If you think this was a waste of time, you don't understand what Thor Heyerdahl was proving. The key is that ancient boats were quite capable of long voyages and that the oceans were roads not barriers. Getting some practice with these ancient boats, both reed and raft, helps us better understand what was really possible in antiquity. It isn't just about showing where the polynesians came from.
"It isn't just about showing where the polynesians came from" Except this doesn't show where the Polynesians came from because they weren't from South America.
Lita Kinikini Well i can tell you that we didnt come from south america... we came from the east, from New Zealand and branched out west toward Hawaii. . . .
From the many wonderful books that my grandfather gave me as a child which sparked my love for travel and adventure, the book on the Kon Tiki voyage might had been my favourite.
I vividly remember attending a theatre in Toronto with my Dad, an avid amateur sailor, to see the original motion picture of Kon Tiki. He talked about the 'show' for days afterward; he would have loved this 'Kon Tiki Two' adventure, in glorious colour! "I must go down to the sea again,.........................." RIP Dad.
This is completing a circle for a lot of us who were encouraged by the original story to dare to go where we might not have gone with our lives. Many thanks to all involved.
This is a great inspiring ocean adventure. Nice to see it done again. There was much more fish in the ocean in the time of Kon Tiki expedition and much less polution. We made such a big change in the ocean in just fifty years. As I remember the book, they see sharks every day.
Absolute fact and interesting as well... On a smaller scale supporting your comment, during covid, in America, I have visited many beaches from California to Florida...during the months of beach shutdowns, their were an abundance of marine wildlife, sand dollars, tropical neon fluorescent fish, and huge 4 ft tall birds who would stroll the beaches alongside me, I have a few videos of it and all.. Humankind has truly become detrimental to this planets nourishment...
After a very hard sea crossing through the Pacific Ocean, they arrived at this paradise; the islands of the South Sea, Polynesia th-cam.com/video/bH8wMypKn3Y/w-d-xo.html
Overfishing.....I agree, but it's weird, because I've never seen this overabundance. Are you sure it's not part of the plan? Corporate greed can be counted on?
I read Kontiki at School and was enthralled, and this is great to see it rerun, but the original proved a point and a theory. Since then we have learnt a lot fir Leather Boats and Brendan the Navigator etc .
Fantastic story and follow up to his grandfathers amazing journey(s). As a HAM radio operator (n3glv) I was shocked and almost brought to tears over the story of the old man who was helped by a fellow ham, all those years before. Excellent stuff guys!
Your comment is old but I agree. I love ham radios. My dad did them when I was a kid and I remember being 5 and listening to a guy talk about how cold it was in Russia. I’ve talked to an astronaut on the iss. Just for a minute but it was very neat
If a few guys with little knowledge of sailing an ocean going raft can carry out such intricate navigation after self teaching over a few months, just think good the original pilots would have been with generations of experience. Overly programme. I read the book in school in the early 1960s - it was a wonderful just post WW2 expedition just when people needed to hear of such a peaceful adventure after years of war and austerity. Nice to see 2 generations later the same need for simple adventure still exists.
thanks for your comment on the knowledge factor...ha ha..amazing for sure what is possible. It is a joy to hear others recalling having read the book in the 1960s. At 10yrs old, I built a 15 inch long model of a raft out of parts of bamboo strips of old awning on our patio.The Scandinavian people are so strong, healthy and take daily time out for a tea and biscuit with friends.. turn off electronics!!please! This unity of brotherhood of diverse people will save us in world disaster. .
I find it amazing that people thousands of years ago jumped on to a raft and sailed into a seemingly endless ocean in hopes of finding another landmass supported by the migration of birds, if even that. I love humanity.
@@Namibiets we love to expand though. We never have enough. Thats how our species so rapidly migrated across the globe and adapted to every environment. Now we are going to space. Give it a few millenia we will somehow run out of enough of it and we will start looking for new solar systems. Everything under the great blue sky, as the khans said
you all probably dont give a shit but does anybody know a way to log back into an instagram account?? I was stupid forgot my login password. I appreciate any tips you can give me!
@Adrien Randall thanks so much for your reply. I got to the site on google and im in the hacking process atm. Seems to take quite some time so I will reply here later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
And of course Thor Heyerdahl followed it up with the Tigris expedition and the book and the book on that expedition is well worth a read. So thanks for this.
