WOW! I've watched since the beginning. This is the best you've produced from a serious side and not just reviewing a new yacht or show. No body laugh but you've seriously matured in these pieces. To go back and watch one of your very earliest and then this one it's hard to imagine it's the same person.
Thank you for sharing this. The type casting happens everywhere. I am an American raised in the South, and served in the US Marines. The Corps was DEFINITELY done with me before I was done with it. I had a malfunction on a HALO and am TRULY lucky I survived. The thing I loved most about being at sea was sunrise/sunset. I loved being on deck, forward of the superstructure before any light broke the horizon. The peace and calm was mesmerizing. If I had the money, I would live at sea. Only setting foot on land long enough to resupply.
After spending the majority of my life at sea, Navy/civilian mariner, I wake up at home every day and miss it all, the sea, the friends, and the new sights and sounds. It will always be my first Love.
This was a wonderful break from the yacht specs and tours. It's like you cracked open and showed us the foundation you operate upon. I feel a better sense of why you chose your world, and why you're so good at guiding all of us through it. It's nice to see people who are in the right place and know it!
I very much enjoyed this video. BUT, darn it, you made me cry when you talked about your father- thanks for sharing such personal thoughts. I will never go on a boat again due to a disability related to a car accident ( don't feel bad for me, I have had a life full of amazing experiences, and have the best people in my life), watching your videos is almost as good as being there myself. Thanks again.
I worked aboard a mega yacht for about 7 years all together. I was the helicopter pilot, so it was a little bit different for me, but still it was fantastic to go to all the different destinations, meet some fantastic people, and get to work with some incredible crew members. It's still some of the best memories of my life. Thank you so much for reminding me.
@@valerie80yearsago90 I Would love to Valerie, but I left that job six or seven years ago. I did thoroughly enjoy it, and for all the same reasons that eSysman listed. I should say that the job of a helicopter pilot on a yacht could vary. Piloting was pretty much all I did, but I met a yacht helicopter pilot who was also the dive master, and another one who was also the chief engineer. Of course their lives aboard the yacht were quite a bit different than mine.
I loved this so much. Very personal and informative at the same time. I worked alongside my father for over 40 years. He died in 2017, but having been able to work beside him, and learn from him, lets me be a better example to my son, who has worked with me for 10 years. Sadly, I get seasick in a bath, but I take your point about connecting with your dad. I reflect on that often myself. Thanks for another great insight into your life. Stay positive and you will be positive. My dad wasn't rich in wealth, but he was very rich in positive thought. You can't buy that anywhere.
After 24 years in the RN I totally understand your thinking ..Today I work in the marina industry and next spring I take my super yacht ( Jeanneau 45 ) around the world . Thank you for sharing your deepest thoughts shipmate !
May I say thank you firstly to your dad, for protecting our way of life! Then thank you too, for doing the same! My mum died last year aged 95 she was in the WRAF. My dad died 20 years ago and we love boating but for pleasure on the boat we had! And you are correct! To see a sunrise/sunset, at sea is magical! Then to be in a foce 6 gusting 7 is a different experience I will never forget! Seeing a wall of water in front of you and you know you are going up that! Please keep going and well done to you for finding your work you love!
Thank you for your personal story, very relatable. My dad lied about his age to join the USN in WWII. He served on a rescue recovery vessel in the Pacific Theatre. They put most of the really young ones on support ships back then. He'd joined mostly out of patriotism but had also read Stoddard's Lectures and wanted to see the world. He became the cook on the ship and was treated very well because he could somehow make their rations into near gourmet creations. Mentioned only a couple of stories about the wartime action. But, he did love the sea and serving his crewmates and the cause. Another of my favorite parts of your vid is 4:52. But, that's another conversation. Really enjoying your series on the KleptoYachts. Please keep up the good work.
Thank you for sharing your heart about your industry. I'm a former Navy Diver/US and I miss being out to sea. I'm now the CEO of my company developing new technology. It is my hope to that one day I too can own a yacht and experience that connection again...
