Censured content


I am a photo fascist. Yes, a perfectionist. Which means that I never upload, or rarely let people use my photos, without me supervised them to perfection... That's probably a shame, as you might miss some of those natural, simple, real moments - so for all of you who want to see what's going on before and after all of these well taken photos you're viewing on this blog, we have now opened a private album on FaceBook. This is where some of those poorly taken photos from our tour around the world will be shown. But this is private, ok?! So you have to be our FaceBook friend to view em'. And you have to promise not to show them to anyone! /Taru

What made it up for me

If you wanna know what made me move aboard this boat, read my story on Sailing Anarchy today. And don't ask me why they haven't thought of making an easy solution with trackbacks to each of the SA articles, it's a pain-in-the-a to find what you need, but scroll down a bit and you'll find it a couple of posts down. /T

Pic has nothing to do with the story, it's just a sweet memory of my first summer on board. And some of my beautiful friends on a visit.

Let's go!!


Cake time. I'm taking a break! Oh my freakin' lord what a mess it is down here. The boat is inside out with things everywhere, everywhere where they're not supposed to be and there's tools in every nook and cranny and I can barely keep my mind sane in this d i s a s t e r, also called our home. Trying to clean up the mess and five minutes later it looks like someone turned the boat completely up side down. Alex tells me it is not time for baking when there is millions of things to finish before the sun goes down, I claim that he doesn't know me by now.. I need my cake therapy to be able to go through this! I need to put on some Portishead on very high volume, put my hands in a bowl full of eggs and distract myself with delicate measurements.

I also told him that we should cast off and leave Barcelona tonight. Let's forget the missing things and let them be sent to some other harbor along the way. I can't stand this goddamn stress no more. If only, if only... It is not the amount of tasks that's stressing me most, it is the knowledge of that the freedom is awaiting us just around the corner. In not so many hours, we'll be free, unbound, released and that is what is most disturbing, frustrating, exhilarating, nerve-breaking, exciting in the life of moi, at the moment.

Will add the recipe for the cake here later on when Alex stops insisting on me to do this and that and this....

And yes, I can clearly see that it looks like a christmas cake and associated winter ambience, just another reason why we should leave. NOW! It's too f-cking cold over here!! Give me the Caribbean! Or at least take me to Morocco! /T

Sponsors

Someone was asking us what is the idea with the sponsors and what influence do they have on this journey so I'll tell you about it. We decided, already in the very beginning of the preparations, that it would be suitable with some sponsors. Simply because, as you might be aware of, it is not totally inexpensive to quit working and cast off for a two year long circumnavigation. Some of the companies to whom we've been customers for a while, offered discounts on their products and we thought it would be nice if we, in return, could take the chance to mention them in one way or the other, on this blog. The other sponsors listed are companies which we've approached with an offer to sponsor our tour. We had a list of things that required greater investments and for those we've been interested to discuss sponsor opportunities - and we're glad that almost all of the brands that we've been in touch with, have been keen to participate in some way. They've agreed on participating simply because they believed in our project/us, and because they understood what the journey/blog might generate in marketing value for their brand, on a longer perspective.

We've decided to not bring in any brands to this project that does not fit our style/lifestyle/values and all of the companies we are and will be working with in the future must be such as we honestly want to be connected with. Things we would invest in anyway. As we are not in desperate need of sponsorships, we can set the rules as we like and there will never be such things as putting brands and their logos all over our boat and never would we wear nor promote brands we wouldn't spend money on, ourselves.

On the picture above, I'm wearing a cap from one of my favorite Swedish brands 'Permanent Vacation' - which is one of the lines I picked up for my fashion boutique some years ago. I was in touch with one of the designers very recently and she loved the idea of having their caps and clothes sailing around the world so they've decided to sponsor our tour with some fashionable clothing for both me and Alex. I'm happy to both wear and promote them once again, as that is a brand that I truthfully value and would wear even in the case they didn't gave us the stuff for free.

I cannot say we've only been lucky to get such great sponsors as we have, as there's obviously great work behind this project - but we're blessed to have achieved such a strong position that some of the greatest brands within, and outside of, the sailing industry - have believed in us/this project and the future of it.