Two thumbs up. I am glad as a high schooler one of our English teachers had us read this. I read it again, Kon Tiki, that is, back in the eighties after purchasing a copy at a used bookstore. It meant more to me this second reading as I could appreciate the hardships Thor endured and the obstacles he overcame to prove his point...that it was highly likely the Peruvians travelled to and populated the Polynesian islands. Glad you were able to successfully pull it off. Excellent! And thanks for sharing this documentary!
+Carl W Eterna the Swiss watch company provided them in 1947 with watches for the expedition. They have a series of watches that have Kontiki engravings in the caseback, the most interesting is the Super Kon-Tiki dive watch oceanictime.blogspot.co.uk/2010/10/eterna-super-kontiki-le-1973-review.html
Great to see Olav Heyerdahl having taken up this challenge from his grandfather. Having just had the pleasure to read 'The Kon-Tiki Expedition' and before this 'The Tigris Expedition', I'd say touché - his grandfather would be proud and want to join in with the crew.
Olav came across as a bit of a spoilt and entitled individual. I feel that when the captain tells you not to go diving with the Sharks because he has a bad feeling about it, your response should not be telling how disappointed you are with him for making that decision and then ignoring it and going into the water anyways. The rest of the crew seemed cool.
Que arriesgados viajar en altamar en una balsa..los acompañé en la travesía desde Vinces a Guayaquil ..cerca de llegar a Durán casi naufragó la balsa ..los felicito amigos soy Julio Toscano desde Guayaquil Ecuador
The rewarding thing about having watched this documentary is seeing the little guy who underwent surgery on the island thru radio messages explaining the operation after the first Kon Tiki arrived and to see him as a healthy, grown man. Just waw ! By chance i saw the other black & white documentary of the original voyage and the story of that little fella. I am a surfer and the wide ocean scares the H out of me, even heavy surf does. I don't know how these men did it.. the bravery, the skills.
Intriguing! What a great reminiscence of olov h. and the crew to his grandfather, what impressing adventures, quite felt your inner silence and freedom. The story of the nine year old polynesian then and 60 years later in 2006 was also fantastic. Thanks a lot! Good life , live- love life
nice! i was hoping someone would do another kon-tiki. a long time ago, after reading the book, i built a small log raft as an experiment and sailed it. it was only for one or two people. it had a tahitian-style crab-claw rig and the boards, and it sailed really well. i towed some friends in an inflatable dinghy with it. it did not last long, it got trashed by some local kids who wanted to vandalise it. i think it was around '89 when that happened. i also made a working scale model of the kon-tiki, back then, also, which really sailed, but left it at the house where i lived when i moved here about 7 years ago. i used to have the book, but someone in samoa back in '92 decided they needed it, and stole it and a few other thor heyerdahl books i had. hard cover copies, too. ugh. haha. i haven't found another copy of kon-tiki or aku-aku, yet, but i managed to find one of them, the fatu-hiva book, which i have now.
In 72 i lived near Bengt Danilson in Punaauia,Tahiti.Lived also at a friend of mine , Francis Cowan ,who whent with Eric Bischof to Peru from Tahiti on a Bambo Raft.On the way back Eric died on a reef in the Touamotus.Francis later build a tahitian vaa,with traditionel materials and sailed to New Zealand.
I've read the Kon-Tiki expedition 3-4 times, and something that always stuck with me was the amount of sea-life they encountered. Most mornings they found fish stranded on the boat that had jumped aboard throughout the night, and as was said in this, they were often surrounded by sharks... I find it disturbing that these guys didn't have the same experience... perhaps an indication of how much we've stripped the ocean?
My exact reaction. Squid, deepwater life, whales, sharks, dolphins, tuna, etc...I agree with Larry that the current they used probably played some role but I'm also confident that humans have made a tangible dent in marine life abundance/diversity (even in the middle of the Pacific).
I picked up this book ‘the Kon-Tiki Exposition’ by Thor Heyerdahl, in a charity shop a few weeks ago in a bundle of old books! I have just returned to it and photographed the plates in the book. What a coincidence!
I've been trying to make this connection for quite some time after receiving some DNA results back showing a mix of South American (Family is from Peru), Spaniard and Pacific Islander and some small traces of others. I've read Kon-Tiki and seen the movie, very interesting. Given the amount of islands, I may be never able to pinpoint the exact location of my polynesian ancestry, but I'm determined to gather as much info as possible. Very interesting and I appreciate Thor and Olav's work and research.
