Teleport, north atlantic 29

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  • 25 Mar 2013 20:37
    Reply # 1251493 on 574386
    Deleted user
    Chris and Jess completed their North West Passage trip some time ago. You can find a link to a podcast interview with them in my 29th March post here, plus news about a forthcoming interview with David Tyler. Teleport's own site is http://www.yachtteleport.com/
    Last modified: 25 Mar 2013 20:57 | Deleted user
  • 27 Oct 2011 13:00
    Reply # 734544 on 574386
    I just read a nice article about Teleport's successful completion of stage 1 of their Northwest passage voyage, in the Calgary Herald (calgaryherald.com), entitled, "Aussie couple sailing yacht through Northwest Passage". I wanted to point out that the journalist made an error (somtimes they don't listen carefully) in stating that they are ".... the first sailors to begin navigating a junkrig yacht through the ice-laden seaway."
    The first was Colin Irwin, back in the sixties. I put Chris in touch with him and they corresponded. Colin tried with a 19ft., whalebacked, fibreglass, engineless purpose built boat. It had an enormous winch on the foredeck for hauling itself out onto ice if it were trapped. I believe Blondie Hasler designed the rig as he did Teleport's (being co-designer with Angus Primrose). And, I think Michael Ritchie taught him how to sail it. Michael, as everyone knows, was owner of Jester, the inspiration for Teleport's design. Unfortunately, he was prevented from getting all the way through by a particularly bad ice year. Of course, in those days, ice was a more formidable barrier. Had he succeeded, he would have been the first person to take any kind of sailboat through the Northwest Passage. Colin decided to try something different and trekked across the north of Canada, from one side to the other by dogsled with Inuit guides, landing him on the cover of National Geographic. By the way, Colin was aboard Teleport, then Marco Polo, on the day I took her out for her maiden sail in 1988.
  • 21 Aug 2011 14:28
    Reply # 681328 on 574386
    Deleted user
    I've been checking daily too. Is a great read. Looks like they have ~700nm to go, another week at their rate sofar....   They must be doing a lot of motoring.
    Last modified: 21 Aug 2011 14:36 | Deleted user
  • 20 Aug 2011 23:24
    Reply # 681043 on 681027
    Robert Groves wrote:Anyone checking the progress of Teleport? Their in the Northwest Passage despite being plagued with problems. Their reports are interesting, the photography sensational. Check them out.
    Yes, I check their position daily. They're now though Pond Inlet, behind Bylot Island, and I was surprised at the speed they kept up across Baffin Bay. The ice conditions must be fairly easy, and they've crossed south of the central mass of ice, which is small. It used to be that you had to go north of it to reach the polynia that allowed access to the NW passage. How things have changed in the last few decades.
    I do envy them the photo of Teleport through the iceberg arch!
  • 20 Aug 2011 22:50
    Reply # 681027 on 574386
    Deleted user
    Anyone checking the progress of Teleport? Their in the Northwest Passage despite being plagued with problems. Their reports are interesting, the photography sensational. Check them out.
  • 17 Jul 2011 02:58
    Reply # 656634 on 574386
    Deleted user
    I'm envious of anyone heading off on an adventure like this...I would be there in a minute if given the opportunity.  However, I think that now a lot of folks venture off knowing that if the shit hits the fan, they can call for help and all is fine, what an adventure.  Having sponsors changes the perspective too.  So yes I admire them for taking the plunge but no I don't put them in the same league as some of the folks here on the JRA. 
  • 17 Jul 2011 00:57
    Reply # 656533 on 574386
    This expedition reminds me of another I encountered years ago. I read an article in the 60's in Argosy Magazine about a fellow named Colin Erwin who was attempting to sail through the North West Passage single handed, in a 19', fiberglass, whale-backed junk rig. (We met years later at Dalhousie University in Halifax.) I think Blondie Hasler had a hand in the design. Either Blondie or Mike Richey taught him how to use the junk rig. In those days, there was much more ice than today. The boat was bilge keeled, I think, and fitted with a large winch which allowed him to pull out onto an ice flow if trapped. The rudder was demountable. I think he tried going from West to East in two legs. However, he was unable to get through before winter set in because of unusual ice conditions that year. How things have changed! He then proceeded to organize a trek across the top of Canada by dogsled (with an Inuit guide) from West to East, writing it up for National Geographic Magazine. It so happens that Colin was aboard Teleport for her maiden voyage. Interesting coincidence. Colin was the first person to try the NWP in a junk rig.

