Presentation
by Yves Gélinas
at the Joshua Slocum Centennial Dinner
June 27 1998)
It is a great honor for
me,
at this occasion of the celebration of the Slocum centennial,
to be invited to present to you
my personal contribution
to the art of sailing a small boat
single-handed around the world.
A few years ago, I was
in Saint-Malo, in France.
I had spent five years
cruising from the East Coast to the West Indies,
to the coast of Cornwall and the Baltic
on my Alberg 30 Jean-du-Sud.
and time had come for me to sail back to Québec,
where I came from.
So I sailed from Saint-Malo
to Gaspé, in Québec,
but the wrong way around the world :
instead of heading West across the Atlantic,
as I came out of the English Channel, I turned South.
At the latitude of the Cape of Good Hope, I headed East,
sailed across the Indian Ocean,
South of Australia, crossed the Pacific Ocean
and after rounding Cape Horn,
finally turned North until I reached Gaspé,
in the Gulf of St. Lawrence,
sailing 28,000 miles in 282 days.
I had planned to do
this non-stop,
but I was capsized and dismasted in the Pacific Ocean
and had to stop for repairs.
I imagine that the
first comment
that would come to mind
about such an adventure, could be :
what was it that made a person
- until then apparently in good mental health -
want to make such a big detour
alone, on such a small boat?
I could answer that it
is the fault of Joshua Slocum
who gave such a bad example
to four generations of sailors.
I could add that I had
done
some single-handed sailing before
and found that I had never been so much at peace
with myself
as when I was alone on my boat, on the ocean.
I have been cruising
under sail for 30 years now
I learned to sail on the St. Lawrence river
and in the Gulf of St. Lawrence
on other people’s yachts before I purchased Jean-du-Sud.
There were no sailing schools, then,
so I had to learn by making mistakes.
Fortunately, I was lucky
and those mistakes were without consequence
(anyway, it was on other people’s boats!).
I eventually
plugged the holes in my sailing education
by reading avidly all the books about cruising under sail
that I could get my nose in
- including, of course Sailing Alone Around
the World -.
I purchased
Jean-du-Sud in 1973.
It is an Alberg 30,
hull no. 399,
built of glassfibre at Whitby Boat Works,
on the shore of lake Ontario.
A six month cruise to
the West Indies and back,
the following winter, had made me want to leave again.
But that time, I wanted to leave for good.
I was working in
filmmaking,
and realized that
if I wanted to achieve something
important,
I must be totally devoted to this art,
I must concentrate on it.
But all I had in my mind was that urge to go to sea.
I realized that if I
stayed, I would be condemned
to settle for quasi-mediocrity.
I had also read many
books about spirituality
and they all agreed on this point :
" In order to increase one’s level of consciousness
and live in the Here and Now,
one must free oneself from one’s desires. "
I saw that the only way
I could ever get rid of that strong desire
would be to make it come true!
I was trying to save
money in order to leave,
but the more money I earned,
the more expensive it was to earn
and at the end of each year, I ended up almost as broke.
In June ‘75, I finally
became
a " Full-time Cruising Yachtsman "!
Other people could have said " Sail Bum "!
I got rid of all my belongings that did not fit inside the boat
and moved aboard Jean-du-Sud.
I had decided to carry
out this experiment :
Since I had almost no money, the only way I could leave
was to find out what I could do without.
I had the main ingredients : a boat, two anchors, a dinghy;
They were not totally paid for,
but I persuaded myself it would be left at my disposal
for as long as I needed them.
For the rest, I decided I could manage.
So I headed back to the
West Indies
and had a go at the charter business for two seasons,
in order to survive
and even pay some money back to the bank.
Then I sailed across
the Atlantic
to be closer to my two daughters
who had moved to Sweden with their Swedish mother.
In fact, I can say that
the conscious story
of that long voyage
started in July ‘78.
I had sailed
Jean-du-Sud to Sweden
to explore with my two daughters
the coast of their new country.
I was writing an
article that described
the course I had followed with Jean-du-Sud,
under the propitious eye of a Magick-Bird
and that strange relationship that had developed
between the three of us
(Jean-du-Sud, the Magick-Bird and myself).
At the conclusion of
the article,
even before I had formed the words in my head,
that line wrote itself :
" And I now hear him talk of the Long Voyage... "
What? You mean : Sail
around the world
South of the Great Capes, non-stop, alone?
Listen to reason : this would be
like climbing Mount Everest!
Of course, I know,
Jean-du-Sud is a good sea boat,
built very strongly.
In five years, I have learnt that I can trust him
(yes, my boat is French : it is a " he ").
And I know he did not go to sea
only to have a go at the charter business
or even be a sailing tourist :
he needs something more consistent
to put under his keel.
But think about it for
a moment :
with only four tons displacement,
he would be the smallest yacht ever
to sail that route!