Right now we're happy to announce that these brands are sponsoring The World Tour: North Sails (sails), Sperry Top Sider (shoes), Sailomat (windvane), Katadyn (watermaker), Accastillage Diffusion Barcelona (boat gear and electronics), Remoska (electrical oven), Permanent Vacation (clothing), Carol (technical production of our new website, coming up soon). Other brands mentioned in the list to the right: Hallberg Rassy and The Barcelona Guide, they're simply there as we have a personal interest in them and we would like to promote them to the extent we can.

We are thankful for the collaborations and we're anxious to bring above mentioned products and services with us around the world. Looking forward to long lasting relations with all of the companies participating.

/Taru

Fresh water tank


Other funny things we're messing around with.. The inspection plates on the water tank were badly oxidized, so we needed to take them out, clean the tank and change the plates. Not sure of how these type of things are mounted in newer boats but this was a bit of a tricky thing to sort out. The screw holders which were holding the aluminum plates needed to get cut out with the grinder in order to get the plates out and the cleaning of the tanks inside weren't that easy as it might sound. Alex will now make new plates in stainless steel to minimize the risk of getting new oxidation in the tank. Glad to have it all done before the watermaker is getting installed. /T

THE list

We're checking off thing after thing on our lists. But with only 19 days left, we still have a crazy amount of things to accomplish before we can leave Barcelona. Here we go:
  • Deck and exterior refit - Including replacement of hatches, new 46ST genoa winches in cockpit, the teak needs to get refitted (that goddamn teak's still not done and the rain doesn't quite help the process!!), portholes (will arrive this week), wind-vane installation's under development, bathing platform needs to get mounted. The watermaker is ordered and on the way. A new set of sails is also ordered and will probably not be here on time, but await us in Gibraltar. Need to haul out the boat to install new seacocks and at the same time we'll need to make some serious polishing of the hull.
  • Interior refit - Including new mahogany for the galley working area, new curtains up, need to invent a better system for storing the kitchenware and glasses.
  • Book order from Amazon - There will come plenty of times when one needs to get entertained and also times when one needs to fill up the knowledge bank - so books have been/will be ordered with a wide variety of subjects such as: Globalization, Nihilism, Kite Surfing, World War I & II, Fruits in the tropics, Film Noir, French/Swedish lexicon, The philosophy of Immanuel Kant, Cruising in the Windward islands, Islands of the Pacific, Introduction to capitalism, Cooking with sprouts, Ocean fishing, Haruki Murakami collection etc...
  • Music list - One thing we'll seriously be missing is the access to Spotify. The detachment from this little digital wonder requires us to download millions of cd's to our ipod's and computers. A major time-consuming task, that's for sure..
  • Provisioning - The boat needs to get filled up with food and wine of course, most of it done.
  • Movie downloading - All those classics and everything we still haven't had the time to watch.
  • Documentation equipment - We'll need to upgrade our equipment and this is under progress as well. Just ordered our dream camera from Canon with HD video possibility and it will hopefully arrive in next week. Some new lenses to that and we're all set.
  • Sport section - Kite gear, new cylinders for diving, two foldable bikes... holy shit, where's that bigger boat when we need it!
  • Medicine section - Not even started.
  • Insurance - Under development.
  • Internet - Under development...
We have exactly 27.360 minutes to fulfill these tasks, shouldn't be impossible, what do you think?

Time for a break


It is a ridiculous amount of rain that is showering Barcelona and nearby regions at the moment. Perfect in time for the current mounting of our new Lewmar hatches and the associated applying of new fiber glass around them. Not!! Although we should worry about how much water there's actually leaking in through the not-yet-sealed-hatch-openings, we have totally decided to leave that project aside for some hours and instead we're chilling down with a couple of (not homemade) pizzas and a movie on the laptop. /T

Fried chicken with a sweet bean salad


Pan fry your marinated chicken and prepare the salad in the meanwhile.

I've used these ingredients:

A handful of rucola
A handful of baby spinach
A bunch of mung bean sprouts
1 Comice pear (whatever pear goes, it's the sweet taste and the firm, grainy texture you're after)
Some red pepper
Blue cheese

I've chosen to made the dressing very sweet and refreshing as there's a lot of taste in the chicken. My sweet dressing is simply made of some raspberry vinaigrette, which can be found in well-assorted grocery stores, and virgin olive oil.