Also a tech/entertainment CEO here. Although I never worked at sea, so many of my fondest and most vivid life memories involve it. It’s an allure I find hard to explain, but getting back to the water, with both the time and means to enjoy it, is specifically what drives me to succeed.
Well said. Those who look at the trappings and say it isn't fair that one should have such 'toys' while people are suffering, need to understand that those who have are paying a lot towards those who don't have. No shadow casting.
I spent four years onboard the USS John C. Stennis and my best memories are the sunsets on the fantail. It makes all the hard work worth it. Thanks for shearing your story, makes me appreciate more what you do.
I sailed for 10 years with the US Navy…Southeast Asia, Med. North Atlantic, in both Submarines and small surface vessels. You have nailed it! There is no more to be said about the sea service. Thank you for these reminders of what it is like.
You nailed it. I cheffed 50 meter yachts. Crossing the Atlantic, waking up anchored, having that first cup of coffee and a cigarette before starting. The world you only see about a boat. Amazing memories.
What a brilliant video, I'm not normally one for crying but it brought a tear to my eye. Always enjoy your vids but this one was something else, well done.
A great video, I totally understand the tightknit similar mindset you mentioned. I worked for a small company that grew quite large. Everyone was rowing in the same direction. Nobody can hide. We became the number 1 in the UK in our sector. The owners cashed in and the business was sold to a larger company. Now we are working in awash of mediocrity and poor management and stupidity. Such a shame. Thanks for posting such a great video one of your best. There is a talent you have unearthed with TH-cam. Keep the great content coming.
I felt your emotions in this video. My father is turning 75 at the end of this month. I hope Dad has at least another 25 years of fun filled life. Totally agree with your sentiments about surrounding yourself with like minded and positive people. I love your boat tours, but this video really shines as a truthful and personal account of life working on boats.
Sitting on the upper scupper with a cuppa in the peace and still of the morning enjoying the sun rise before hustle and bustle of the work day. Lovely memories.
you've probably already noticed from ths comments of other people this was a very moving video and in my opinion your very best never mind the Glitz and glamor which is amazing but this personal touch can be inspirational and life-changing thank you
I spent 30 years in the U. S. Navy Submarine Force. Retired 10 years ago. I tell people frequently that I would go back to sea in a minute. Great video!
Take it you dont fancy 3 legged kittens eh? :) That was a moving story. My family came to Australia on the 1st fleet to SA, it was a grueling journey on a wooden sailing ship called the Tam O Shanter. Every time I sail my 6m 'super yacht' over the bar, I feel connected in much the same way, Thanks for what you do for us!
Having been in the yachting industry for nearly 25 years of my life, this sums up my personal view very eloquently. Thank you eSysman for this video, it really touched home. 🤜🏼
I've never been on a yacht but was an engineering officer on an aircraft carrier, long ago. Months at sea got really tiring, but I wouldn't give up the experience for all the $ there is. Sailing in to a new port for the first time, riding out a typhoon, seeing all the things that no landlubber ever will. A price can't be put on it. Thank you for a well presented video.
I agree with you, I am a glass half full. A very successful client told me very early on in my profession. Always do your best and say hi first to the people that you meet, keep learning everything you possibly can, because luck is defined as preparedness meets opportunity! The more your prepared the more opportunity you will see around you. He was so, so right! Best tip I ever got! I love your channel keep up the great work!!
An excellent video , yes as an entrepreneur I have worked for years with no real light at the end of the tunnel and yes sometimes it has been a train .... but I pick myself up and remember Churchill’s words of never never giving up. So the people who think it’s all just been handed to us are at their core those who are jealous and never will understand the struggle which they are unwilling to engage in ! You captured it all thank you sir.
A wonderful insight to your life and why you chose this life, lovely reference to your Dad RIP, I think of my Dad daily and his words of wisdom ! In love waking up early to see the sun rise or the morning mist ... a great time to be alive !! Stay Safe & Fair Winds !!