Tangaroa, the fastest sailing raft ever made! Though I didn't set out on the Tangaroa-voyage or on the Kon-Tiki2 to prove any specific theory as Heyerdahl had, what I discovered is yet another argument against anyone who thinks the oceans were barriers for non-industrial people. Heyerdahl was convinced that oceans and seas served as communicators for early man. Clearly, he was right and a pioneer on that! And he inspired others like me to follow up this work. Torgeir Higraff
Thor s theories were debunked by DNA evidence. Its more like Polynesians reached the new world than the other way around judging by rafts they used. Polynesian sailing ability was in a class of its own. Funny how these conspracy theorist use Polynesian names for there South American rafts because a Polynesians would have said..I'm not getting on that LOL
Thank you so much for sharing this wonderful story and achievement with us. My greatest love is sailing in the South Pacific and you have made it even more of a fondness for all. Well done, your journey has truly been appreciated by many. All the best.
I remember the 1970's movie Kontiki about Thor Heyerdahl. The craft in that movie wasn't a flat raft as in this documentary. I had not heard about this expedition before now.
In 60 years, will we see a recreation of the Tangaroa expedition as well? And then a recreation of that recreation, which recreated the original? This could go on forever. = ]
Good to see this documentary of the expedition, of which I read about 40 years ago as young student. I may not be the seafarers type, but I always envy those who are.
Hải trình kon -tiki chuyến hành trình vĩ đại nhất mà con người từng thực hiện .sin được tán dương những con người mạnh mẽ dám sống theo hoài bão của mình !
“There are three sorts of people; those who are alive, those who are dead, and those who are at sea.” - Old Capstan Chantey attributed to Anacharsis, 6th Century BC
I really love this story since I read the Kontiki Expedition in 1995 my novel for my school exam.Thank for your hard work with great effort to prove me that my ancestors from south AMERICA ,I believe that 100%.three witness1.kontiki expedition,2.Tangaroa expedition 3.the book of MORMON........
moana brought me here and now i'm so amazed with all the sailing. how lucky were they to experience such journey! makes me want to go on an ocean adventure and face my fear of the vast deep blue sea
I have this weird feeling everytime I watch these dangerous and challenging journeys using ancient vehicles. Despite of being battered in the breakers, Kon Tiki still saved a boy's life. Maybe that was her destiny.
@cesardeluxe The watch they are using is the (now discontinued) Eterna Kontiki Diver (rated 1000m). All the crew were given one each by Eterna. You can also see Olav using an Eterna Kontiki Four Hands at the beginning of the movie. Thor Heyerdahl also used Eterna watches on the original KonTiki expedition.
Li2b. Look it up, but if you don't recognize that call sign, you are on the wrong video playback. THAT was from my (weak) memory, and for some reason, I NAILED it. steve
When watching this my most dominant thought was to how very lucky the people that live on those islands are. Such serenity without constant attack from the rat race that more than 95% of humanity has grown accustomed. It kind of brought tears to my eyes.
kevin marchant you need a deeper look at such. I live on such an island. The history shows lot of struggle for survival including constant tribal warfare not to mention diseases and even cannibalism. Still water truly run deep in the Pacific.
kevin marchant Please go to a library and get a copy of American Col. Leonard Clark's book, "The Rivers Ran East". Also take Rajeshwar Sharma's advice to heart. Clark and his companion Jorge Mendoza were the first people of European ethnicity to go down river and make it alive down the Eastern slopes of the Andes west of Lima Peru along the Gran Paranal towards the upper tributaries of the Amazon. The "native Indians" of the region were the Ashaninkas, called Campas then. And Clark lost many of his crew to them by arrow and spear. They went by dugout canoe at first and later by balsa raft. This adventure story is incredible since it was done in 1946, and today those same Indians are living with government supervision and are fighting against the maoist narco-terrorists who have joined with Mexican drug cartels in capturing and enslaving the Indians to grow cocaine. Also notice that the feathered serpent of the Aztecs, the Dancing Anaconda god of the Eastern Peruvian Amazon, and Satan are one in the same in they way they all have their rule over the lives of the people and the power of the witches that condemn them to death or slavery, just like the left is doing today.
I have a good friend who is Polynesian and I was told that his great grandfather spoke of cannabalism in his time. Also, which I thought was awful was he got his first tattoo when he was 8. His Mother and Father held him down while he screamed...freaked me out hearing the shit that goes on there. Lot's of spousal and child abuse also. It looks pretty at the resorts, but when you see the other side of the islands, it would bring other kinds of tears to your eyes.