    By the way, he passed along a useful hint from his mentor concerning the control of that unruly mainsheet  net that sweeps the stern (and anything attached to it) during a gybe. Blondie (or Mike) told him to fit a long bungy cord from one side of the boat to the other with hooks on each end, in line with the end of the boom. When the boat gybes, the mainsheet goes limp and the bungy chord gently cradles the web of sheet and sheetlets, drawing them inboard until the sail pulls the lot taught again, stretching the cord. No snagging on wind vanes, aerials etc. I tried it myself and it worked well. Somehow it seemed untidy or makeshift but if it works, it works!
  • 11 Jul 2011 11:45
    Reply # 650477 on 574386
    I think it's time to wade in. I'm the builder of Teleport, once Marco Polo III. I would like to fill in some background. I built her between 1976 and 1988. The hull and coach roof are 6 layers and 5 layers, respectively, of Western Red Cedar using epoxy, sheathed with 10 oz cloth. The hull is 7/8" thick and very stiff. At the time I understood that, cold molding, pound for pound, was the strongest form of boat hull construction. The specs called for mahogany. I substituted cedar because of price and workability. I increased the thickness, with approval from Meade Gougeon by 1/8", to compensate for the difference in strength characteristics. As it was, I had to steam many pieces to get them to bend to the tight curves. The hull was further strengthened by numerous laminated ash frames in the forepeak. Cedar, however, has poor impact resistance. I consciously decided never to take her near ice.

     In an earlier writeup in his blog, in a piece of journalistic hyperbole, intended no doubt to achieve dramatic effect,  Chris wrote, "....we innocently bought a rotten old yacht in Canada in 2009." I called him on that; he apologised and revised his description, to read, "tired old yacht", which is still misleading. Let's try, "a neglected yacht."

    The boat was put up for sale in 2006 and sold in October 2007 to Don McIntyre. It was his intention to sail or ship it to the UK to take part in the 2009 Jester Challenge. I was delighted that a veteran single-hander would enter Marco Polo in this race. She is after all, the "son of Jester" and I think Blondie would have been delighted too. Unfortunately, family responsibility intervened and he cancelled that plan. He then embarked on an expedition called the "Talisker Bounty Boat Voyage 2010"  http://www.bountyboat.com/  Chris Bray was scheduled to participate at the beginning, to take part but stepped off. He then acquired Marco Polo from Don which he renamed Teleport.

    The boat was purchased sight unseen, un-surveyed but for a 2006 survey where there was indication of delamination in a portion of the after-deck. Chris acquired her in 2007, also sight unseen and un-surveyed. The boat sat in the yard, covered in shrink wrap, from 2006 until 2010, cooking in the sun. No provision was made for survey or repair. I volunteered to ensure the cover remained intact. By the time he got to her in the Spring of 2010, the rot had spread throughout the after-deck and in other deck areas. However, the boat, apart from the affected deck areas and adjacent bits is essentially very sound. Hull, coach roof, keel, deadwood and spars are in excellent condition. (The mast, however, above what one could reach on deck, has never been surveyed nor has it been out of the boat for probably 6 years.) A properly built and maintained wood/epoxy boat can last many decades. Chris and Jess have done a marvelous job of restoration and upgrading for two handed cruising. I like what he has done to improve accommodation in the saloon. They accomplished in three months what would have taken me three years.

    When I learned that Chris planned to do the North West Passage, however, my heart sank.  I have tried three times to start a discussion of the vulnerability of the cedar hull material in ice, starting long before he got here and each time there is no comment, no discussion, no argument, no excuses, just.... silence. I suggested sheathing in Kevlar. (I met a fellow who did that to his 40ft fibreglass boat which to took through the NWP, West to East.) No response.

    I have committed my share of youthful follies that cost me time, money and heartache. But nobody else got hurt. From the very outset, I have felt they are playing Russian roulette with this boat. Of course, we all wish them the best. I sincerely hope they slip through without major incident, and write a book about it: "Ripping Tales from the North".

    I have kept arms length from this project from the beginning, apart from answering questions and helping a little bit here and there. You have to let go. If we found problems, I would have felt guilty, whether it was my fault or not. If advice was given that was not heeded but proved prescient, I would have felt guilty for not being persuasive enough. And last but not least, I think it's the wrong boat for the voyage. Well, its their boat now. Nevertheless, I will be following them like an anxious parent.

    Jim Creighton

  • 27 Jun 2011 00:04
    Reply # 631103 on 574386
    Deleted user
    One can view the online tracking at http://www.yachtteleport.com/. Look to the right hand side of the page for "Postion". Teleport is heading up the west coast of Newfoundland towards the Strait of Belle Isle. Chris and Jess will post more reports and photos during the trip.

    Chris has quite a resume as an adventurer and photographer. Great deal of Arctic, Antarctic and ocean sailing experience. Check out his site at http://www.chrisbray.net/


    Last modified: 27 Jun 2011 00:05 | Deleted user
  • 24 Jun 2011 00:59
    Reply # 629003 on 574386
    "It ain't the ships, it's the men in 'em". Chris and Jess impressed me when I met them as being two people who could do the job if anyone could; but I just hope Teleport doesn't let them down by being that little bit too old, too weak. I'm disturbed by the way they keep discovering new areas of rot, and I would want more than six thin layers of soft cedar between me and an ice floe. I do hope they have the courage to turn back if they realise that Teleport isn't going to make it.
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