In those latitudes,
there is no more land
and the seas can be enormous :
they fetch the whole way around the world!
I would need to prepare
myself and my boat impeccably
if I want to survive.
If I consciously neglect the slightest detail,
I will spend the whole voyage repeating to myself :
" I should have... "
and I will never be able to live in the " Here and Now ",
which is the object of this whole exercise.
First, I would have to
replace the mast :
playing around Cape Horn with a yacht this size,
I can be sure I will get knocked over, sooner or later
and the original Alberg 30 spar was not designed
to stand through a capsize.
Then, strengthen the
hull and coachroof,
build four watertight bulkheads,
to make my boat virtually unsinkable,
pull out the old " Atomic Four " engine
to make room for stores and spares.
And there is still a
great deal of work to do on the design
of that super self-steering system
I have been dreaming of, these last years,
that will look better, perform better
than all the other systems on the market.
I need new sails : I
would not sail far in the Southern Ocean
with the original sails of the boat.
All that would be a
great deal of work
and require a lot of money!
And I considered myself lucky
if what I had lasted till the end of summer.
In the fall, I would need to find a job.
So I had forbidden
myself to even dream
about this crazy project
and I had left Sweden and headed South
without even knowing where I would spend the winter.
Luckily, a letter from
a friend, Michel Chabiland,
caught up with me in Germany, on my way South.
Michel offered me a job in his boatyard.
I had met him the
previous fall
and we had quickly become fast friends.
He ran a yard near St. Malo, on the Rance River
where Jean-du-Sud had spent the winter.
In the spring, he had
generously placed at my disposal
his yard’s resources,
in order to refit Jean-du-Sud before I sailed to Sweden.
And it was during a
stopover
in this beautiful anchorage of the Channel Islands,
the Isles of Chausey,
the last before I would reach St. Malo and start to work,
that this crazy dream suddenly appeared possible :
I saw that the Magick-Bird
was offering me the facility
to prepare Jean-du-Sud for this great challenge.
I could use Michel’s
yard to make my boat so strong
that the seas off Cape Horn would not scare him.
And I knew I could
count on Michel’s generosity
and also on his competence
to help me solve the many technical problems
I was bound to meet.
So I moored
Jean-du-Sud near St. Malo
and learned a new trade.
For the first time in my life, I was working with my hands
and I remember writing this note :
" I have been earning my living for twenty years,
but I learned how to work at forty! "
That first autumn, I
could only work on planning the project.
I did not have any money, so I thought :
it is simple, all I have to do
is shoot a film as I sail,
this is what I was doing before I went sailing.
And the money I find to make the film
can also pay the expenses of the voyage.
That was extremely
naive :
I quickly found that it is hard enough
to finance a feature-length film.
But try to convince people to invest
in a film shot single-handed
while you also sail an Alberg 30 to Cape Horn!
In spite of the
interest shown right away
by the French network of Radio-Canada,
if a friend who was a sailor and a cinematographer
at the National Film Board of Canada
had not insisted so strongly
that they lend me some equipment,
I would have left without a camera.
Finally, thanks to the
financial help
of a network of radio stations
who sponsored the voyage
and the collaboration of a ham operator,
Pierre Décarie, VE2KD, who picked up the reports
transmitted every day by radio from Jean-du-Sud
and relayed them by phone patch
to the station for broadcasting,
thanks also to the
Ciné-Groupe people,
who assumed the risk of producing the film,
I could leave reasonably well equipped.
With hindsight, I
realize
I had to have a great deal of faith
to tackle such a project.
In fact, consciously,
I had decided to conduct this experiment :
I had read in a book I felt I could trust
that if you are deeply convinced
from the top of your consciousness
that you must do a thing,
it becomes automatically possible
and you should find the means
that will help you make it happen.
Provided, of course,
that you do your own share impeccably.
At Findhorn, they used
to call this
" the Law of Manifestation "
others invoke the Providence.
But I prefer to express
this same reality
in a less serious, if not more poetic way
and call it " the Magick-Bird ".
This way, I can use as
a reminder
a little bird, woven from a Magick coconut palm
hanging from the hand-rail, inside the cabin.
When I had left, five years earlier,
I had put it to a test
and must admit that until then,
its performance had been more than adequate :
I had never run out of the essential,
I was even able to have my two daughters
with me on the boat, every summer.
So I decided to start
from this axiom
and give it the benefit of the doubt.
From that moment until
the day I left,
there was not a single day I did not ask myself :
" What can I do to-day most efficiently
in order to materialize this project? "
As soon as I considered
the problem as a whole,
taking into account the size of the project
and the little means I had,
I felt discouraged and was tempted to quit.
So I made an effort not
to anticipate,
to face the problems only when they needed a solution
and tried to solve them one by one, the best I could.
I thought I would need
two years,
but it was three years before I could leave.