Love this Video. Great to see how someone with so many years in the Yachting industry still loving and appreciating all the little things it offers you. Lost my father at 25 and he was a truck driver for my whole life. I understand what you are saying. When I get around a semi and smell the oil and diesel and hear the air brakes it takes me back to when I used to get to go to work with him. Sorry for your loss, but I know you dad smiles and looks down on you during those sunrises on the wide open ocean.
What beautiful words of wisdom just by telling your personal job and journey aboard super yachts, explaining life as a seaman, and the benefits it all entails. I Really enjoyed hearing your story and about your father's days abroad as a young lad. Blessings to you and your family!
Thanks for sharing, especially about your father. Still miss mine 7 years later. Personally, however, I rather enjoy being the master of my own little sailboat with a good woman next to me. Still get the same sunsets and sunrises and we get into places the big boats never see.
I cant understand what not to like about this video. How could people dislike this video. Thank you, thank you for sharing your experience, your life, your family history. Thank you eSysman for all your videos...
A wonderful narrative of the allure of life at sea. My father was in the navy as well and as such taught his two sons to sail at a young age. I've been at it now for more than 60 years.
Wonderful insight into your industry. Extremely well articulated and thought-provoking. It helps me to understand why someone chooses the life that you have chosen. I think it was a great choice. I look forward to more from you. Thank you for this.
Ahoy, eSysman Recent viewer to your TH-cam channel. Like the content and your insights. Like your easy manner, especially the full-body chuckles. Your aerial shots of the crew swimming the mid-Atlantic leg of your crossing are beautiful and reminds me of the joy that comes from unexpected pleasures. Reminds of my time on the USS Plunger, a fast-attack sub, when on a calm day we had a 5-hour delay in some sonar testing a few miles off the Channel Islands in California. The captain, soon to be promoted to a shore-command, called a swim-call....... Unheard of in the nuclear navy! Man, never has one seen 80 sailors strip off their jump-suits and dive into the water with more speed. The captain must have mused, "How can I bottle that for the next 'torpedo in the water' drill?" The most joy during that swim-call came from the porposing action of the subs' bow rising and falling in long-set waves. When the bulbous bow of the 3700 ton, 278 foot sub would sink deeply into a trough, we would swim like heck up the bow. Then, as the bow rose in the next wave, we would be shed from the bow like a romp of river otters sliding down a muddy bank. Laugh-out-loud fun. One of the cherished memories of my sub service. Helped me forget the 4-hour watches topside on chilly nights, the 50-day transit to Guam via the east coast of Siberia and the all-hands-up manning of brooms and mops to scrub down the interior of the sub each Friday during the aforementioned transit. And, oh yes; the torpedo in the water! Like you said, the job of going to sea has its glamour and unexpected joys, but is not without abundant counterpoint. Keep working at your new craft. It's paying off. eSonar Dave
Thank you for this wonderful video, the connection that you convey to your viewers, and the connection you shared with your father. Thank you so very much
Always alott of information n very truthful great explaining n we all miss our dad mine was x- navy n mom mom was a teenager 12-7-41 in pearl harbor we will always miss our mom n dad thanx 4 bring back those memories thanx
... thanks so much, for your 'View from Here' ... your history & your love for what you do ... to live long & prosper aboard a very fine Ship, called Life, is so wonderful & inspiring to hear ... thank you eSysman for this ...
I really appreciate this upload 🤙🏼 Now I have more information to tell people what I want to do and why😂. I’m not the best with words 💀😂😂 Much appreciated .
What a spirited video. One can marvel at these floating palaces in places like Antibes or Monaco, perhaps lend a thought to the obscene distribution of wealth allowing their existence, but it takes an insider to penetrate their hulls. You are doing a fine job revealing the humane behind all that pomp.
I'm curious, what brand is that polo shirt? It looks really good on you. And I loved this video. My grandfather was on a US Navy ship in WWII and hearing about you and your father was very touching.
A touching and personal video especially re your father. One of your best films eSysman. Excellent editing and footage too.
+1
WOW! I've watched since the beginning. This is the best you've produced from a serious side and not just reviewing a new yacht or show. No body laugh but you've seriously matured in these pieces. To go back and watch one of your very earliest and then this one it's hard to imagine it's the same person.
