Ian, our boat school teacher in South Africa & Namibia

During the last 6 months we had a stellar teacher aboard Nesi: Ian Bacon from Chicago (UCSB recent grad- go gauchos!!). He was aboard during the toughest sailing stretch we’re likely to have for a loooong time. We knew this was the case, so we wanted to find a super amazing person for the role… And guess what? We got very lucky 🙂

Here’s the story — and read at bottom for Ian’s impressions of life aboard & his favorite teaching activities with the girls.  

Check out all the posts from our previous teachers.

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Calling: Adventurous Teachers & Videographers

Would you like to sail the world, explore beautiful islands, live on an amazing community boat, while helping create an innovative program?

We are a sailing cooperative called Green Coco with catamarans run by sailing families. We have space for a teacher and videographer in Brazil and Caribbean 2025 & 2026 aboard 60ft Nesi (with Kristian & Sabrina) and in French Polynesia aboard 46ft Selavi (with David & Eleanor).

We are looking for:

  • TEACHER. A passionate & enthusiastic teacher for kids age 4-10, who embraces a whole child approach. Preference for native speakers of French, Portuguese, and English. Duration: 1-6 months.
  • VIDEOGRAPHER OR SOCIAL MEDIA EXPERT. Someone who loves capturing and editing videos, and/or has social media skills. Duration 1-6 months.

How to Apply: 3 steps.

  1. Please read below: Parenting Philosophy, Qualifications, Expectations Aboard.
  2. Fill out our application
  3. Email to expedition@greencoco.org a simple intro video about yourself (casual selfie is fine, 2 min max) and a basic resume (list of your relevant jobs, education, experiences, if you have a career mission statement). Videographers/social media experts: please share a portfolio or similar. We will also need 2 references, which you can supply later, don’t get bottlenecked with this.

Read below for more details on the positions, and check out all the posts from all our previous teachers.

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We started our Atlantic Crossing! Day 1-5

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Catch our daily updates on our Community site (free enrollment required) or on @greencocosailing

Preparation: Kids depart, Last Minute Repairs, Provisions

We had 3 weeks in Walvis Bay, Namibia to prepare for the Atlantic Crossing but it just is never enough. The girls & Sabrina said farewell to Nesi and flew back to Brasil with Grandma & sister Sammy — we had an awesome road trip which we’ll share later.

Upon my return, it was non-stop hustle to do repairs on the boat. The diesel fuel tank had a leak; major job. The starboard engine was still giving us alignment issues; major job. The new lithium battery banks needed more protection; major job. And endless minor jobs.

Our deckhand & electrician Dophaise played a key role, as he has done in the last 4 months. He has been a massive help, but we had to say good-bye as his time with us came to an end. He got a work-exchange job at a local farm near Windhoek, Namibia’s capital. His journey to find work abroad continues!

Provisioning is a HUGELY time consuming. This is a task that Sabrina does so well, and without her, our steward & first mate Ian Bacon and I would now have to figure it out. It took us multiple days to shop & pack the boat with multiple shopping carts worth of food, for 5 people aboard 33 days across the Atlantic (assuming we won’t provision in St. Helena Island, in the mid-ocean).

DAY 1: Our Atlantic Crossing begins!!!

Such a frenzy to prepare the boat this last week- repairs, provisions, documents.

Yet we managed to leave on the 13th of Jan with our co-op guests Kim and friend Shawn, plus my dad Bob and our first mate Ian.

Riding a South wind into the SE trade winds, heading to St Helena island, 1200nm (9 days) to arrival.

We’ve been FLYING ever since leaving Walvis Bay, averaging 8kts.

DAY 2: Towards the horizon

I won’t lie – heading into 3000nm of ocean is intimidating and scary… takes some trust and faith in all our hard work on the boat & experience.

I thank these dolphins for leading us into the big sea with their playful joy 🙂

We did 200nm on the first 24hrs- over 8kt average. Nesi is flying. 1000nm left for St Helena island.

Night watches were 3 hrs each. Captain K sleeping in the cockpit close at hand, as we wove between some cargo ships and fishing vessels, showing up on radar and AIS.

Full moon popped up thru the clouds to illuminate the ocean.

We are so HERE !

DAY 3: This is what trade wind dreams are made of!

Gentle downwind sailing. Perfection all around. 15kts breeze from ESE. Sailing WNW.

