17 March 2011 by Tristan Gooley
Congratulations to Sam LLewellyn on the launch of The Marine Quarterly. A more handsome nautical vessel would be hard to find. (The Marine Quarterly that is.)
It would be considered poor form for me to comment at length on the quality of the content, since the launch issue includes a piece by me, ‘Stars and Waves’ on the subject of traditional Pacific navigation techniques. Suffice to say, the whole is beautiful and fascinating.
I suspect that the nautical community will soon be divided into two groups, those that know of the MQ and those that do not.
For more information or to subscribe (it is subscription only) visit The Marine Quarterly.
Tags: nautical heritage, nautical navigation, pacific navigation, sailing, stars, The Marine Quarterly, waves |
11 February 2011 by Tristan Gooley
I’m doing some research at the moment and came across this line, written by the German explorer Alexander von Humboldt, about flying fish:
‘Like swallows they shoot forward in thousands in straight lines, always against the waves.’
I’ve seen a fair few flying fish in my time, even been hit by a few. I’ve also come across this idea that they always fly in a set direction relative to the waves a couple of times before, but I’ve yet to work out whether this is true or not. If so it could offer some interesting navigational pointers for times when the wave direction is hard to gauge. Anyone able to shed any further light on this?
The flying fish in this picture is one that hit me in the face in the night when crossing the Atlantic singlehanded. It gave me one hell of a shock, but lost the fight…
Read More...
Tags: Alexander von Humboldt, flying fish, nautical heritage, sea, waves |
21 September 2008 by Tristan Gooley

Last night I was fortunate enough to be invited aboard HMS Warrior to give the after dinner speech to the Contessa 32 Association End of Season Rally. It was a fun evening that had at its heart some the best British maritime traditions. HMS Warrior was an extraordinary feat of engineering and, ironically, peacemaking. At the other end of the scale the Contessa 32 is steadily going about securing its own small place in our nautical heritage also.
Tags: contessa 32, extraordinary feat of engineering, hms warrior, nautical heritage |