Top 10 Sailing Vlogs by Views: La Vagabonde, SV Delos, SSL, Seeker, Whitespotpirates, Wynns & More

You will see the top 10 sailing vlogs by total views. These are the most loved sailing vlogs of all time! Who will be number 1? We also give a sneak peak of season 2 of Slow Boat Sailing in the Marquesas.

Check out our related videos at
https://youtu.be/zA8Ej2MEkdQ &

0:09 Stevie in Cuba’s Cayo Largo del Sur Resort and Marina Vistited by Sailboat S1E5 https://youtu.be/GE5T8RZFvUo
0:11 #10 Chase the Story Sailing of SV Cheeky Monkey, http://www.chasethestory.com, and http://www.turftosurf.com sail with pets (cats)
0:18 A short clip from “HD QUALITY: Prepping the Boat to Sail Off the Grid – Story 46” at https://youtu.be/3Sxold4e_O0
0:44 Footage from “(audio only) E29: Chase the Story’s Tasha Hacker and Ryan Horsnail on the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast” https://youtu.be/0Tr53SKVg2c
0:48 Stevie from “Getting Easting, Sailing Offshore from New Orleans to St. Petersburg S1E1” https://youtu.be/ThEH0T3mAxc
0:51 #9 Shaun and Julia Sailing sail the Great Lakes on SV I’m Easy which is up for sale. http://www.shaunsailing.com
1:00 Janna wife in the Gatun Locks. See our Panama Canal transit video “How to Transit the Panama Canal with Sailing La Vagabonde ‘s Line Handlers in a Yacht S1E11” at https://youtu.be/jloq585Lnxw
1:04 #8 In DrakeParagon Drake, Monique, and crew sail a Westsail 42 on the east coast of the U.S. and Canada and North Atlantic. Breif clip from “DrakeParagon Season 3: Sneak Peek” from https://youtu.be/1WQ8JugRfBc
1:17 #7 On Wicked Salty Wes and Kate sailed from New England to the Bahamas with their dog Lola. They are currently looking for a replacement for their boat Parity.
1:24 A brief clip from “MISTAKES IN OPEN OCEAN SAILING” at https://youtu.be/euXI2Bdq52g
1:32 A clip from “Ep. 13: (audio only) Wicked Salty on the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast” https://youtu.be/UWsf549ySHg
1:43 #6 WhiteSpotPirates stars Nike in the Untie the Lines series. She sails her boat Karl in Panama and the Western Caribbean. http://www.whitespotpirates.com
2:04 Clip from “White Spot Pirates’ Tells All, Untie the Lines on the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast Ep. 14 (audio only)” https://youtu.be/1FakwiwCdEE
2:07 Clip from “Sailing Offshore to Panama, Shelter Bay Marina, Panama Canal, and Checking in Colon, Panama-S1E9” at https://youtu.be/QQ63x_G_u0Y
2:18 #5 Gone with the Wynns are sailing their catamaran Curiosity to the Bahamas and points south. http://www.gonewiththewynns.com
2:28 #4 SV Seeker is the only DIY sailing vlog in the top 10. SV Seeker is building a 74ft steel origami junk rigged motorsailer.
2:30 “Tour and Invitation” at https://youtu.be/Znt5KTOClWY played in the background.
2:42 Footage from “Offshore to Providencia, Colombia, Sailing Across the Caribbean to the Pirate Paradise Island S1E6” at https://youtu.be/UPoDgcdp_BY
2:50 Subscribe to Slow Boat Sailing!
2:59 #3 Sailing La Vagabonde is crewed by Riley and Elayna. They sailed from the Med to New Zealand on a Beneteau monhull and are starting over in France with an Outremer 45 catamaran. https://youtu.be/hMYT5E_oeC4
3:18 #2 Rick Moore sails Sophisticated Lady in the Caribbean.
3:32 #1 Sailing SV Delos has sailed from Seattle to Cape of Good Hope crossing the Pacific and Indian Oceans.
3:58 Catch their interviews “Sailing SV Delos on the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast (audio only) – Ep. 10” at https://youtu.be/bb1Tk8P7E-U and “SV Delos, Cape Horn or Caribbean? Slow Boat Sailing Podcast Ep. 33” at https://youtu.be/ss9Gxxn9N58
4:15 Footage of Lake Pontchartrain, West End, New Orleans, New Orleans Yacht Club (NOYC), and Municipal Yacht Harbor
4:50 Preview of Slow Boat Sailing’s Season 2 in the Marquesas coming in May.