Yesterday was a little nuts with wind shifts and spinnaker tear; gotta pay the dues. Today repaired the small rip (caught on spreaders while furling).

I’d like to report to my land-bound wife @sabby_sirena that although our cabin is still utter mess from our departure chaos, we did clean the bathrooms and galley and are keeping a hawk’s eye on food spoiling. Make you proud honey.

We’ve already gone 1/3 of the way to St Helena— less than 800nm to go. yeww!!

Day 4: Flipping eggs!

This is how we keep 360 eggs unrefrigerated during our trip 🙂

Managing food is a major part of a passage or expedition. Try making wholesome healthy food for 5 people for 34 days without going to the grocery store! Here’s how we’re trying do it:


  • Fresh Food. In Walvis Bay Namibia, we filled 4 shopping carts worth of fruits & vegetables, meats & cheeses, dairy & eggs. Divided this into 10 baskets, 3 fridges, and 3 freezers. Produce is ideally fresh from a farmer’s market, unrefrigerated, which lasts much longer. However, the Namibian desert isn’t exactly a farmer’s paradise, a lot is imported from S. Africa, so we had an extra challenge with that.
  • Provisioning. There’s the equivalent of about 15 shopping carts of food packed into Nesi’s cupboards & bilges; these require shelves and plastic bins with labels and easy access. About 3 months worth of food. There’s stuff from every country in there: Seychelles, Madagascar, South Africa, Namibia. Try to keep track!
  • Food Management. The worst is to let food go bad. Each food category needs careful attention. Heard of the saying “one bad apple spoils the bunch”? The superstition that bananas are bad luck aboard? Nope, it’s not true, but there’s a reason for all of this!

How to deal with each of these food categories is in itself a fascinating story. Ever since our first days on Aldebaran crossing the Pacific from Galapagos to Pitcairn (21 days, 4 people, with just 1 mini fridge!) we’ve learned a lot.

In our modern world of refrigeration and ready access to groceries 24/7, we’ve lost the knowledge of food storage & preservation needed for off-grid living. We like bringing it back little by little, because it’s super cool, and hey, might be good to know someday.

Day 5… Broken Oven, Slow Spinnaker

We are going so slow its like we are walking across the ocean … it’s very relaxing haha .

3-4kt boat speed today with spinnaker just barely staying in the air. With zero wind yesterday we even stopped the motor for a quick swim which was delightful, the water is getting warmer, entering the tropics properly!!

Our power is ample with 2.5kw of solar ☀️ and new 800ah lithium batteries 🪫. This is fortunate because the gas burner in the oven is malfunctioning, so we are using the electric backup (which mows thru power. The oven thermocouple disconnected from the wire, i fixed it, not sure why it still is broken.)

No surprises here, everyday something breaks, usually small things… it almost seems like a law of boating. We are bobbing along. We had a massive egg & bacon breakfast to keep the crew morale up 🙂

Catch our daily updates on our Community site (free enrollment required for Public Updates; co-op membership required for Private Member site) or on @greencocosailing

Don’t forget!

Deadline for our Expedition Letters Launch is January 20, 2025 — you’ll receive a raffle ticket for a FREE boat trip (if you’re one of the 50 first subscribers); and option to nominate a teacher to receive the letters. These our monthly delivered by snail mail to your house, ideal for families, kids, and schools.

Learn more here: www.greencoco.org/#letters

Opportunity: new captains wanted for the 42ft trimaran Aldebaran!

Have you dreamed of cruising on a sailboat in tropical paradises, hosting friends & guests, and living a healthy awesome life at sea? The Green Coco cooperative makes this possible for aspiring captains with amazing hosting skills, who may not have enough funds to jump into multi-hull ownership, but really want to do this now while young!

Aldebaran in Tikehau, western Tuamotus (French Polynesia)

Our world-cruising trimaran Aldebaran is ready for new owners. We’re looking for an awesome couple with these skills:

  • experienced seamanship – prior boat ownership a big plus
  • love to host guests – positive energy is a must
  • culinary arts – you love to cook wholesome food for groups and are creative with ingredients
  • holistic health – like yoga, meditation, and similar
  • business acumen – you’ll be running your own business, with the co-op’s support
  • boat work – carpentry & fiberglass skills are essential, plus normal boatwork
  • French language and/or European citizen are a big plus.

