A 50 year old professional drifter snags a 19 year old groupie and some sponsors for his next adventure. I won’t be going to see the movie but congrats on escaping life in the real world.
Who did it a century ago? I’m under the impression he never docked for supplies. I agree the website is pretty crappy. I can’t find any information on how he built the boat which must be on there somewhere, but I just can’t find it.
It is pretty impressive, actually. Ordinarily, douchebags at sea just wash up with the first tide or stay out and are ripped to confetti in short order. This is real triumph for douchebags.
What research purpose? There are a group of people near Moscow right now, in a simulation of a space ship, simulating the trip to Mars and back (over 2 years). They are watched by scientists to record and evaluate the psychological (and physiological) problems that will occur, and test the best strategies to deal with them.
This is useful research.
The arctic research stations also double for the effects of isolation (and light deprivation) in addition to their geologic and meteorolgic research.
Putting a group of people into a Big Brother container and filming them 24/7 is not research, just money-grabbing while degrading to human dignity.
Similarly,one doctor preparing himself and sailing the ocean alone with a Klepper foldable boat over the ocean in the 1950s (before satellite radio, GPS and other rescue) to find out what ship-wrecked people needed to do in order to survive at sea - that was useful research.
Doing a stunt just to show that it can be done, without preparation, feedback and recording of scientists - not research.
So, to sum up: important research questions have already been done; you need to ask the questions before you start; you need to have scientists interested in your method and observe you.
Joshua Slocum, for one. To be precise, Slocum’s voyage was 1160 days long and completed 112 years ago. And he at least went somewhere - all the way around the world all alone, using equipment and methods that were considered antique even then. I fail to see what this gentleman has accomplished to advance knowledge.
The problem (as best I can see, and I do know a couple of folks that are into sailing big time) that others in the sailing world have with Reid Stowe is that he is a blithering idiot.
When Soanya was on the boat and doing the bulk of the posting it was interesting reading. Lot of good insights and observations on the day-to-day happenings.
Reading most of Reid’s posts was almost painful at times. For instance, he’d catch a tuna and there would be a long rambling post about blessing the fish’s spirit etc.
A small nitpick. I’m pretty sure he didn’t build the boat for this cruise. If I remember correctly it was something like 20-25 years old when he started. But I do seem to remember him saying he either built it of did some major rebuilding when he first got it.
Big meh - military wives tolerate going hubbyless when they get deployed, and have for decades [and in some cases the practice of husbands going off to war predates history] and we seen to get along just fine.
And it isnt as if we don’t have experience with experimental isolated living experiences - we had people living underwater, we have people living in submarines, we have people experimenting with alternatives for those who had been living in satellites.
He was just pulling a stunt …
But then again, as I said, big meh- military wives pop kids out without the husbands being home all the damned time.
But Slocum did put into port just about every chance he got.
Reid Stowe set out to be out of sight of land for 1,000 days and was totally alone for the larger part of the cruise. Unlike the people in the Russian experiment he was at substantial risk for that time. There was nobody to help him if things went south.
I think there is some value in his cruise.
But the guy is still a dick.
“Research” is meaningless without research design. Whatever information he may have possibly got (and I doubt there is much) is not in any way useful unless it’s part of a plan to ask and answer specific questions. You can’t just call everything you do “research.”
But then again, as I said, big meh- military wives pop kids out without the husbands being home all the damned time.
[/QUOTE]
I wonder why we don’t hear of people criticizing soldiers for leaving their families for years at a time. It’s odd, because going off to serve your country in the line of duty seems roughly equivalent to goofing off on a boat for no discernible reason. It’s a mystery.
As I said before, it appears that Reid Stowe NEVER DOCKED. This is significantly different than a solo circumnavigation with many ports of call. That’s not to say that Joshua Slocum’s feat was not amazing and perhaps way more impressive, but Reid Stowe had to haul ALL his supplies as far as I can tell.
I guess that what you are saying is that Reid Stowe did not circumnavigate the planet. Of course, his website is so shitty, I can’t even find a map of his travels, and it’s not even clear what his route was. If he didn’t, well then that’s completely unimpressive because you could just get a big old boat and park it in the middle of the Mediterranean for 3 years and accomplish the same thing.
I don’t blame the guy for dropping his wife off though. She knew what she was in for. Couldn’t she have brought along 3 years worth of birth control? Who knows, maybe they ran out of rubbers after a year.