Thank you for sharing this. The type casting happens everywhere. I am an American raised in the South, and served in the US Marines.
The Corps was DEFINITELY done with me before I was done with it. I had a malfunction on a HALO and am TRULY lucky I survived.
The thing I loved most about being at sea was sunrise/sunset. I loved being on deck, forward of the superstructure before any light broke the horizon. The peace and calm was mesmerizing.
If I had the money, I would live at sea. Only setting foot on land long enough to resupply.
One of your best. The old saying is that if you want to succeed take a successful person to lunch is demonstrated here.
After spending the majority of my life at sea, Navy/civilian mariner, I wake up at home every day and miss it all, the sea, the friends, and the new sights and sounds. It will always be my first Love.
This was a wonderful break from the yacht specs and tours. It's like you cracked open and showed us the foundation you operate upon. I feel a better sense of why you chose your world, and why you're so good at guiding all of us through it. It's nice to see people who are in the right place and know it!
I very much enjoyed this video. BUT, darn it, you made me cry when you talked about your father- thanks for sharing such personal thoughts. I will never go on a boat again due to a disability related to a car accident ( don't feel bad for me, I have had a life full of amazing experiences, and have the best people in my life), watching your videos is almost as good as being there myself. Thanks again.
That was wonderful and thank you so much for sharing your thoughts about your job, your father, and the sea.
Yes, I would like to Thank You for telling your story and about you dad.
I worked aboard a mega yacht for about 7 years all together. I was the helicopter pilot, so it was a little bit different for me, but still it was fantastic to go to all the different destinations, meet some fantastic people, and get to work with some incredible crew members. It's still some of the best memories of my life. Thank you so much for reminding me.
Please make videos!! I’d be very interested to see how life was like onboard for you as a super yacht helicopter pilot.
@@valerie80yearsago90 I Would love to Valerie, but I left that job six or seven years ago. I did thoroughly enjoy it, and for all the same reasons that eSysman listed. I should say that the job of a helicopter pilot on a yacht could vary. Piloting was pretty much all I did, but I met a yacht helicopter pilot who was also the dive master, and another one who was also the chief engineer. Of course their lives aboard the yacht were quite a bit different than mine.
I loved this so much. Very personal and informative at the same time. I worked alongside my father for over 40 years. He died in 2017, but having been able to work beside him, and learn from him, lets me be a better example to my son, who has worked with me for 10 years. Sadly, I get seasick in a bath, but I take your point about connecting with your dad. I reflect on that often myself. Thanks for another great insight into your life. Stay positive and you will be positive. My dad wasn't rich in wealth, but he was very rich in positive thought. You can't buy that anywhere.
Your best video. And I've watched them all across all your channels. No flash boats, just you being you.
Your best one! I was glued from beginning to end! Thanks, you made my world better!
After 24 years in the RN I totally understand your thinking ..Today I work in the marina industry and next spring I take my super yacht ( Jeanneau 45 ) around the world . Thank you for sharing your deepest thoughts shipmate !
You described the feeling perfectly. The feeling is as you described. Thank you
This was a very interesting insight into superyachts. Thank you
Beautifully done. Thanks for sharing about your dad!
May I say thank you firstly to your dad, for protecting our way of life! Then thank you too, for doing the same! My mum died last year aged 95 she was in the WRAF. My dad died 20 years ago and we love boating but for pleasure on the boat we had! And you are correct! To see a sunrise/sunset, at sea is magical! Then to be in a foce 6 gusting 7 is a different experience I will never forget! Seeing a wall of water in front of you and you know you are going up that! Please keep going and well done to you for finding your work you love!
WOW, this was actually, your best film ever! Congrats, great story, I feel you!