Chicken's marinated in soy, salt, black pepper, sesame oil, chili pepper and a bit of fresh garlic.

Serve as a starter or a lunch salad. It is very, very delicious.

Searching for the real meaning of life

People often ask us: How did you come up with this idea? To sail around the world? I mean you guys barely knew each other when you decided? How do you expect to be just the two of you on such small space for such a long time? Do you do this to run away from something? The list is long with wonderings and, sometimes pessimistic, questions so I will tell you the story of how we decided to do this and a bit about our philosophy around this journey. And life in general.

When Alex first introduced me to Caos, he had just bought her a couple of months earlier. It was a cold and windy November afternoon. The wind blew up to around 30 knots, it was freezing cold and there was cold water everywhere so the chance that I would get bored and never step onto a sailboat again were greater than I would give it another chance. But I went through it somehow, felt a rush of excitement when we stepped off the boat again in the dark and cold night and I told Alex that we definitely needed do this again very soon. Somehow I loved the new insight this small ride gave me. Not only the sailing, or the man behind the helm - but also the new spiritual reflection it offered. I was somehow impressed that a man, a tremendously sexy man like Alex is, would prefer to go out sailing alone in rough weather rather than spending his time and money on normal type of entertainment/soul searching that the norm in his age and looks would do. This man was a far cry from the jet set world, the wheel of consumption, the overstrained businessmen and the party-people that I, at this time, was surrounded by most of my time.

Alex simply enjoyed sailing by himself and he seemed to have found peace and happiness in the natural and raw things of life and I got incredibly attracted by the strong statement that his aura was screaming out. His calmness and his passivity to all things fake and worldly was and still can be a bit provocative in the eyes of a few, as he has no intention to hide his real self, but that is exactly what in the beginning got me turned on - and still do. Me myself had always been torn between the consuming lifestyle versus the deeper insights of how destructive and pathetic the superficial consumption society actually is/was - so to meet Alex who clearly was on the real side with real values, was such an incredible relief.

So I kept on seeing this sailor and he continued bringing me out on cold nights on the sea and even though I was/still is a very lazy and comfortable person who hated the cold weather (Spain had it's coldest winter for 80 years that winter), something inside of my head told me: keep on, go through this, it will reward you later on, and I did follow that voice.

Then one day when we had been seeing each other for a couple of weeks or so, Alex asked me: "Why don't we take the boat and go somewhere warm? Africa or maybe the Caribbean for some months?" I thought for some seconds and I heard myself say: "Why not around the world?" I remember Alex was looking at me like he thought I was joking. His face was thrilled of excitement yet extremely skeptical. "Yes, why not" - he said after a while of confusion, and smiled. Still wondering what the hell did she just say? Sailing around the world was obviously one of Alex ultimate dreams, as is for every sailor I suppose, but he was far away from making reality of that dream in exactly this period of his life. 

When I think about it in retrospective, I am not sure that I at this time knew the meaning of what I just had suggested. One of my crazy ideas or a social experiment in a different world, is probably what my oldest and best friends would describe it as, without leaving a shred of surprise. And what Alex thought at this time is not very clear either. I think that he barely started to believe that the dream actually would become reality for real before maybe around the early summertime, this year. I, on the other hand, was sure of that this was the meaning of my life from the very second that I suggested the idea and I happily moved onto the boat after New Year. Still not sure how it all went so fast but something inside of me told me that it was the right thing to do. And the warmer it got in the spring time, the more I learned to love sailing and the life aboard.

As I had been working with online portals, blogs and all kinds of social media networks since I opened my online boutique and started my blogs back in 2005, it was obvious that we had to run a blog and a website with the journey. It was also obvious from the start that we would bring in sponsors to lower the costs of equipment and most naturally would I take this excellent chance to develop my creativity and my passion and experience in photography and editing and share the beautiful days of the journey with the rest of the world.

Whatever we thought of and however we turned and twisted the idea between each other, it just felt perfectly right. Like there was never a better plan made. This was not only the journey of our dreams with the person we felt stronger for than for anyone in our pasts, it also clicked perfectly with our passions, life experiences and with the individual philosophical process which we individually had gone through so far, in life.