Three years, during which every morning,
I asked myself this question :
" What can I do to-day, most efficiently... "
And if you ask me what
this long voyage
taught me most important,
I will answer : it is precisely this attitude
that became, with time, a habit.
As a conclusion, I
would like to read a letter
I wrote my two daughters before I left.
You will easily understand
that it was essential to me
that I express my deepest motivation
as honestly as I could do it
to the two people on earth that I loved the most.
Annikki and Julika
Gélinas
Uppsala, Sweden
St. Malo, April 13 1980
Yesterday was your
birthday, my dear Annikki, and I often thought about you.
Many times during the
evening, I went topside to try to see, up in the sky, the lovely
constellation of the Dolphin. I finally had to go to bed without seeing it :
the Dolphin is a summer constellation and even late at night, it was still
too low and the horizon was cloudy. I told myself that I should have given
you a group of stars that can be seen on your birthday, but I comforted
myself at the thought that the Dolphin is a lovely constellation, even if it
is not very bright. As soon as I discovered it in the sky, I thought that
you would like it because you are always joyous and playful like a dolphin.
I can still remember the day I saw you for the first time, the day of your
birth, thirteen years ago yesterday, you were already smiling!
But I could see, high in
the sky, the lovely Northern Crown, with the Pearl in its middle, and right
away I had before my eyes the charming smile of my own little pearl, my dear
Julika.
For quite some time, I
have wanted to tell you the reasons that pushed me to undertake this long
voyage, but I realize that it is very difficult. It is easy to find reasons,
but none of them seems to me more important than the others. Finally, I had
to admit it is beyond reason. If I go, it is because I feel deeply inside
myself that I must do it. It is a dream I have had for a long time and my
good fortune - or better, the Magick-Bird - made the circumstances favorable
even though I did not plan it consciously.
Of course, I must mention
my interest in sailing. Sailing became for me a way of life and I try to do
it as best I can. The success or the failure of such a voyage depends almost
entirely on the amount of energy I put into its preparation and execution.
If I want to do it non-stop, I must have foreseen even the smallest detail.
I try, of course, to take advantage of the experience of those who sailed
those waters before me : they are my guides. But I try to steer away from
the mistakes they could not avoid, and to add to the sum of this knowledge,
the fruit of my own experience and talent. Maybe that way, if the Magic-Bird
wants it to be, can I contribute to improve the art of sailing a small boat
across the oceans.
And if I chose to sail
non-stop, it is also because this is the only way I can sail around the
world without missing a single summer with you : if I leave in August, after
spending June and July with you, I will be back, if all goes well, in April
or May, soon enough to spend an other summer with my loved ones.
When I left Montréal,
five years ago, to go sailing with
Jean-du-Sud and the
Magick-Bird, I was looking for a way of life that would be closer to what I
wanted, deep inside me. It seemed more important to me to work at getting
peace of mind, than at earning and spending money. After five years of this
way of life, I could experience all the good it did me and I feel that eight
or nine months of solitude could allow me to consolidate what I have already
acquired, and progress even further. It happens that some people feel the
need to be alone, at some point in their life, either to go through some
difficult step of their spiritual evolution, or to give themselves the
liberty of progressing more easily.
This is what I have felt
these last years and it is, I believe, my deepest motivation.
" If you have been far away for so long, as far as the
stars and even farther than the stars, you come back with a different
vision ". It may be that I am also looking for that different vision that
Bernard Moitessier found deep inside himself.
Moitessier also wrote :
" In the
high latitudes of the Southern Ocean, one is in the hand of God ". But I
prefer to say in the hand of the Magick-Bird. We have lived together for so
long, the Magick-Bird and myself, that I feel He will do all He can to guide
me through. You can even help Him to help me. Anyone can do it and the more
love there is, the better it works.
Sir Francis Chichester, a great British sailor, did a single-handed circumnavigation on this same
route, with a boat very difficult to handle. His wife, who loved him very
much, had organized a group of people who prayed for him, while he was at
sea. And he wrote that this had helped him a lot, in his difficult moments.
But to get the same
result, you don’t have to recite prayers. All you do is quieten your mind
and your heart, and right away, you are on the wavelength of the Magick-Bird.
Who knows, I may be at
that moment fighting against bad weather and I will feel that I am no longer
alone, that others, somewhere, are sending me their love, and this new
energy will help me overcome my fear or my fatigue, reminding me that the
Magick-Bird is looking after me.
And if it did happen
that, as the song after which I named my boat says, " Jean-du-Sud found his
ultimate storm ", I hope that you will not be sorry for me. I will try to do
the great passage without fear or regret, and my last thoughts will go to
you. You may not see me, but I will be fortunate enough to make my nest very
close to you, deep inside your heart, and help you from the inside with the
Magick-Bird, for the rest of your life.
A bientôt, my sweet
Annikki
A bientôt, my tender
Julika
Papa Yves
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