Wow! Very cool dad. I'll bet that was quite the adventure. So brave, and just a little bit nutty...😁 Your dad, and people like him, are who make the kind of history most of us only dream about.
I can understand to the difference in large animals between this voyage and Kon Tiki's. I used to travel to some amazing coral islands in Asia years ago, and just over the period of ten or so years, I've seen a huge difference in the amount of large sharks, and other sea life, and the health of coral reefs. For starters, shark fin soup is huge in Asia for the Chinese, and everywhere fishermen are killing even the smallest sharks just to get the fins. Shark populations have dropped drastically. I am guessing that the Chinese, and others are pull everything out of the sea they gets their hands on in large fishing boats, and fish stocks are dwindling quickly. Couple this with pollution and global warming, dying coral reefs, which I've seen where fish hatch and develop, and I am not surprised at all.
That father and son moment towards the end must've been breathtaking for both of them! Also, agree with Kevin Marchant's comments below; the people on the island really serve as a reminder to us as how great humans can be!
If you think this was a waste of time, you don't understand what Thor Heyerdahl was proving. The key is that ancient boats were quite capable of long voyages and that the oceans were roads not barriers. Getting some practice with these ancient boats, both reed and raft, helps us better understand what was really possible in antiquity. It isn't just about showing where the polynesians came from.
"It isn't just about showing where the polynesians came from"
Except this doesn't show where the Polynesians came from because they weren't from South America.
Lita Kinikini Well i can tell you that we didnt come from south america... we came from the east, from New Zealand and branched out west toward Hawaii. . . .
nesianrugby
You dumb shit. You did not learn a thing did you.
amen!! very true..
@@kalita1113 yeah but, the Mormons believe a lot of crap that isn't accurate like the Garden of Eden is in the state of Missouri.
From the many wonderful books that my grandfather gave me as a child which sparked my love for travel and adventure, the book on the Kon Tiki voyage might had been my favourite.
Giants.
These men were war heroes of great character
as well as scientists.
Kon Tiki is my favorite book.
I vividly remember attending a theatre in Toronto with my Dad, an avid amateur sailor, to see the
original motion picture of Kon Tiki. He talked about the 'show' for days afterward; he would have loved this
'Kon Tiki Two' adventure, in glorious colour! "I must go down to the sea again,.........................." RIP Dad.
This is completing a circle for a lot of us who were encouraged by the original story to dare to go where we might not have gone with our lives. Many thanks to all involved.
I read the Kon-Tiki and really enjoyed this film. It gives you an idea of what happened in 1947.
Well - that left me in tears! Bravo, one and all.
The Kon-Tiki expedition and the Ingemar Johansson being world champion boxer shaped my early years. Greetings from the Swede.
This is a great inspiring ocean adventure. Nice to see it done again.
There was much more fish in the ocean in the time of Kon Tiki expedition and much less polution. We made such a big change in the ocean in just fifty years. As I remember the book, they see sharks every day.
Absolute fact and interesting as well...
On a smaller scale supporting your comment, during covid, in America, I have visited many beaches from California to Florida...during the months of beach shutdowns, their were an abundance of marine wildlife, sand dollars, tropical neon fluorescent fish, and huge 4 ft tall birds who would stroll the beaches alongside me, I have a few videos of it and all..
Humankind has truly become detrimental to this planets nourishment...
After a very hard sea crossing through the Pacific Ocean, they arrived at this paradise; the islands of the South Sea, Polynesia th-cam.com/video/bH8wMypKn3Y/w-d-xo.html
Overfishing.....I agree, but it's weird, because I've never seen this overabundance. Are you sure it's not part of the plan? Corporate greed can be counted on?
@@dustinraymond9403 Corporations are all woke so not sure where you're going with that
I read Kontiki at School and was enthralled, and this is great to see it rerun, but the original proved a point and a theory.
Since then we have learnt a lot fir Leather Boats and Brendan the Navigator etc
.
Having read Kon Tiki many, many times in my life I am excited to see such expeditions still inspire others to venture out on interesting adventures.
Amazing story of the re-enactment of the original Kon-tiki journey! Especially the local links to people who can still remember the fist expedition!