We will be running contest where our most loyal Patreon supporters can become part of our crew literally as we explore the paradise islands of the South Pacific.

http://www.Patreon.com/slowboatsailing

Our one Star or Executive Producer patron can join the crew without winning the drawing.

Patrons of the round the world vlog and podcast get bonus podcast episodes and free audiobooks of How To Sail Around the World Part-Time and Slow Boat to Cuba. They get never before released audiobook chapters of Slow Boat to the Bahamas. You can also get access to many podcasts and videos early as a patron.

Slow Boat to the Bahamas

and

How to Sail Around the World-Part Time

have been #1 sailing bestseller on Amazon.

Support the Slow Boat Sailing vlog and podcast at
https://www.patreon.com/slowboatsailing

Subscribe to the podcast at
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/slow-boat-sailing-podcast/id1084423845?mt=2
http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/slow-boat-sailing-podcast
music by http://www.BenSound.com

Vlogs were selected by total veiws from the bigger list on
http://www.sailing-channels.com. That website lists a lot of channels that are not vlogs.

(c) Linus Wilson, 2017, Vermilion Advisory Services, LLC

Tyler Brandt is a doer and a circumnavigator.

I think you can credit Sailing SV Delos (in Episode 10 and 33 of the podcast) for popularizing the sailing vlog genre. Nevertheless, they probably were not the first sailors to produce highly edited accounts of their round the world voyage in episode form. I was watching Tyler Brandt’s Wizard’s Eye Expedition vlogs long before I heard the term “vlog” or logged into YouTube. He also probably started his professionally produced series before the Delos crew was broke in Australia and started editing video intensively in 2013. Now he is days away from completing his five-year circumnavigation which began and ended in Mexico. Tyler has always approached sailing around the world as an outdoor adventure challenge. For him its a sport not a lifestyle. On Wizard’s Eye you won’t find bikini-clad twenty-somethings snorkeling remote reefs. You will see the reality of offshore sailing, mostly guys looking for adventure going beyond the horizon. The Slow Boat Sailing Podcast episode 23

guest Annie Dike said her channel had 95% men watching it, The same is true of my channel. Sailboat cruising is not just a lifestyle. It is a sport, and like most sports it primarily attracts men who practice and watch it. Congratulations, Tyler on circumnavigating the globe. Many talk and few do. Tyler is a doer.

It is impossible to fly a pet (dog or cat) from the USA to Tahiti or French Polynesia.

It is impossible to fly your dog or cat into French Polynesia from the USA. I worked every angle and looked into every scenario to get my 4-pound, toy poodle to rejoin the boat this summer. He flew off the boat in Ecuador, which was an ordeal in itself. I could not have him aboard for the Marquesas passage because we were hauling out the boat in Hiva Oa and leaving for five to six months. The only place you can offload a pet from your boat in French Polynesia is Tahiti, and that process takes over a month. (Check out our bonus episode 29

of the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast with Tasha Hacker to learn how to do that.)

You cannot fly a dog or cat to French Polynesia from the USA unless you charter a jet. Period. The key reasons are:

  1. There are only two airports in the USA that fly into French Polynesia. LAX and HNL. They both only fly into Tahiti (PPT).
  2. Tahiti agriculture requires that you fly in on a weekday when customs is open. The only flight out of HNL flies out on a Saturday. That means HNL is not possible. (Hawaii is a “rabies free state” and flying a pet there is a nightmare.)
  3. All the airlines flying out of LAX (Air France and Air Tahiti Nui) do not allow pets on board going from LAX to PPT. This is no doubt a response to French Polynesian regulations. Make sure your Tahiti leg with another carrier (American for example) is not a code share with Air Tahiti Nui for example.

There you are! It is impossible. The only hope is to fly to one of the handful of countries which pets can fly in from first. I suspect there are impossible road blocks to doing that including waiting periods, but I was not willing to fly to Aukland to get to Tahiti. Moreover, that small list of countries with an import treaty no doubt have a slew of regulations making it very hard for a dog or cat from the USA to land in their county.

I got bogged down in the minutia of the vet visits and test needed before I realized there was no plane willing to carry my dog. He’s going to stay home and will probably never get to join the boat while it is in French Polynesia. I hope Tonga is less restrictive for pets.