Thank you for your personal story, very relatable. My dad lied about his age to join the USN in WWII. He served on a rescue recovery vessel in the Pacific Theatre. They put most of the really young ones on support ships back then. He'd joined mostly out of patriotism but had also read Stoddard's Lectures and wanted to see the world. He became the cook on the ship and was treated very well because he could somehow make their rations into near gourmet creations. Mentioned only a couple of stories about the wartime action. But, he did love the sea and serving his crewmates and the cause. Another of my favorite parts of your vid is 4:52. But, that's another conversation. Really enjoying your series on the KleptoYachts. Please keep up the good work.
That was great mate! :). Not only are you good crew, you are also great at this You Tube thing, Well Done!
This video was awesome. It’s a nice way to say “get your arse off the couch and be your best!”
I love the fact that you get inspired by people excelling not envious .it shows good ethics 💪
Thank you for sharing your heart about your industry. I'm a former Navy Diver/US and I miss being out to sea. I'm now the CEO of my company developing new technology. It is my hope to that one day I too can own a yacht and experience that connection again...
Also a tech/entertainment CEO here. Although I never worked at sea, so many of my fondest and most vivid life memories involve it. It’s an allure I find hard to explain, but getting back to the water, with both the time and means to enjoy it, is specifically what drives me to succeed.
How enticing and so very unusual and refreshing to your usual format.
Really enjoyable. Thanks.
Very emotional video, thanks for sharing such personal feelings and thoughts! You’re the best!
Well said. Those who look at the trappings and say it isn't fair that one should have such 'toys' while people are suffering, need to understand that those who have are paying a lot towards those who don't have. No shadow casting.
This is one of your very best videos, eSysman. Thank you for sharing.
Motivational, thank you! I'm gonna send this to my 20 year old son.
I spent four years onboard the USS John C. Stennis and my best memories are the sunsets on the fantail. It makes all the hard work worth it. Thanks for shearing your story, makes me appreciate more what you do.
Thanks for an amazing honest video. Possibly the best one yet. Awesome 👌
One of your best. This is a side I watch you for.
I sailed for 10 years with the US Navy…Southeast Asia, Med. North Atlantic, in both Submarines and small surface vessels. You have nailed it! There is no more to be said about the sea service. Thank you for these reminders of what it is like.
This vid has a new dimension. I will watch it many times. Thanks!
You nailed it. I cheffed 50 meter yachts. Crossing the Atlantic, waking up anchored, having that first cup of coffee and a cigarette before starting. The world you only see about a boat. Amazing memories.
What a brilliant video, I'm not normally one for crying but it brought a tear to my eye. Always enjoy your vids but this one was something else, well done.
One word......outstanding!! Through tears... thank you.
Beautiful video. This may be your best video so far. Thank you.
Wow, very moving tribute to the sea and your father.
A great video, I totally understand the tightknit similar mindset you mentioned. I worked for a small company that grew quite large. Everyone was rowing in the same direction. Nobody can hide. We became the number 1 in the UK in our sector. The owners cashed in and the business was sold to a larger company. Now we are working in awash of mediocrity and poor management and stupidity. Such a shame.
Thanks for posting such a great video one of your best. There is a talent you have unearthed with TH-cam. Keep the great content coming.
I think this is tihe best video you have done (and I think your father would be proud of you)
Kind words.
I felt your emotions in this video. My father is turning 75 at the end of this month. I hope Dad has at least another 25 years of fun filled life. Totally agree with your sentiments about surrounding yourself with like minded and positive people. I love your boat tours, but this video really shines as a truthful and personal account of life working on boats.
Sitting on the upper scupper with a cuppa in the peace and still of the morning enjoying the sun rise before hustle and bustle of the work day. Lovely memories.
you've probably already noticed from ths comments of other people this was a very moving video and in my opinion your very best never mind the Glitz and glamor which is amazing but this personal touch can be inspirational and life-changing thank you
I spent 30 years in the U. S. Navy Submarine Force. Retired 10 years ago. I tell people frequently that I would go back to sea in a minute. Great video!
Take it you dont fancy 3 legged kittens eh? :) That was a moving story. My family came to Australia on the 1st fleet to SA, it was a grueling journey on a wooden sailing ship called the Tam O Shanter. Every time I sail my 6m 'super yacht' over the bar, I feel connected in much the same way, Thanks for what you do for us!
beautiful video mate, you truly have a special talent for this!