Fantastic story and follow up to his grandfathers amazing journey(s). As a HAM radio operator (n3glv) I was shocked and almost brought to tears over the story of the old man who was helped by a fellow ham, all those years before. Excellent stuff guys!
Your comment is old but I agree. I love ham radios. My dad did them when I was a kid and I remember being 5 and listening to a guy talk about how cold it was in Russia. I’ve talked to an astronaut on the iss. Just for a minute but it was very neat
Absolutely great adventure well documented and produced, so glad I found it on TH-cam
If a few guys with little knowledge of sailing an ocean going raft can carry out such intricate navigation after self teaching over a few months, just think good the original pilots would have been with generations of experience. Overly programme. I read the book in school in the early 1960s - it was a wonderful just post WW2 expedition just when people needed to hear of such a peaceful adventure after years of war and austerity. Nice to see 2 generations later the same need for simple adventure still exists.
I appreciate your comment very much :-)
thanks for your comment on the knowledge factor...ha ha..amazing for sure what is possible.
It is a joy to hear others recalling having read the book in the 1960s. At 10yrs old, I built a 15 inch long model of a raft out of parts of bamboo strips of old awning on our patio.The Scandinavian people are so strong, healthy and take daily time out for a tea and biscuit with friends.. turn off electronics!!please! This unity of brotherhood of diverse people will save us in world disaster. .
I love this video. I read the book about the first Kon Tiki expedition in 1960 and now I feel so fortunate to have seen this.
I find it amazing that people thousands of years ago jumped on to a raft and sailed into a seemingly endless ocean in hopes of finding another landmass supported by the migration of birds, if even that. I love humanity.
Often it was not the need to explore but a need to survive. Perhaps even a way to flee from the other less friendly humans ;)
@@Namibiets we love to expand though. We never have enough. Thats how our species so rapidly migrated across the globe and adapted to every environment. Now we are going to space. Give it a few millenia we will somehow run out of enough of it and we will start looking for new solar systems.
Everything under the great blue sky, as the khans said
Brilliant Doco, I've read the original book of "Kon Tiki" many times
Me too! ;)
Enjoyed being invited along, can't wait for the sequel.
I rented this documentary well in Beaufort North Carolina. Enjoyed it.
Spellbinding. As a Norsk-American especially, this makes me so proud, Nice party at the end!
you all probably dont give a shit but does anybody know a way to log back into an instagram account??
I was stupid forgot my login password. I appreciate any tips you can give me!
@Roberto Kabir instablaster :)
@Adrien Randall thanks so much for your reply. I got to the site on google and im in the hacking process atm.
Seems to take quite some time so I will reply here later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Adrien Randall It worked and I now got access to my account again. Im so happy!
Thank you so much, you saved my ass!
@Roberto Kabir You are welcome xD
And of course Thor Heyerdahl followed it up with the Tigris expedition and the book and the book on that expedition is well worth a read. So thanks for this.
Two thumbs up. I am glad as a high schooler one of our English teachers had us read this. I read it again, Kon Tiki, that is, back in the eighties after purchasing a copy at a used bookstore. It meant more to me this second reading as I could appreciate the hardships Thor endured and the obstacles he overcame to prove his point...that it was highly likely the Peruvians travelled to and populated the Polynesian islands. Glad you were able to successfully pull it off. Excellent! And thanks for sharing this documentary!
+Carl W Eterna the Swiss watch company provided them in 1947 with watches for the expedition. They have a series of watches that have Kontiki engravings in the caseback, the most interesting is the Super Kon-Tiki dive watch
oceanictime.blogspot.co.uk/2010/10/eterna-super-kontiki-le-1973-review.html
DNA testing would say otherwise...
Fantastisk! Wonderful! Proud to have been born a Norwegian. What a great accomplishment by these men. Godt gjort!
Ja! check-out isloopzsazsa comment above!!
Great to see Olav Heyerdahl having taken up this challenge from his grandfather. Having just had the pleasure to read 'The Kon-Tiki Expedition' and before this 'The Tigris Expedition', I'd say touché - his grandfather would be proud and want to join in with the crew.
Olav came across as a bit of a spoilt and entitled individual. I feel that when the captain tells you not to go diving with the Sharks because he has a bad feeling about it, your response should not be telling how disappointed you are with him for making that decision and then ignoring it and going into the water anyways. The rest of the crew seemed cool.