Become Sailing La Vagabonde’s 3rd Crew Member!!!

Riley and Elayna are looking for someone with an iron stomach great editing and video skills to cruise the Med. Adobe premier pro, a lust for travel, and drone piloting skills are an asset. Must be willing to stay at least a year. Private berth in luxury catamaran is included. I have no idea what the other 6 jobs are!

 

The application process to be crew on the Slow Boat in the Marquesas is a lot simpler. Non-smokers can pledge $99 for the one Star/Executive Producer spot. No video editing is required to join me for one to two weeks while we film season 2 between May to July 2017.

Top 10 Best Paid Sailing Channels: La Vagabonde, SSL, Wynns, Delos, RAN, Gecko, Uma, & More

This video ranks the top ten highest paid sailing channels based on my estimates of their Patreon and AdSense revenues from their channels. 9 of the 10 were vloggers. All channels incur expenses such as buying and replacing camera and computer gear to keep the pipeline of videos flowing. Only two channels made six figures. The highest paid channels did not necessarily have the most subscribers. My recent study looked at 444 sailing YouTube channels. Thus, the other 98 percent of channels made less than the top 10 from Patreon and AdSense.

I assumed that their average patron paid for 32 videos per year, and the channels made $1.50 per 1,000 views on Adsense. My estimates could be way off if either one of those estimates was off for any particular channel. Advertising revenues vary greatly based on a lot of factors. Not all public pledges are the same on Patreon because patrons can limit the number of times they are charged per month. Nevertheless, this assumption for Patreon was in line with the 2016 Patreon blog reported earnings for Sailing SV Delos and Sailing La Vagabonde.

See https://ssrn.com/abstract=2919840

The channels’ Patreon revenues were based on the public Patreon pledges and the annual views reported by Socialblade.com. The revenue estimates are guesses and could be significantly higher or lower.

0:33 Chase the Story Sailing and Sailing Miss Lone Star have more subscribers than some in the top 10 but did not make the highest paid list.
0:50 #10 Sailing Uma sail a Pearson 36 sailboat in Haiti.
1:01 #9 Jamie and Liz are Brits sailing a Oyster 435 since 2005.
1:16 #8 RAN Sailing is sailing out of Sweden.
1:32 #7 White Spot Pirates produces the Untie the Line vlog. It pulls in a $32K/year from Patreon and Adsense. Check out Nike’s interview on episode 14 of the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast at

1:57 #6 Sailing SV Lazy Gecko sails with kids and pets in Florida.
2:13 #5 Rick Moore and his Ambient Real Life production company is sailing Sophisticated Lady (SSL) in the eastern Caribbean.
2:29 #4 Boatworks Today is the only DIY channel in the top ten. .
2:43 #3 Gone with the Wynns are one of only 3 channels with over 100K subscribers.
3:03 #2 Sailing SV Delos were interviewed on episode 10

and

episode 33

of the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast.

3:43 #1 Elayna and Riley of Sailing La Vagabonde are number 1 in terms of subscribers 288K.
4:41 Some top channels interviewed on the Slow Boat Sailing with over 10K subscribers have suspended their cruises. Examples are Wicked Salty, Sailing Baby Blue, and Resolute Sets Sail.

5:55 The majority of sailing channels on Patreon are making $73 or less per video. See https://ssrn.com/abstract=2919840

6:18 AdSense estimated earnings are often much smaller than Patreon estimated revenues for these channels.

6:30 Affiliate and sponsorship income examples
Sailing La Vagabonde II Outremer 45 sponsorship:

Sailing SV Delos Supersailmakers sponsorship:

7:20 Assumptions for revenue estimates
8:20 sailing channels are companies with costs
8:42 SailingSaltyMermaid totaled their boat while filming a vlog series:

Check out our round the world vlog:

Check out our video on how to make money on Patreon

We will be running contest where our most loyal Patreon supporters can become part of our crew literally as we explore the paradise islands of the South Pacific.

http://www.Patreon.com/slowboatsailing

Our one Star or Executive Producer patron can join the crew without winning the drawing.

Patrons of the round the world vlog and podcast get bonus podcast episodes and free audiobooks of How To Sail Around the World Part-Time and Slow Boat to Cuba. They get never before released audiobook chapters of Slow Boat to the Bahamas. You can also get access to many podcasts and videos early as a patron.