Thanks bud.
Having been in the yachting industry for nearly 25 years of my life, this sums up my personal view very eloquently. Thank you eSysman for this video, it really touched home. 🤜🏼
Awesome story dude , I still wouldn't do it , takes a certain person to work on super yachts, but a truly heartwarming account ,
Thank you for being so open. I haven't been to sea in quite a while and I still miss it. Well done.
Awesome video, really personal! Great shots by the way :)
Great video. Thanks for sharing it with us. Brilliant ideas.
Thank you for this moving video. I have enormous respect. 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
I've never been on a yacht but was an engineering officer on an aircraft carrier, long ago. Months at sea got really tiring, but I wouldn't give up the experience for all the $ there is. Sailing in to a new port for the first time, riding out a typhoon, seeing all the things that no landlubber ever will. A price can't be put on it. Thank you for a well presented video.
I agree with you, I am a glass half full. A very successful client told me very early on in my profession. Always do your best and say hi first to the people that you meet, keep learning everything you possibly can, because luck is defined as preparedness meets opportunity! The more your prepared the more opportunity you will see around you. He was so, so right! Best tip I ever got! I love your channel keep up the great work!!
An excellent video , yes as an entrepreneur I have worked for years with no real light at the end of the tunnel and yes sometimes it has been a train .... but I pick myself up and remember Churchill’s words of never never giving up. So the people who think it’s all just been handed to us are at their core those who are jealous and never will understand the struggle which they are unwilling to engage in ! You captured it all thank you sir.
What a heartfelt video, this is my favourite one of all. Thank you 🇨🇦
A wonderful insight to your life and why you chose this life, lovely reference to your Dad RIP, I think of my Dad daily and his words of wisdom ! In love waking up early to see the sun rise or the morning mist ... a great time to be alive !! Stay Safe & Fair Winds !!
I've watched a hundred of your videos but somehow missed this one from two years ago. It really resonates with me.
Love this Video. Great to see how someone with so many years in the Yachting industry still loving and appreciating all the little things it offers you. Lost my father at 25 and he was a truck driver for my whole life. I understand what you are saying. When I get around a semi and smell the oil and diesel and hear the air brakes it takes me back to when I used to get to go to work with him. Sorry for your loss, but I know you dad smiles and looks down on you during those sunrises on the wide open ocean.
This was a beautiful video. Thank you for sharing this part of your life with us.
What beautiful words of wisdom just by telling your personal job and journey aboard super yachts, explaining life as a seaman, and the benefits it all entails. I Really enjoyed hearing your story and about your father's days abroad as a young lad. Blessings to you and your family!
So true and well said you have to keep striving for something and have personal goals then keep upi the goals :)
This vid is one of the best you have created. IT speaks miles of the man you are and character you show. Thank You!
Thanks for sharing, especially about your father. Still miss mine 7 years later. Personally, however, I rather enjoy being the master of my own little sailboat with a good woman next to me. Still get the same sunsets and sunrises and we get into places the big boats never see.
I cant understand what not to like about this video. How could people dislike this video. Thank you, thank you for sharing your experience, your life, your family history. Thank you eSysman for all your videos...
Probably the ones who said they don’t like rich people!
That was awesome, and thanks for being so real.
What a joy! Thanks from an old sailor💥👍👍
A wonderful narrative of the allure of life at sea. My father was in the navy as well and as such taught his two sons to sail at a young age. I've been at it now for more than 60 years.
Wonderful insight into your industry. Extremely well articulated and thought-provoking. It helps me to understand why someone chooses the life that you have chosen. I think it was a great choice. I look forward to more from you. Thank you for this.
My father served for 30 years in the US Nave and he was the same way. When he passed, per his wishes he was buried at sea off a US Navy ship.
Whatever you do, do it with conviction and passion, only in this way will it fill you and you will truly come true. Egads!
👍👍👍🌞🥇💛
The BEST video you’ve ever made. You can be proud of what you’ve accomplished.