Que arriesgados viajar en altamar en una balsa..los acompañé en la travesía desde Vinces a Guayaquil ..cerca de llegar a Durán casi naufragó la balsa ..los felicito amigos soy Julio Toscano desde Guayaquil Ecuador
The rewarding thing about having watched this documentary is seeing the little guy who underwent surgery on the island thru radio messages explaining the operation after the first Kon Tiki arrived and to see him as a healthy, grown man. Just waw !
By chance i saw the other black & white documentary of the original voyage and the story of that little fella.
I am a surfer and the wide ocean scares the H out of me, even heavy surf does. I don't know how these men did it.. the bravery, the skills.
I didn't want this to end!
Intriguing!
What a great reminiscence of olov h. and the crew to his grandfather, what impressing adventures, quite felt your inner silence and freedom. The story of the nine year old polynesian then and 60 years later in 2006 was also fantastic. Thanks a lot! Good life , live- love life
This was purely inspirational and well done, congratulations to you all!
So amazing!read thors book long ago and watched the doco like 8years ago. This was great!so jealous as I'd love to live that life❤
nice! i was hoping someone would do another kon-tiki. a long time ago, after reading the book, i built a small log raft as an experiment and sailed it. it was only for one or two people. it had a tahitian-style crab-claw rig and the boards, and it sailed really well.
i towed some friends in an inflatable dinghy with it. it did not last long, it got trashed by some local kids who wanted to vandalise it.
i think it was around '89 when that happened. i also made a working scale model of the kon-tiki, back then, also, which really sailed, but left it at the house where i lived when i moved here about 7 years ago.
i used to have the book, but someone in samoa back in '92 decided they needed it, and stole it and a few other thor heyerdahl books i had. hard cover copies, too. ugh. haha.
i haven't found another copy of kon-tiki or aku-aku, yet, but i managed to find one of them, the fatu-hiva book, which i have now.
Very Refreshing to Watch This.
In 72 i lived near Bengt Danilson in Punaauia,Tahiti.Lived also at a friend of mine , Francis Cowan ,who whent with Eric Bischof to Peru from Tahiti on a Bambo Raft.On the way back Eric died on a reef in the Touamotus.Francis later build a tahitian vaa,with traditionel materials and sailed to New Zealand.
Adventure really does give man a reason to live... Well done on completing your set journey guys.
I need just one of those balsa logs and I could make a few cambered balsa surfboards ! I've been using western red cedar but it's to heavy !!!!!
Amazing accomplishment. Thanks for sharing the video here on TH-cam.
An interesting and quality documentary! Thanks so much for posting.
great adventure ,and old-fashioned experience !!!!👍🎥🎩
Excellent documentary, great adventure 😊
I've read the Kon-Tiki expedition 3-4 times, and something that always stuck with me was the amount of sea-life they encountered. Most mornings they found fish stranded on the boat that had jumped aboard throughout the night, and as was said in this, they were often surrounded by sharks... I find it disturbing that these guys didn't have the same experience... perhaps an indication of how much we've stripped the ocean?
They were in a different current. More speed, less sharks. Believe me, there are still way too many in the Pacific.
"way too many"? Who the fuck are you? Is the number of sharks we decide to spare the appropriate/natural amount?
My exact reaction. Squid, deepwater life, whales, sharks, dolphins, tuna, etc...I agree with Larry that the current they used probably played some role but I'm also confident that humans have made a tangible dent in marine life abundance/diversity (even in the middle of the Pacific).
You'd be shocked. Shark numbers globally have dropped by about 85% since then, largely due to big fishing boats :(
@@ExopMan chill man..... get a grip
very nice story enjoyed it emintsly
the descendants of two fantastic seafaring cultures . truly amazing !
Really enjoyed watching this after the Kon-tiki feature film and then the original documentary.
Magnificent! I wonder if is possible to sail that raft back to Peru. Perhaps a more modern style of sail would be required to do that.
Great adventure thanks foe sharing
I picked up this book ‘the Kon-Tiki Exposition’ by Thor Heyerdahl, in a charity shop a few weeks ago in a bundle of old books! I have just returned to it and photographed the plates in the book. What a coincidence!
I've been trying to make this connection for quite some time after receiving some DNA results back showing a mix of South American (Family is from Peru), Spaniard and Pacific Islander and some small traces of others. I've read Kon-Tiki and seen the movie, very interesting. Given the amount of islands, I may be never able to pinpoint the exact location of my polynesian ancestry, but I'm determined to gather as much info as possible. Very interesting and I appreciate Thor and Olav's work and research.