Slow Boat to the Bahamas

and

How to Sail Around the World-Part Time

have been #1 sailing bestseller on Amazon. Slow boat to Cuba launches on Amazon on November 21, 2016.

Support the vlog and podcast at
https://www.patreon.com/slowboatsailing

The vlog is also a video cruising guide of the places we visit focused on the seamanship necessary to visit the exotic foreign ports that we visit. The vlogs recount the adventures of the Slow Boat Crew.

Subscribe to the podcast at
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/slow-boat-sailing-podcast/id1084423845?mt=2
http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/slow-boat-sailing-podcast
music by http://www.BenSound.com

Ep. 32: SY Zero Sails without a Rudder and Sailing Across the South Pacific

Subscribe for free to the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast on iTunes and Stitcher!

Christian from the SY Zero YouTube channel and blog talks about doing the north Pacific circle from Mexico, to Hawaii, to Alaska, sailing the inside passage, and back to San Diego California. He talks about how he survived a busted rudder and used sails and motor to get back to port under his own power.

Our “On the AIS Segment” guest is the creator of the Adventuresare life (Sailing Windfall) YouTube channel who sails with her previously estranged father on the Great Loop.

The host Linus Wilson talks about the sailing in the 3,500 nautical mile passage from La Libertad, Ecuador to Hiva Oa in French Polynesia’s Marquesas Islands. He talks about sailing wing and wing and the different sail combinations he used to sail dead downwind for most of the passage.

We came out with some great new videos on the Slow Boat Sailing YouTube channel that have been well recieved since last episode. Check out our “How to Transit the Panama Canal” video, which features Janna and Sophie for the first time since episode 1:

Further, you can get the full VIDEO interview with sailing SV Delos of which part will make up episode 33 of the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast in April. You can watch it now at

 

Finally, Linus summarizies the findings of his latest study that finds YouTube sailing channels that use Patreon make a video a week vs. a video every three to four months for sailing channels not on Patreon. Unlike the popular perception that Patreon supports the sailors, it only typically pays less than $80 per video and does not cover the cost of video production. You can see the video about that study at

 

Slow Boat Sailing is making a podcast and vlog about sailing around the world part-time. The podcast interviews the most interesting cruising sailors in the world, including the crew of SV Delos, White Spot Pirates, Chase the Story, Sailing Miss Lone Star, Wicked Salty, SV Prism, and many more. This costs time and money and we love our supporters who subscribe on iTunes, Stitcher, and YouTube as well as those who support us on Patreon.

We will be running contest where our most loyal Patreon supporters can become part of our crew literally as we explore the paradise islands of the South Pacific.

http://www.Patreon.com/slowboatsailing

Our one Star or Executive Producer patron can join the crew without winning the drawing.

Patrons of the round the world vlog and podcast get bonus podcast episodes and free audiobooks of How To Sail Around the World Part-Time and Slow Boat to Cuba. They get never before released audiobook chapters of Slow Boat to the Bahamas. You can also get access to many podcasts and videos early as a patron.

Slow Boat to the Bahamas

and

How to Sail Around the World-Part Time

have been #1 sailing bestseller on Amazon.

Support the vlog and podcast at
https://www.patreon.com/slowboatsailing

The vlog is also a video cruising guide of the places we visit focused on the seamanship necessary to visit the exotic foreign ports that we visit. The vlogs recount the adventures of the Slow Boat Crew.

Subscribe to the podcast at
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/slow-boat-sailing-podcast/id1084423845?mt=2
http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/slow-boat-sailing-podcast

SV Delos, Crew Changes & Sailing the Indian Ocean on the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast Ep. 33


Brian, Brady, and Karin of Sailing SV Delos talk about their Indian Ocean sailing & recent crew changes on the video version of the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast #33 hosted by Linus Wilson. You can hear their first interview on the podcast on episode 10 at

Subscribe to the podcast for free and hear it on your podcast app as the episodes come at at
iTunes: http://apple.co/2c05jND
&
Sticher: http://bit.ly/2lpZYoJ
On the podcast we interview the most interesting sailors in the world such as the creators of SV Delos, Untie the Lines (White Spot Pirates), and Chase the Story (Turf to Surf and SV Cheeky Monkey).