Well done and a great contribution to all those sailors that went to war at sea, delivered cargo worldwide, provided enjoyment at sea, etc.
Ahoy, eSysman
Recent viewer to your TH-cam channel. Like the content and your insights. Like your easy manner, especially the full-body chuckles. Your aerial shots of the crew swimming the mid-Atlantic leg of your crossing are beautiful and reminds me of the joy that comes from unexpected pleasures. Reminds of my time on the USS Plunger, a fast-attack sub, when on a calm day we had a 5-hour delay in some sonar testing a few miles off the Channel Islands in California.
The captain, soon to be promoted to a shore-command, called a swim-call....... Unheard of in the nuclear navy!
Man, never has one seen 80 sailors strip off their jump-suits and dive into the water with more speed. The captain must have mused, "How can I bottle that for the next 'torpedo in the water' drill?"
The most joy during that swim-call came from the porposing action of the subs' bow rising and falling in long-set waves. When the bulbous bow of the 3700 ton, 278 foot
sub would sink deeply into a trough, we would swim like heck up the bow. Then, as the bow rose in the next wave, we would be shed from the bow like a
romp of river otters sliding down a muddy bank. Laugh-out-loud fun. One of the cherished memories of my sub service. Helped me forget the 4-hour watches topside
on chilly nights, the 50-day transit to Guam via the east coast of Siberia and the all-hands-up manning of brooms and mops to scrub down the interior of the sub each Friday during the aforementioned transit. And, oh yes; the torpedo in the water!
Like you said, the job of going to sea has its glamour and unexpected joys, but is not without abundant counterpoint.
Keep working at your new craft. It's paying off.
eSonar Dave
Thank you for this wonderful video, the connection that you convey to your viewers, and the connection you shared with your father. Thank you so very much
That was a great video 👍🏼 thank you for sharing it with us.
Awesome video, thanks sharing that story about your dad. That is a really special connection.
Thanks for sharing your deep personal inner thoughts.
Always alott of information n very truthful great explaining n we all miss our dad mine was x- navy n mom mom was a teenager 12-7-41 in pearl harbor we will always miss our mom n dad thanx 4 bring back those memories thanx
Great video, such passion
... thanks so much, for your 'View from Here' ... your history & your love for what you do ... to live long & prosper aboard a very fine Ship, called Life, is so wonderful & inspiring to hear ... thank you eSysman for this ...
Great insight. Great videp. Thankyou
One of your best vids !
🚢
What a great video! I loved everything about it ... except that end music. ;) An inspirational story for sure!
I really appreciate this upload 🤙🏼
Now I have more information to tell people what I want to do and why😂. I’m not the best with words 💀😂😂
Much appreciated .
Nice one Dude! 👍
Great video. Brought me back to memories of my father. Appreciate it. Keeping you in my prayers.
Fantastic lovely video. Thank you.
This is one of your best videos it is so emotional and perfectly edited.
very well said mate, lets leave it at that.
14th view. First comment. Don't plan to work on superyachts, but I plan to work with the sea regardless. :)
1:56 oh that’s my ship where I’m serving as Master now. I believe that’s video from 2019 or late.
The tanker? That's cool that you're watching. That was 2018.
@@YachtReport no container “Fouma” right in front of you
What a spirited video. One can marvel at these floating palaces in places like Antibes or Monaco, perhaps lend a thought to the obscene distribution of wealth allowing their existence, but it takes an insider to penetrate their hulls. You are doing a fine job revealing the humane behind all that pomp.
Loved this video. Very well said, thank you!
That was awsome,,my favourite so far
A very nice and inspiring video.
Congratulations.
Probably your best work yet. Shame it wasnt 30 minutes longer. Nice new intro btw.
Cinematicly, this was a *fantastic* video.
The theme, music, editing, shots, it all came together synergistically.
Bravo.
I'm curious, what brand is that polo shirt? It looks really good on you.
And I loved this video. My grandfather was on a US Navy ship in WWII and hearing about you and your father was very touching.
Amazing and invaluable statement... very kind of You!