Please see the sale listing for the 42ft trimaran Aldebaran including prices.

The Green Coco cooperative can offer seller financing to the right applicants — which means you may only need money for the deposit (~30% of boat price). You’ll own the boat outright, run a sailing cooperative business with adventurous guests, and live the cruising life in the South Seas.

If this is your dream and you fulfill most of that list above, we welcome you to apply! Please review the information here and see “How to Apply” at bottom.

Aldebaran in Ahe, northern Tuamotus (French Polynesia)

Quick info about Aldebaran:

  • 42 foot trimaran built in 1968 in Hawaii with mahogany and polyester resin
  • Accommodation: Sleeps 6-8. Includes:
    • sleeps 2: 1 private aft cabin with 1 double bed, deck access behind cockpit. Usually the couple who owns the boat sleeps here.
    • sleeps 4: 2 double beds in the open plan salon
    • sleeps 2: 2 single benches in the cockpit (all-weather enclosure) for short term extra capacity
  • The boat has been imported into French Polynesia — the boat never has to leave! This is worth several thousand $$.
  • Inventory of parts available on the Boat listing page.

Why are we selling?

Hi! We are Billy & Kimber. We’ve had amazing adventures on Aldebaran in the Society Islands (Tahiti to Bora-Bora) and around the Tuamotus (Tikehau to Tahanea), while running Green Coco trips in the past 4 years. She is a fantastic liveaboard, we’ve spent weeks aboard the boat in remote atolls, which are total paradise. We’ll able to stay off-grid thanks to her 900w of solar panels, new AGM battery bank, and watermaker.

We also love that Aldebaran is super stable and spacious which helps a lot with comfort at anchor and underway. The guests love Aldebaran’s stability and wide deck / nets. She sails well on all points of sail, although she doesn’t go upwind very well in rough seas. We try to wait for good conditions which is viable in the tropics.

The boat’s greatest downside is that she’s very maintenance intensive (err… I guess all boats are??). Aldebaran in particular constantly needs love with woodwork and fiberglass repairs. We’ve been keeping up with the maintenance & repairs. The boat is in overall good shape, but needs work & funds and could use a fiberglass overhaul in the next few years.

Aldebaran is scheduled for a haul out in Sep 2024 so she will have a fresh coat of bottom paint and be ready to continue the adventure. If interested in seeing her out of water (very recommended) we can suggest flying down to Tahiti and taking the ferry to Raiatea to meet us.

After the last 4 years sailing Aldebaran in French Polynesia and participating in the Green Coco cooperative, we’re now planning a different project back in the East Coast of US, so we are selling the boat.

Recent adventures of Billy & Kimber on Aldebaran


Aldebaran’s history

Prior to Billy & Kimber, Aldebaran crossed the Pacific with Kristian & Sabrina, the founders of the Green Coco sailing cooperative. They launched the co-op by running trips in the Channel Islands of Santa Barbara aboard this trimaran, which is nostalgically beloved by many of our members 🙂 Over the course of 4 years, they sailed down the coast of Mexico and Central America to Galapagos, then 21 days across to Pitcairn, and finally up to French Polynesia, where the boat has been since. Under their ownership, they hauled out Aldebaran in Ventura (2009, 2011, 2013); in Marquesas (2017); and in Tahiti (2020). They sold the boat to Billy & Kimber when they upgraded to their 46ft catamaran Selavi in 2020, as they began expanding the cooperative.

This video gives you a great idea of life on Aldebaran in 2018 (Huahine, French Polynesia)and also our fun-loving co-op ! 🙂

Pictures from our first year in 2015:

About the Green Coco sailing cooperative

Green Coco is a community organization that offers authentic sailing adventures in French Polynesia and around the world, which are family-friendly and off-the-beaten path. Our boats are owner-operated, offering a real taste of the cruising life at sea. Guests participate in boat activities to feel truly part of the journey. We create transformative, learning voyages with a wellness focus: offering workshops in breathwork, yoga, sailing, cooking, and more, which contribute meaningfully to visitor’s daily life back at home. The majority of trips include members who come back regularly over the years; everyone lends a hand on the boat. As a result, our trips and interactions with guests are like family & friends, very different to conventional charter trips.

The co-op was born out of the question: how do can we live the cruising dream together with our friends, without waiting until retirement? Normally this is financially out of reach for younger people. We came up with a system for everyone to share resources: to pitch in funds and/or work exchange to be able to get time aboard.