0:00 Intro music was Onetox- Ramukanji (2011 official remix)

0:03 Linus Wilson, Host of the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast at
introduces the interview. A more comprehensive interview that explores the entire SV Delos voyage is in episode 10 of the free podcast.
0:20 You can get your own really cool SV Delos shirt and sticker at
http://bit.ly/2mpBcEV
0:27 Interview begins with Brian, Brady, and
0:55 Q: What was the longest offshore passage of the Indian Ocean crossing?
A: Andaman Islands to Cocos Keeling Island (16 days)
2:00 Managing the Aghulas Current
3:35 Help pay for the Slow Boat Sailing Podcasts’ Skype recording software and get great rewards at
http://www.patreon.com/slowboatsailing
6:20 Port hopping in South Africa and the lack of anchorages
Cape Town
Mossel Bay, South Africa
East London, South Africa
Durban, South Africa
8:03 We discuss crew changes on SV Delos
9:07 Max and Frida rock Delos
10:05 Does SV Delos fit 7 crew?
12:12 Why did Karin go to college in Australia?
14:50 Winners of become a Delos pirate crew member competition
18:05 What makes the ideal Sailing SV Delos crew member
21:10 Chagos was remote
22:00 Favorite Indian Ocean stops of the 2015 & 2016 cruising seasons
27:11 Will Delos round Cape Horn before they go to the Caribbean?
Brady seemed interested in the Horn, but Brian seemed more interested in cruising the Caribbean.
29:10 The cruising community in Cape Town, South Africa
30:55 The last time Delos was in a major cruising destination was 2 years ago in Thailand. Brian luvs pad Thai!
31:30 Is butter chicken enough to recommend the Andaman Islands of India?
32:15 How do new crew members help out with the cool videos? Brian gives filming tips..
33:25 The scariest moments on SV Delos:
Hitting a reef in Madagascar
Hand steering in big waves on the way to Cocos Keeling
37:17 What kind of autopilots do you use on SV Delos and what problems have you had sailing offshore?
Raymarine linear drive 2 is the big seas autopilot. The planetary gear have worn out. It is attached to the back quadrant.
40:15 They also have a chain mounted wheel pilot which is not robust enough for big seas.
41:30 When has a saltwater leaking been a problem on Delos?
43:30 They will be taking 1, 2, 3, or 4 crew in addition to Brian, Brady, and Karin on the Atlantic crossing. 2 most likely. That crew list is not finalized…
44:00 Stops planned on the Atlantic crossing St. Helena, Ascension Island (possible), Namibia (sand dunes “droneland”), Brazil, Rio (possible), Salvador, Recife, Brazil…
45:00 Brian Trautman plans to go slow and only arrive in Trinadad in November 2017. Other round the world (circumnavigators) cruisers
45:50 SV Totem stopped in Namibia
46:00 Cruising in Namibia is tricky. There are only 2
47:30 How much time have you taken off the boat?
50:40 Last time hauled out the boat. Plan to haul next in Trinidad and Tobago…
52:05 What do you like about Cape Town, South Africa?
55:30 What is Durbin, South Africa like?
57:40 How many countries has Delos visited? 30 something…
58:00 What are the favorite countries you have visited?
Philippines, New Zealand, Madagascar…
58:45 What are the most recent upgrades to SV Delos?
Silent wind wind generator, dive gear, new camera gear, ice maker, dodger
59:30 It’s 5 O’clock in Cape Town! Beer!
1:01:30 Boat’s washing machine
1:03:20 What is you advice for someone wanting to start offshore cruising?
1:05:19 Moonshining & stills: Air Still and Turbo 500

by Linus Wilson (c) 2017

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Get a copy or free sample from my other books at

Slow Boat to the Bahamas

How to Sail Around the World Part-Time

Slow Boat to Cuba

Or support the podcast and or videos on Patreon for some awesome rewards, including a chance to star as a crew member on the Slow Boat!
https://www.patreon.com/slowboatsailing

Facebook:
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Twitter:
http://www.twitter.com/slowboatsailing

How to Transit the Panama Canal with Sailing LaVagabonde ‘s Line Handlers by Yacht-S1E11

See how to transit the Panama Canal in a small sailboat or yacht. This video puts you in the cockpit for each one of the six locks in the Gatun, Pedro Miguel, and Mira Flores locks of the Panama Canal. It shows you all the secrets of a successful Panama Canal transit.