Thank you for this film. Thoroughly enjoyed it.
Tangaroa, the fastest sailing raft ever made! Though I didn't set out on the Tangaroa-voyage or on the Kon-Tiki2 to prove any specific theory as Heyerdahl had, what I discovered is yet another argument against anyone who thinks the oceans were barriers for non-industrial people. Heyerdahl was convinced that oceans and seas served as communicators for early man. Clearly, he was right and a pioneer on that! And he inspired others like me to follow up this work.
Torgeir Higraff
The seas have always been a highway for man because if we came from the sea WHY would we be afraid to travel them
Is it possible to sail back to Peru on a Kon-Tiki2 raft? Has anybody been able to prove this yet?
@@eriknelson6158 We tried in 2016. From Easter Island to Chile. In 70 days we tried very hard, below the Roaring Forties. kontiki2.com
Thor s theories were debunked by DNA evidence. Its more like Polynesians reached the new world than the other way around judging by rafts they used. Polynesian sailing ability was in a class of its own. Funny how these conspracy theorist use Polynesian names for there South American rafts because a Polynesians would have said..I'm not getting on that LOL
Excellent documentary, well done, cheers to the mates that made the voyage.
Thank you so much for sharing this wonderful story and achievement with us. My greatest love is sailing in the South Pacific and you have made it even more of a fondness for all. Well done, your journey has truly been appreciated by many. All the best.
As a sideband owner and pirate operator (kelo alpha xray), that Morse code story was emotional. Time to brush up on dots and dashes. Happy sailing!
Excellent video. Gives visual appreciation of the expedition that I read about 40 years ago.....
fishing must have been a blast... some super yummy delicious fish
Just a beautiful story of courage and daring.
I just watched the Kon Tiki movie and it was great. This is what brought me here.
I read his novel Kot Tiki Expedition at HS. Wow, this is a real treat to finally see the movie and of course Tangaroa! Well done so inspiring!
Incredible work
Much respect to our ancestors for making these voyages. One wonders how they even fit their balls on the raft.
I remember the 1970's movie Kontiki about Thor Heyerdahl. The craft in that movie wasn't a flat raft as in this documentary. I had not heard about this expedition before now.
This is awesome. But to think of the VERY first ones who sailed without knowing how far they had to go. Respect.
In 60 years, will we see a recreation of the Tangaroa expedition as well? And then a recreation of that recreation, which recreated the original? This could go on forever. = ]
Nice documentary. Really enjoyed it.
Amazin guys!!! Loved the doc, worked well together, was surprised no sharks out there!! Weird isn't it? That's a good thing though haha
Good to see this documentary of the expedition, of which I read about 40 years ago as young student. I may not be the seafarers type, but I always envy those who are.
great sailing ! you guys are awesome!
Hải trình kon -tiki chuyến hành trình vĩ đại nhất mà con người từng thực hiện .sin được tán dương những con người mạnh mẽ dám sống theo hoài bão của mình !
“There are three sorts of people; those who are alive, those who are dead, and those who are at sea.”
- Old Capstan Chantey attributed to Anacharsis, 6th Century BC
Wow!!!
quite an achievement,, congratulations to you all
One of the best shows I've ever seen.
Hi, it's me again, just watched it again. Back in five years :)
Fantastic stuff. Thanks for uploading :-)
Thank you from Moscow.
fantastic documentary
I love watching Kon-tiki!!!!
I really love this story since I read the Kontiki Expedition in 1995 my novel for my school exam.Thank for your hard work with great effort to prove me that my ancestors from south AMERICA ,I believe that 100%.three witness1.kontiki expedition,2.Tangaroa expedition 3.the book of MORMON........
moana brought me here and now i'm so amazed with all the sailing. how lucky were they to experience such journey! makes me want to go on an ocean adventure and face my fear of the vast deep blue sea
I have this weird feeling everytime I watch these dangerous and challenging journeys using ancient vehicles.
Despite of being battered in the breakers, Kon Tiki still saved a boy's life. Maybe that was her destiny.
@cesardeluxe The watch they are using is the (now discontinued) Eterna Kontiki Diver (rated 1000m). All the crew were given one each by Eterna. You can also see Olav using an Eterna Kontiki Four Hands at the beginning of the movie.
Thor Heyerdahl also used Eterna watches on the original KonTiki expedition.
Nagyon tetszett!"Kitartás"!