Co-op members are like micro-partners who have access to the boats, having a say in where the boats go, creating schedules that accommodate their plans, etc. Member contributions are designed to cover costs of operation and overall basic life needs — not generate substantial business profits. If you’re looking to make plenty of money running charters, this isn’t for you! This is about the best lifestyle possible, covering all our costs of life, where you look forward to hosting people because they’ll become great new friends.

The co-op’s service to the community is to offer affordable, authentic sailing experiences which are invigorating and strengthen our connection with Nature and ourselves. The co-op makes this possible by enabling & supporting young couples who want to live this dream but may not have the funds to do it on their own. We offer several programs to help finance the boat and your ongoing expenses.

Currently the co-op has 3 boats: Aldebaran and Selavi (46ft Bahia catamaran) both in French Polynesia and Nesi (60ft Eleuthera catamaran) currently in the Indian Ocean. Nesi is leading the Green Coco Expedition, an innovative world schooling project. Read more about the Expedition and our co-op. We are growing the co-op which will bring more resources to all the Partner Boats.

Why not just sell Aldebaran?

That is an option! If we don’t find a perfect candidate, we may sell the boat outright. But we want to make it available via seller financing including the co-op business, because we believe in this model and we think it’ll make the pie bigger for everyone.

The value to us? Our co-op members continue to have access to a great boat in the South Pacific, and another awesome new couple gets to enjoy this lifestyle. We get to “pay it forward”, and see the co-op grow.

What does the co-op do for Partner Boats?

For folks who want to participate in the co-op (running trips for members and new guests) we offer seller financing and reduced interest rates (muuuuuuch lower than banks!). Green Coco also provides ways to raise funds to pay off some of the boat loan and have money for your boat expenses — it is very important to be well capitalized with boat ownership.

This is Selavi, the Green Coco 46ft catamaran shown in Bora-Bora. The boat was sold last year to new Co-op Partner David & Eleanor (@designedtoexplore) who are learning the ropes and will start running trips next year.

Partner boats operate like independent businesses that collaborate through the co-op. Green Coco offers several aspects to help you with back-end of business — pre trip documents, protocols for hosting guests, accounting systems. We are building a co-op website for trips and schedules so you don’t have to. Running a boat is already a lot of work, so the co-op tries to make the rest of life easier for everyone by joining forces with different partner boats.

What about sales and marketing? The co-op does general marketing and sales for all boats. Although Green Coco makes no guarantees on sales or revenues, we create alignment of interest so we can bring you business. That said, you’ll be running your own business and it’s on you to succeed.

If interested in learning more, send in your application and we’ll send you an deeper financial overview of the Co-op and the relationship with Partner Boats.

Who are the ideal candidates?

The ideal candidates are a captain & first mate/chef couple. They are exceptional hosts, very adept sailors, able to fix most things aboard a sailboat. For Aldebaran, they need to be able to do regular wood work and fiberglass repairs (which is always in need of love). They enjoy cooking delicious wholesome food, practice wellness like yoga & meditation, excel at communication, are natural at teaching (sailing, freediving, etc) and are endlessly patient, hard-working.. and of course are an avid waterman/woman who love ocean sports like surfing, kiting, diving, long distance swimming, etc.

This position is for a couple with entrepreneurial spirit who always dreamed of owning their own boat and business, and are very community oriented and sociable. You’ll be part of the Green Coco cooperative, a sailing organization that creates unique, participatory adventures at sea. We aren’t a regular charter company… we are a private group of ocean lovers and adventurers who also offer public trips. Read our testimonials.

Requirements for applicants (see “How to Apply” at bottom):

  • a captain with experience navigating in complex environments under pressure keeping 100% cool and good attitude
  • an enthusiastic first mate/chef with passion for wholesome, nutritious food
  • knowledge and enjoyment of wellness practices such as yoga, breathwork, meditation, non-violent communication, and similar
  • experience in freediving, scuba diving, surfing, kitesurfing, and other water sports
  • loves to teach others and has patience with guests and kids
  • you have some savings or access to financing — both for the deposit and have capital for ongoing improvements until the boat has cashflow.
Co-op crew in Bora Bora

Details

The sale listing for our 42ft trimaran Aldebaran is here. She is available for purchasing outright if we don’t receive qualified applicants.