You can skip ahead to the parts you want to see:
0:25 Shelter Bay Marina, Colon, Panama
0:28 Panama Canal agent
0:40 Line rental and fenders
0:50 Provisioning, groceries, and meals for line handlers at Rey Supermarket at the Quatros Altos Mall in Colon, Panama
1:15 Name painting tradition for Panama Canal transiting boats visiting Shelter Bay Marina in Colon, Panama
1:30 Our line handlers Jose & Pedro from Sailing La Vagabonde
1:50 Our line handler Pedro form Sailing La Vagabonde
1:58 Number of line handles needed = 4
2:04 Port of Cristobal
2:10 Flats Anchorage, Colon, Panama, Caribbean Sea, Atlantic Ocean
3:10 Our line handlers watch themselves on Sailing La Vagabonde Episode 35 & 36 at

3:48 Sophie gives art advice
5:10 Three options for transiting the Panama canal: 1. Tug Tied, 2. Rafted to Another Yacht, or 3. Wall Tied
5:00 Gatun locks
5:20 Rafting to another yacht
5:33 Monkey fist throw
5:45 Do all your line handlers need to be experienced?
6:25 Rafted in the center
6:55 Adjusting the lines when rising in the locks
7:00 Costs of transiting the Panama Canal
7:30 Walking the monkey fist
8:00 Do smaller boats need to use their engines when rafted?
9:05 Winching Panama Canal lines
10:34 Lock #3 of 3 of the Gatun Locks
10:50 Mooring v. anchoring in Gatun Lake
11:10 How to moor to moorings made for ships in Gatun Lake
11:35 Our second Panama Canal advisor on day 2
11:50 You need a galley slave on your Panama Canal Transit!
13:40 Pedro Miguel Lock
13:50 Rafting to a sidewall tied ferry
14:33 Are Panama Canal advisors helpful?
15:14 Currents created by ships in the locks
15:55 Last in first out (LIFO) rafting
16:30 Mira Flores lock 1 of 2
17:00 Discussion of the new Panama Canal locks launched in 2016
17:08 Covering solar panels to prevent damage
18:25 Mira Flores Lock #2 of 2
18:46 Unrafting
19:03 Exiting the Panama Canal in the Pacific Yacht Club
19:29 Port of Balboa, Panama
19:38 Balboa Yacht Club, Panama City
20:00 Moorings and dinghy ban in the Balboa Yacht Club
21:00 Plans to sail to Ecuador!
21:05 More Panama Canal tips
21:15 Benefits of supporting the channel at
http://www.Patreon.com/slowboatsailing
22:50 Bonus episodes, free audiobooks, drawing to sail with us, the Star/Executive Producer reward is awesome!
23:48 What is the most important thing to do when visiting Panama by sailboat or yacht?
25:00 Should you use volunteer or professional line handlers?
26:20 Insurance issues
27:00 How long does it take to get a Panama Canal transit date?
27:30 Agent or no Panama Canal agent? Which is better?
29:15 How to select a reputable Panama Canal agent?

This is episode 11 of Slow Boat Sailing’s round the world vlog series. You can watch this and past and future episodes at

Episode 12 will take the Slow Boat offshore to Ecuador and across the equator. Episode 10 in Panama and New Orleans will not be released to the public until June or July 2017. Patrons of the YouTube channel will get to see episode 10 three months earlier than the public.
Music by http://www.Bensound.com

Story, video, and editing by Linus Wilson (c) 2017
Associate Producer, Anders Colbenson

Sign up for our free newsletter at
http://www.slowboatsailing.com
for free books and sailing tips.

Like or follow us on Facebook and Twitter to get video announcements and updates on our travels and thoughts about sailing at

http://www.Facebook.com/slowboatsailing
or
http://www.twitter.com/slowboatsailing

Get a copy or free sample from my other books at

Slow Boat to the Bahamas

How to Sail Around the World Part-Time

Slow Boat to Cuba

Check out our free podcast at
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/slow-boat-sailing-podcast/id1084423845?mt=2
On the podcast we interview the most interesting sailors in the world such as the creators of SV Delos, Untie the Lines (White Spot Pirates), and Chase the Story (Turf to Surf and SV Cheeky Monkey).

Or support the podcast and or videos on Patreon for some awesome rewards, including a chance to star as a crew member on the Slow Boat!
https://www.patreon.com/slowboatsailing