Amatasi sailing to Helford River

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  • Опубликовано: 20 мар 2017
  • Amatasi, 27ft Wharram Ethnic Design, sails from Falmouth to the Helford river in Cornwall.

Комментарии • 9

  • @zenblack476
    @zenblack476 5 лет назад +4

    My dream is to build one of these I can’t wait till that day comes Where I get to feel her slipping by like that beautiful!

  • @outlander-x
    @outlander-x 6 лет назад

    super!

  • @nessuno1948
    @nessuno1948 7 лет назад

    Bella barca, un altro modo di andare per mare.

  • @gabrielsoul6856
    @gabrielsoul6856 7 лет назад

    This must be the most uncomfortabe boat I have ever seen

    • @RobbsHomemadeLife
      @RobbsHomemadeLife 7 лет назад +3

      we must be looking at different boats.

    • @gabrielsoul6856
      @gabrielsoul6856 7 лет назад

      Robb's Homemade Life No, we are looking at the same boat, the Amatasi ..dont you know what your looking at.?

    • @edwardjones8170
      @edwardjones8170 7 лет назад +4

      If the allure of this type sailboat is a mystery to you then you will never understand. But fear not, I'm sure the world is certainly happy to know your opinion.

    • @kellyhunt3958
      @kellyhunt3958 5 лет назад

      One of the most stable boat designs out there, fast safe and reliable, copied from the great Polynesian boats that sailed the world. (and a design that fits most budgets and skill levels, if you can use a jigsaw and apply fiberglass then you can build one of these in your garden)

    • @mossyoakshomestead8885
      @mossyoakshomestead8885 10 месяцев назад

      That is because you are blind, This vessel is based on a soman fishing boat, That is based on the Polynesian double canoe that conquered and populated over ten thousand square miles of the pacific islands above and below the equator in the most inhospitable ocean on the planet. From Easter Island to Hawaii to New Zealand and New Guinea, Known as the Polynesian Triangle, hundreds if not thousands of years before Europeans (and the Vikings) ever left the sight if the coastline in clunky slow heavy single hull vessels using sub standard Mechanical instrument navigation practices as opposed to Natural environmental navigation practices, On a European boat, when your clock stops, your sextant falls overboard or your nautical almanac is lost YOU are Fu#@ed, Polynesian Wayfinders just sail on using natures cues to navigate, finding little spots of land in a vast Ocean needing none of the Inferior mechanical navigation practices (still used today) of the Europeans, Educate yourself before making un educared comments in public.