What you’ll get exactly:

  • full ownership of a classic 42 foot catamaran with 3 double beds + 2 surplus bunks (sleeps 6-8). Includes French Polynesia importation duties.
  • business partnership in Green Coco, with a revenue stream that is fun and satisfying.
  • if needed, seller financing with very competitive terms — extremely tough to get these days

As a business partner / boat owner, you’ll be in charge of your own future and gain profits according to your work, backed by the Green Coco cooperative to reduce your risk.

Through our co-op investment program, we may be able to help you secure a part of the downpayment with pre-sales, and reduce your total debt.

We’re really proud to be able to offer this to someone. We consider ourselves super lucky we pulled off the best sailing lifestyle imaginable (at least for us!). Now we get to help someone else launch their dream too. Honestly, it is all thanks to our cooperative, who continues to make this epic Green Coco adventure possible. We are harvesting some serious collective stoke 🙂

Timeline

Billy & Kimber can offer sea trials on Aldebaran in August 10-30, 2024 (transiting from Tuamotus to Raiatea), just pay our normal co-op rates. They will haul out in Raiatea for bottom paint and maintenance in early September, then the boat is available for transferring ownership after mid-September.

HOW TO APPLY:

If you’d like to become the next Aldebaran captains in French Polynesia, please apply by sending the following 3 items to captain@greencoco.org:

  1. VIDEO: a 2 minute video introducing yourselves. A casual selfie is fine! Don’t overthink it, it’s just an opportunity to say hi and introduce who you are.
  2. RESUMES: please send your resume (nothing fancy needed.. please don’t spend too much time on making this perfect, we don’t judge editing mistakes…). Important: send us a short addendum about your experience with sailing, cooking, hospitality, holistic health, boat work & repairs. In your email, please mention anything that wasn’t covered in your video and resume.
  3. FINANCING: How much downpayment can you make? We recommend minimum 30% of boat value and equal amount in savings for the year 1 costs.

Please send the above 3 items to captain@greencoco.org.

THANK YOU AND GOOD LUCK!

Aldebaran was on the cover of Multi-hull magazine back in the day — her 15 minutes of fame 🙂

How the Granite Rocks of Seychelles were formed

“These rocks are fake. It’s just a Hollywood set for a movie,” Ian said, after we anchored next to the St. Pierre islet. “They are actually styrofoam cutouts with spray paint.” We laughed. They simply don’t look real.

We were now in the area around Praslin & La Digue islands, the most famous cruising ground in the Seychelles. We were halfway through our 12 day shakedown cruise testing Nesi‘s systems.

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Zoe: our Boat School teacher from Tahiti to Seychelles

Zoe was our second pre-school teacher to come aboard Green Coco — she is from Corsica (a territory of France), and recently finished her teaching credential. She wanted to experience alternative forms of education for kids. She was onboard starting in French Polynesia, and helped us fly to California and then to Seychelles, and make the transition across the world to our new boat.

Zoe & Naiyah in Mahe, Seychelles

Have you ever seen people so excited to make something happen, you just know they’ll be great for the job? That was Zoe.   As I picked her up with the dinghy at the dock in Bora-Bora, she said, “Only seeing you now, do I believe you guys are real. I mean, teaching kids on a cruising sailboat?  This is my dream.” 

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The first 3 weeks in Seychelles

Aside from the jet lag — 7am in California is 7pm here! — we felt a surreal sensation to be aboard Nesi .

While sailing in the Tuamotus, one year ago, we envisioned this distant, unlikely possibility. I sent an investment proposal to our community for a 15 year sailing circumnavigation, took the chance to fly across the world to visit 2 boats in the Seychelles, leaving Sabrina in command of Selavi with the kids in Fakarava (and guests that arrived before my return!) and spent the next several months in a whirlwind: fund-raising, hosting trips, Burning “Muddy” Man, never-ending boat repairs, a complicated boat sale, growing our co-op, squeezing in a snow vacation, and finally moving across the globe with 2 kids and 18 bags.

This 12 month tornado somehow deposited us back onboard Nesi, at the dock in Mahé island where I’d last seen her, except now, with the whole family together. The whole thing felt like a strange and beautiful dream.

