just simply beautiful. I have followed Matt from day 1 of his podcast, after watching Red Dot on the Ocean. It has significantly changed my view on life. I hope to be in a position to support Matts efforts. Thank you for another inspiring video.
Beautiful. Matt's podcasts have had a major influence on how I will experience the last decades (I hope!) of my life, i.e. sailing. Wish I could do more to support him, but atm, it is what it is.
Found it quick myself. On 19 September 2011, Matt Rutherford (USA) single-handedly negotiated the Northwest Passage in his 8.2-m-long (27-ft) Albin Vega sailboat St Brendan, setting the record for the smallest boat to ever negotiate the notoriously dangerous Arctic Ocean route. The feat took place during his non-stop 43,576-km (27,077-mile) circumnavigation of North and South America, starting on 13 June 2011 at Annapolis City Dock in Chesapeake Bay, Maryland, USA, and finishing back where he started 310 days later on 18 April 2012.
just simply beautiful. I have followed Matt from day 1 of his podcast, after watching Red Dot on the Ocean. It has significantly changed my view on life. I hope to be in a position to support Matts efforts. Thank you for another inspiring video.
Beautiful. Matt's podcasts have had a major influence on how I will experience the last decades (I hope!) of my life, i.e. sailing. Wish I could do more to support him, but atm, it is what it is.
Beautiful.
That reflection in the glassy water 😍
Good job for someone who has a love/hate relationship with computers. Keep'em coming, this is good stuff.
What is the smallest boat that has made the Northwest Passage?
Found it quick myself. On 19 September 2011, Matt Rutherford (USA) single-handedly negotiated the Northwest Passage in his 8.2-m-long (27-ft) Albin Vega sailboat St Brendan, setting the record for the smallest boat to ever negotiate the notoriously dangerous Arctic Ocean route. The feat took place during his non-stop 43,576-km (27,077-mile) circumnavigation of North and South America, starting on 13 June 2011 at Annapolis City Dock in Chesapeake Bay, Maryland, USA, and finishing back where he started 310 days later on 18 April 2012.
@@lanetatom2701 Ocean Research Project (this channel) is Matt Rutherford, btw.
@@davidmersiovsky wow, think of the odds that my first thought was to wonder how small of a vessel had done it.
Nice job finding that ice!
Thanks! In the Northwest Passage the ice will find you
❤