close

Welcome aboard to the our video site for sailors. We are being constantly blasted by scammers and pirates, so registration is  invite only


contact@sailorsahoy.com with "Invite". No spam, no newsletters. Just a free account

Quần short Tạo ra

Here's a really quick weekly grocery haul. We picked up a few things here and there throughout the week, but I didn't film it. Thanks for watching! Follow us on: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FindingAloha/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/finding_aloha/

findingaloha

0

0

64

Sarah and Charlie Robertson — a mother and son duo share what it means to sail the Melges 15 together.

melgesperformancesailboats

0

0

1,333

Meet us at the Southampton Boat Show : Saturday 21st : 1pm until 2:30pm on the Boatfolk Stand E044

Sailingmelody

0

0

1,404

On 9/11, my wife and I ventured to the Valley of the Temples to see the Byodo-In Temple, a replica of the traditional Japanese style building and temples built to honor immigration of Japanese to the island of Oahu, Hawaii. While there, we got to feed the koi fish, the birds and pray in the temple. Remove your shoes when venturing into the inner hall where Buddha statue stands tall and ominous. This video is of Crystal grabbing the ram to ring the gong located to the left of the temple.

Barefoothiker051

0

0

223

The Transatlantic Race 2025 is organized by the New York Yacht Club and the Royal Ocean Racing Club, with support from the Royal Yacht Squadron and the Storm Trysail Club. Six days into the West-East Transatlantic Race, Christian Zugel’s Volvo 70 Tschüss 2, co-skippered by Johnny Mordaunt, has raced over 2,000 miles and is the clear leader for both Monohull Line Honours and the overall IRC win. “For the first few days of the race, we had a variety of conditions, mainly driven by sea temperature changes. The plan is panning out—but everybody sticks to the plan until it punches you in the face,” commented Tschüss 2 navigator Campbell Field, taking nothing for granted. A standout feature of their progress has been precision navigation through the Gulf Stream’s meanders. “We picked up over three knots of current in one area and nearly four in another,” explains Field. “Sea temperature has been a big indicator—we saw it drop from 25°C to just under 8°C in a matter of hours.” Their 24-hour distance run has peaked at 491.5 nautical miles, averaging 20.5 knots. With 3.8 knots of favourable current and sustained speeds of 18–19 knots, they’re pushing hard. “We’re not cutting corners—we passed just a mile off Point Alpha,” says Field. “We’ve got 1,600nm to go, and anything can happen, but right now, we could beat the previous boat’s elapsed time.” That time—10 Days, 9 Hours, 1 Minute, and 42 Seconds—was set in 2019 by Wizard, now racing as Tschüss 2. Current projections show a finish nearly two days faster. Their main challenge is staying ahead of a cold front expected within 48 hours. “It’s all about placing ourselves on the leading edge. We’re running our own race, and if we stay smart, we’ll finish strong,” Field concluded. #rorcracing #TransatlanticRace #nyyc #ircrating

rorcracing

0

0

2,030

0

Sailingdoodles

0

0

176,813