My greatest pleasure is that Sabrina and the kids loved the boat from the first moment, which I was wondering about! After all, Sabrina wasn’t the hugest fan of the boat (Aquatiki II in Fakarava) that inspired our hunt for this specific model around the world (a Fountaine Pajot Eleuthera 60ft catamaran). That boat was running dive charters and was quite beat up and messy. When I saw Aquatiki II, I knew she was the right model, the right foundation for our next phase. Nesi is the exact same model boat, yet she feels palatial and elegant, well-cared for and delightful in all her spaces. All the videos of the boat weren’t nearly as convincing as the moment that Sabrina stepped aboard and said, “Ok, now I get it. This is amazing!” How satisfying and relieving!

After arriving, we had 3 weeks to prepare the boat for our first Shakedown Cruise with two co-op members, our rigger Ian, and my mom. This was much too little time, yet I figured it would push us to act quickly. Push us it did!

The basic problem is that Nesi is a “marina boat”, and we need to convert her into an “off-grid cruising boat”.

To understand this task, imagine that a huge flood caused your suburban house to suddenly lose all its utilities: water, power, gas. The huge flood also caused the main hardware store to close, leaving only the mini-stores open; and all the good handy workers (electricians, carpenters, etc) simply can’t reach you, only an array of inexperienced workers. Worse yet, the mail delivery stopped, so you have no access to online purchases.

In such a huge symbolic “flood”, we suddenly must turn to complete self-reliance and independence. This is a challenging shift to make.

The good news is that Nesi is a well cared for boat and all her systems were functional; the foundation is excellent. The bad news is that Nesi is still a boat , and all her systems needed tons of attention, and major upgrades to transition her from “marina boat” to “off-grid cruising boat” status.

The first round of our journey features some non-trivial destinations: sailing to Madagascar, Mozambique, and South Africa. So the success of our quest has big implications.

First item on the agenda: figure out how to run this big 60ft boat.

In general everything is similar to our old 46ft catamaran, but massively sized, and much more complicated. The mainsail is gigantic and runs on multiple electric winches. The windlass is enormous with 14mm (unmarked) chain. There are twin 110HP turbo engines (which were misaligned), a 12kW electronic Generator, and a complex series of battery chargers and inverters. The electrical system is the most complicated & non-intuitive part of the boat, featuring both 24v and 12v, and three different 220v circuits. There is an air conditioning system with 3 compressors that cools all five cabins plus the large salon. There is a high output 65 Gallon per hour watermaker (which was not 100% well-maintained)

We also had to figure out how to live aboard the boat… how to keep food in the fridges (which were icing over and dripping wet), to cook properly (the oven needed a new burner), and store belongings (this boat strangely has less storage space our 46ft catamaran). Meanwhile we had to entertain and teach our kids, who were thriving with our onboard teacher Zoe from Corsica, who helped us in the epic journey from Tahiti.

Lest we forget, we are in East Africa. It’s easy to overlook this since Seychelles is the most affluent African country, and everything costs a fortune, so you’d hope this would translate to good quality. Alas, this was optimistic thinking.

Seychelles is a fascinating and beautiful place, but efficiency is not her forte. She has plenty of character, being a melting pot of Middle Eastern, Indian, and European cultures. Seychelles’ history is unique. When the French first claimed Seychelles in 1756, there were no permanent inhabitants, only transient Arabic sailors.

This is surprising because Seychelles are large islands with relative proximity to many populated areas. To get a sense, some of the closest places are Madagascar is 550nm SW, then Somalia is 700nm NW, then Tanzania is 900nm W. In the other direction, India is 1500nm NE.

Do you know another archipelago (near the equator) that was uninhabited when Europeans arrived, just 500nm from a continent? Galapagos. It’s probably no coincidence that the only two places on Earth with wild-roaming Giant Tortoises are Galapagos and Seychelles (as far as I know). Those species were prolific around the world, but they were exterminated by hunters, except in these two island groups that remained largely uninhabited until the mid 1700s.

Just 40 years after the French colonized Seychelles, they gave it up to the British in 1796. Unfortunately, this means the baguettes and croissants aren’t nearly as good as those in Tahiti. On the plus side, English is the lingua franca. Seychellois, the creole language spoken by all the locals, is essentially like French with an extremely heavy African-style accent, which survives from that first era of French control. We can’t understand it, but if we speak French, the locals can understand.

The Seychelles feels like a Caribbean island — with its relaxed “island time” vibe and Rasta influences — yet with African edginess. Many people are gentle and chill. Yet we are constantly caught off guard by the proud, head strong approach of many locals that can be mistaken for unfriendliness and even bitter spitefulness.

