are able to track and follow the voyage online and talk to crew members live because of that receiver. It's not for the crew.
www.hokulea.com/
Thanks Jess :)
how does austronesians and polynesians secure safe drinking water though, how does these guys do it, moreso in today's water which is so polluted
the rain. they studies weather patterns which helped them
Ahh yes the traditional solar panels, no tech to be seen here folks
What do you mean no tech? Boats are technology...
Cause humAns forgot how to fly
They mean modern technology
"with no tech"
Well that's a ridiculous lie, literally everything about it is "technology." From rope to lashings to wood and treatment and the architecture and material craft. "no nails or steel" doesn't mean "no tech".
Are you sped?? Technology is electronic 😂 polys didn’t need nothing , whites did tho 😂
PROVING FLAT EARTH and people dont even realize it.
Title is misleading. Catamaran design itself employs technology. Anything man has created is a technological improvement over nothing at all. To say "no tech" is a very uninformed uploader.
The earth is not a sphere .
i know, its a oblate spheroid
White Dacron sail, synthetic ropes, watches, modern clothing, tinned food getting towed by a powerboat etc. mmmm
Modern foods and water storage solar panels communication equipment gps and other safety equipment I can understand because this is a reenactment there is little risk compared to the original. Well done on your adventures but people see all the above and don’t believe you.
bst, the earth is flat.
Minute 3:06: What it truly means is that you can navigate like that ONLY and ONLY on our FLAT and stationary earth. Research flat earth!
Enough
That's why sailors and ships go missing. They fall off the edge into space.
The Polynesians though, they were way ahead of their time. They developed a catamaran that could travel through space.
lol ... fool
@@dogonegone We are a tiny part of much bigger enclosed structure. We are not flying in some outer cosmos.