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Parallel Universe: words from Captain Clive on life at sea

By Anna Cummins on April 20, 2011

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(Blog below from Clive Crosby, our intrepid skipper for 5 Gyres expeditions, and extraordinary sailor/adventurer/father/sustainability advocate)


The intensity of life at sea is such that relative strangers living for weeks in the space of a small urban apartment, with lounge/ diner, kitchenette, two bathrooms, utility, office area, closet and bedroom, (with fourteen beds) and a roof top terrace with extensive panoramic views, get to know one another and themselves rather well. Mostly for the better, but occasionally the worse whether they want to or not.

Already over two-thousand miles into the Pacific Ocean, and headed deeper for one of the most remote places on the planet and last remnant of the British Empire, the temperature is rising. Like an army with nothing to do, active minds plot activity. Channeled correctly it is all conquering. Beyond our simple daily routine of watches with duties around cooking, cleaning, maintaining and scientific work, we have little to conquer; we occupy ourselves proactively with exercise, reading and conversation, a simple but satisfying life.

Bound for Pitcairn Island, Captain Bligh and his mutinous crew aboard the Bounty are referenced. Many things have changed in the centuries since then, but human nature is much the same, active minds and restless souls that took a ship striving for change and a better life. They found it on Pitcairn, an island oasis far from their homeland -  another world, new community, opportunities and a fresh start.

At sea, solitude, simplicity and companionship replace high speed connections, on demand activities and time pressures. For most it is enlightening. However, once landfall is made this all evaporates, the bubble bursts, the desire to reconnect is overwhelming, normal, complex life returns, the view of a parallel universe and another way to live becomes a memory. But one from which we can learn.

Stripped bare life is simple and our needs are few, less is more and yet so often we are duped into consuming. We could live as stronger communities, why not? Shared resources, bartered goods, a new sense of belonging. At sea, away from the social, norms, networks and pressures I know that it works and has done for centuries.

Clive Cosby

From aboard the former Global Challenge yacht Sea Dragon en-route from Rapa Nui (Easter Island) via Pitcairn Island to Tahiti. Owned by Pangaea Explorations working with the 5gyres institute, UN scientists, journalists and videographers the team are working to raise awareness on the plight of our oceans.

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