29:00 what is the green colored fish
En honor al gran descubridor de esas nuevas tierras tupac yupanqui¡¡¡¡¡¡
Je revois avec plus grand interet ce film que lors des conferences de l epoque quel homme admirable monsieur HEYERDAHL
Li2b. Look it up, but if you don't recognize that
call sign, you are on the wrong video playback.
THAT was from my (weak) memory, and for some
reason, I NAILED it.
steve
amazing
Don't know how i got hear but i'm glad i did very interesting.
We'd
i just read the book, have to watch this :)!
Really good story
just makes ya wana pack your bags and go on an adventure.
I'm surrounded of people of who believe the world is 2000 years old
Pls help
@@TheGustavo9526 hey mordekai, you know who else thinks the world is 2000 years old?
What life they r living really amazing..
Magnifique aventure bravo
When watching this my most dominant thought was to how very lucky the people that live on those islands are. Such serenity without constant attack from the rat race that more than 95% of humanity has grown accustomed. It kind of brought tears to my eyes.
You should go see it. Expensive as can be., But amazing. Happiest and friendly people.
kevin marchant you need a deeper look at such. I live on such an island. The history shows lot of struggle for survival including constant tribal warfare not to mention diseases and even cannibalism. Still water truly run deep in the Pacific.
kevin marchant
Please go to a library and get a copy of American Col. Leonard Clark's book, "The Rivers Ran East". Also take Rajeshwar Sharma's advice to heart. Clark and his companion Jorge Mendoza were the first people of European ethnicity to
go down river and make it alive down the Eastern slopes of the Andes west of Lima Peru along the Gran Paranal towards the upper tributaries of the Amazon. The "native Indians" of the region were the Ashaninkas, called Campas then. And Clark lost many of his crew to them by arrow and spear. They went by dugout canoe at first and later by balsa raft. This adventure story is incredible since it was done in 1946, and today those same Indians are living with government supervision and are fighting against the maoist narco-terrorists who have joined with Mexican drug cartels in capturing and enslaving the Indians to grow cocaine. Also notice that the feathered serpent of the Aztecs, the Dancing Anaconda god of the Eastern Peruvian Amazon, and Satan are one in the same in they way they all have their rule over the lives of the people and the power of the witches that condemn them to death or slavery, just like the left is doing today.
And White ppl made these places better .. LOL
I have a good friend who is Polynesian and I was told that his great grandfather spoke of cannabalism in his time. Also, which I thought was awful was he got his first tattoo when he was 8. His Mother and Father held him down while he screamed...freaked me out hearing the shit that goes on there. Lot's of spousal and child abuse also. It looks pretty at the resorts, but when you see the other side of the islands, it would bring other kinds of tears to your eyes.
The hardest wood for guaras? They need strong and flexible wood. Not the hardest wood. Wrong translation, I hope?
the peruvian one is my dad
i was only 7 when he left amd now he is in another expedittion KONTIKI 2
You must be so proud!
+frederick rasenberger I am :)
Dani'S Made I am touched by d bravery of all d sailors,now waiting for kontiki 2
Is there going to be another documentary?
Wow! Very cool dad. I'll bet that was quite the adventure. So brave, and just a little bit nutty...😁 Your dad, and people like him, are who make the kind of history most of us only dream about.
Well presented movie - Polynesians live in a different world -
I can understand to the difference in large animals between this voyage and Kon Tiki's. I used to travel to some amazing coral islands in Asia years ago, and just over the period of ten or so years, I've seen a huge difference in the amount of large sharks, and other sea life, and the health of coral reefs. For starters, shark fin soup is huge in Asia for the Chinese, and everywhere fishermen are killing even the smallest sharks just to get the fins. Shark populations have dropped drastically. I am guessing that the Chinese, and others are pull everything out of the sea they gets their hands on in large fishing boats, and fish stocks are dwindling quickly. Couple this with pollution and global warming, dying coral reefs, which I've seen where fish hatch and develop, and I am not surprised at all.
That father and son moment towards the end must've been breathtaking for both of them! Also, agree with Kevin Marchant's comments below; the people on the island really serve as a reminder to us as how great humans can be!
I would use the guara boards like you do LEE BOARDS ......USE THEM ON THE DOWN WIND SIDE OF THE BOAT ONLY!
Thank you, were trees planted to replace trees cut down to build raft.?
# HeroesAtSea.
great, thank you...