The fact that tourism is the primary economy in Seychelles causes a well-known distortion in culture. Places like Costa Rica and Mediterranean villages also reflect this issue: when flamboyantly rich visitors contrasts with a humble community, it can be a ripe breeding ground for resentment and local self-entitlement.

Like the Caribbean, the Seychelles has the added karmic load of dealing with absurdly affluent yachts. This ranges from the fleets of charter cats that rake in $20K per week, to dealing with several multi-million dollar mega-yachts owned by Arabic sultans and Russian oligarchs which flaunt their shores. An incredible number of foreign-owned mansions also dot the islands.

All these factors lead to a community of boating professional that is generally, ahem… difficult to work with. The golden goose (rich yachties) is constantly being squeezed of its fat. What’s left is a mishmash of boat workers who range from too busy, to utter incompetence. The default situation here is to over-charge wildly for mediocre work.

In fact, we’ve been struggling with these issues ever since we purchased the boat last July. The charter manager that was going to run the boat on a few ten day charters, to cover the costs of our boat sitting at the marina hemorrhaging money, failed abysmally. Not only did we not cover our costs, we lost a pile of money.

The issue of having reliable help continued in the first 3 weeks we were aboard. People were charging us for services we didn’t ask for. People were charging us steep fees for “using their own tools” ontop of their regular wages. Ridiculous stuff. Yet as a newbie just trying to get stuff done, I was stuck between a rock and hard place. Worse even than incompetence, people responded to critique with verbal attacks. I got into more fights with people in those 3 weeks than I have in 3 years. Granted, I was stressed, but I was not proud of this, nor was it conducive to my mental wellbeing.

As the weeks passed and the repair / improvement list was ticked slowly, I became increasingly anxious. Just to get a straight price or quote from anyone was like pulling teeth. To get them to show up was an exercise in incessant phone calls and perseverance. Eventually, the generator was serviced, we bought a brand new dinghy & outboard, fixed various leaks. But as we approached the start of our Shakedown cruise, the boat still felt in pieces.

A few people were redeeming forces: our boat manager & surveyor Vincent Leon is an honest, incorruptible & super helpful guy. The previous owner of the boat, Stephane is responsive to any questions and spends time so I can understand systems. The old captain of the boat Patrick is a delightful hard worker, and straight with his word. Sadly he injured his knee and had to stop working but his very presence gave me hope. Eventually he connected us with a deckhand Kenneth that had those same virtues, which I appreciated greatly, amidst the chaos of everything else.

The best money we spent was flying our friend and rigger Ian Weedman to Seychelles. He is an absolute joy to be around and a total master of his craft. His plan was to join us for a week of boatwork, the 12 day Shakedown Cruise, then 2 weeks of re-rigging Nesi with the mast laying on the ground. A huge job to do in a foreign country, and simply irreplicable, because the one rigger on the island can’t keep up with the work demand of all the charter boats. More on this essential piece of our sailing preparations later.

Finally I felt grateful and re-charged to see my mother Susie, who arrived at the end of this 3 week period. Our current teacher Zoe was departing and we had a gap of a month before the next teacher arrived. So my mom took over the duties of being with the kids, which was simply a joy to watch and be around.

During those 3 weeks, we managed to cast the dock lines twice. We spent one night each time at a nearby islet 20 minutes from the harbor, to test the battery systems. One time we managed to lose our brand new dinghy due to a pathetic slippery line, and we came way too close to the reef in our effort to recuperate the dinghy (Sabrina eventually got it back by swimming!) The second time was better, so this was re-assuring, but we still didn’t really understand how to manage the boat’s electrical system. Furthermore, one of the engines still had charging / alignment problems.

With some things going our way, and many things not, we hustled to prepare our first Shakedown Cruise with our co-op members Judy and Matt. They signed up for this knowingly, ie. the unknown of our preparations. Yet, we personally didn’t anticipate being in such a state of disarray.

Breathe, I reminded myself. It’s all gonna be ok. In this process of keeping faith, and moving forward, we remembered a simple truth: We don’t belong in the marina. Within a few days of leaving, and being offshore again, everything seemed to fall into place….

Interested? See our schedule of trips here — we only have one cruising trip still open this year (plus a few passages available).