Hydroptère – Fastest on the Water Sets Sights Offshore

l’Hydroptère, a hydrofoil trimaran, is the fastest sailing vessel on the water.   Last November, it sailed at an average speed of  50.17 knots over one nautical mile. l’Hydroptère also holds the speed record of 51.36 knots over 500 meters.

Now the l’Hydroptère team is working to develop an ocean going version of the hydrofoil tri with the goal of sailing around the world in 40 days.  The plan is to build two boats, l’Hydroptère.ch, a scaled down version of a new design to be used for testing and development, followed by the full sized, l’Hydroptère maxi.

Curtain raised on the new l’Hydroptère.ch

l’Hydroptere Sailing Record

Fisherman’s Friends Net Catchy Album Deal

Last July, we posted a video of the Fisherman’s Friends singing the chantey ‘South Australia.’   The group is made up of ten crab and lobster fishermen and their friends who live within half a nautical mile of each other in fishing village of Port Isaac in Cornwall.   They have recently  signed an album deal – said to be worth £1m – with Universal Music.   Universal Music also represents Lady Gaga and Amy Winehouse.  I wonder if there is any cross marketing potential. Perhaps Amy and Lady G could perform with Fisherman’s Friends?   Several chanties come immediately to mind.  Spanish Ladies, Liverpool Judies and perhaps Whiskey in the Jar might be good fits.  Thanks to Alaric Bond for passing the article along.

Fisherman’s Friends Net Catchy Album Deal

Fisherman’s Friends sing South Australia

Noro Hits the Celebrity Mercury again

The norovirus has hit the Celebrity Mercury with a vengeance.    The Mercury returned to its home port of Charleston today, a day early, and the next cruise will be delayed by two days for an extensive top-to-bottom cleaning and sanitizing of the ship.  This will be the third time in three cruises that the ship has been taken out of service for cleaning.

More than 20% of passengers on Celebrity cruise ship are sick
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Eustace the Monk – Benedictine Monk, Sea Captain, and Pirate

The death of Eustace at the Battle of Sandwich

The Oxford Dictionary of National Bi0graphies features an intriguing character from history today – Eustace the Monk,  a Benedictine monk from the 13th century who was also a sea captain, a mercenary and a pirate. Quite a resume.  A romance biography written about Eustace around 1225 by an unknown poet from Picardy, is said to have influenced the medieval myths of Robin Hood.
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Storm-sunken “treasure ship” found in Ukraine ?

A sunken British frigate rumored to be carrying gold to  pay the troops? Sounds a lot like the HMS Hussar which sunk in New York in 1780.  This more recent discovery is the British storeship  Prince, which sank in the Black Sea in a heavy storm in 1854 during the Crimean War.   Like the Hussar, the rumors of gold are likely no more than rumors.  The HMS Prince has been often confused with the steamer Black Prince. The steamer did carry gold, while there is no record that the Prince ever did.

Storm-sunken “treasure ship” found in Ukraine
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Death of a Coast Guard Legend – Lieutenant Herbert M. Collins Crosses the Bar

Death of a Coast Guard Legend – Lieutenant Herbert M. Collins Crosses the Bar

A Coast Guard Legend passed away yesterday. Lieutenant Herbert M. Collins, USCG (RET), the last survivor of the legendary Pea Island Life Saving Station, passed away due to complications from cancer. Here is the message that Admiral Allen sent out to notify the field.

Subj: Death of a distinguished CG Veteran
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Couture superyacht brings high fashion to the high seas

I will admit to being easily amused, but I found this to be very funny.  For those with more money than sense, here is a “couture superyacht” designed by a fashion designer.   I would worry that it might be more fashionable than seaworthy but it does look rather conventional overall.  (As a naval architect, I  promise that I will never, ever design clothes.)

Couture superyacht brings high fashion to the high seas
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Update: HMS Superb – Royal Navy Court Martial

Commander Drysdale

Last January we posted about the the HMS Superb, a  British nuclear submarine, which in 2008 crashed into a massive stone pinnacle under the Red Sea. (See Submarines Navigating Badly.)   Now the commander and two other officers have been severely reprimanded by a Royal Navy court martial.  Apparently all concerned just misread the chart.

Commander of submarine in crash misread chart, court martial told
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Update: Katie Spotz Completes her Row Across the Atlantic

Last December we posted about Katie Spotz’s attempt to row across the Atlantic alone.  Yesterday she arrived in Georgetown, Guyana, in South America, after 70 days 5 hours 22 minutes in the Atlantic. Spotz, 22, is now the youngest person to cross an ocean in a rowboat, and the first American to row solo from mainland to mainland.

Woman Is the Youngest to Cross an Ocean Alone

Happy Pi Day (3.14) and a Toast to Hakudo Maru

Some call today Pi day, as the first three digits of the date (3.14) are the first three digits of the constant pi used to calculate the circumference and area of a circle.   Which makes it a good day to raise a toast to Hakudo Maru.

By Japanese naming convention, merchant and private ship names end in the word “Maru,” meaning circle.    There are several explanations for this convention, including that ships were thought of as floating castles and maru represents the defensive “circles” that protected the castle.  Another explanation is that the suffix honors, Hakudo Maru, the celestial being in Japanese mythology who is said to have come to Earth 5000 years ago and taught humans how to build ships.  A toast to Hokudo Maru.

My favorite explanation is that maru represents the hope that the ship leaves port, travels the world, and returns safely to home port, representing the complete circle of a successful voyage.

At 95 years old, Newport News-built MV Doulos again avoids scrapyard

The 58 year old, SS United States, built at Newport News, may be at risk of being scrapped but it now appears that the MV Doulos, the world’s oldest ocean-going passenger vessel, may not be making a trip to the breakers yard any time soon.  Her days as a passenger vessel are over but she was recently sold to a Singapore-based buyer permanently berth the ship and use it as a floating multiuse facility that could include a restaurant and a retail component.   The MV Doulos was built as the SS Medina in 1914 by Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company for the Mallory Steamship Company.  In recent years she has been owned by the German charity Gute Bücher für Alle (English: Good Books for All), and was used as a floating bookshop.

At 95 years old, Newport News-built MV Doulos again avoids scrapyard

The Maritime Art of Patrick O’Brien – No, not that Patrick O’Brian

The U.S. Naval Academy Museum will be hosting a large exhibition of paintings by Patrick O’Brien through April 30th.  No, not that Patrick O’Brian, Patrick O’Brien the  Baltimore based maritime artist.   The Annapolis Marine Art Gallery will be hosting a reception in celebration of the museum exhibition — Saturday, April 10th, from 2 – 6 PM.

To learn more and to glimpse some of O’Brien’s wonderful work, click here.

Bad News and Slightly Less Bad News about Somali Piracy

The monsoons have ended which means that it is pirate season again off the coast of Somalia and in the Gulf of Aden.  The bad news is that it is now estimated that piracy off  Somalia is costing the international shipping industry at least $100 million a year.  The only slightly less bad news is that while pirate attacks rose 62% last year, the hijacking success fell to 22%, resulting in the number of successful seizures being about the same as in 2008.

Piracy costs shipping firms over $100m annually, says report

Gulf of Aden pirates are having less success