Call it the meaning of life or the mission on planet earth, we just knew that this was what we were meant to be doing. So when people ask us "how will you be able to live just the two of you on such small space and will you ever get bored" - we almost laugh as the question is so simple compared to the years of thinking process we have spent to get here. I don't think there are no better answer to all of the wonderings more than: We just know it, from the bottom of our hearts and in every corner of our bodies, we know that this is the right thing to do. If it would mean that we will have to see only each other for two long years, live on tiny space and not having contact with the rest of the world, we would still do it - but obviously that is not the case.

So when people ask us: "Are you doing this to run away from the reality?" We just say: Yes, of course we are. We are utterly convinced that a detachment from the society is what we need for now, to reach those new insights which we're so desperately longing for - as the thing you might call the normality or the reality, aren't enough for us any longer. With our life experiences and insight in different worlds, we can truthfully proclaim that we're no longer interested in the normal way of living. Though I know I do it damn good, I do no longer want to be a part of the consumer society where the image you convey of yourself is more important than the real things: love, being true to oneself and the pure happiness you get from simple things. Don't get me wrong: money have to always be made and we will both always appreciate well made craftsmanship and quality in the things that we use, wear, eat and live on, just have a look at the boat we live in - we just believe that there is a far greater meaning with life than the world we have seen so far, and we can't find a better way to put our philosophy into practice, than to sail away. To only have enough material for what we actually need, that the things we use are perfectly efficient for our lifestyle and not to live in abundance, is what we're striving for. And with the love for one another, the nature, the sea and the like minded people we will meet on our journey, we believe that we'll find a more pure and truthful happiness which we cannot find in this normal world.

The most fantastic part with it all, with this beautiful thing called life, is that we actually have found someone who's the copy of ourselves in the philosophical aspect and who completely understands, what we both always thought that no one could adapt to. We've both, unconsciously, been searching for that someone who would be able to, not only comprehend our personal philosophies and existential questions, but also being able to physically act on the desires of reaching a new level in life. That new something which requires the detachment we're now about to execute together.

The ones who knows us for real, our families and childhood friends, they know that we are two individuals who always have had the need to get out there in the unknown - yet when we feel that the time is right, we'll get back to collect some new energy from our loved ones. New acquaintances might take this type of disappearance personally, but I think most of them will get the point after a while. This is how we are and have always been. Although individually until now.

I can totally understand that it can sound provocative for some people that we're choosing to step outside of the norm to get even closer to each other and far away from it all. But this is what drives us, this is what is have to get done and this is what we have been waiting for for almost a year now. Or even a lifetime. Very soon we will finally be able to say: We made it, no matter where the journey will take us, how long it will last or how long it will be the two of us, we made it through to the other side. Mentally and spiritually we're already there - now only remaining is the physical part of ourselves, to reach to that next level where we believe that our souls will find a new, greater meaning with life.

Mung beans für alle


Tada! They're done! I can imagine that you're bored by our beans by now so this is the last one, I promise. These little babies will go perfect with the asian stew that I'm planning to concoct for dinner tonight. /T

Step 2 / Keeping it natural


The beans in the last photo were sprouted for around 12 hours, and this is now how they look after 36 hours, there's some 24-36 more hours to go before they're done. It is a quite amazing feeling to see these little wonders gradually grow in the jar. This is something that comes from the nature, grows with natural treatments and will go straight to our own diet. Wonderful ecological food chain and we can't wait to put this self sufficiency into practice for real when we'll leave the normal world, as we prefer to call it. To produce/catch/sprout our own food to the extend it is possible, will be one of the culinary missions of this trip. The fresher the better and you all know how rewarding it is to cut down most possible intermediaries, whatever it might concern. Food in particular. /T

Work under progress


Our Sailomat 760 came with us in the flight from Sweden and is now getting mounted. Exciting!

We received a lot of great feedback when we asked for advice on Cruisers Forum regarding two different windvanes from Sailomat and Windpilot - and after contemplating, we figured that the one from Sailomat would fulfill all of our requirements. What a great luck also that Stellan Knöös, the owner and designer at Sailomat believed in our project and wanted to support our journey with a great discount on the system. Looking forward to get it installed this afternoon and hopefully having the chance to try it out this weekend.

For all of you who're not into sailing (yet), I'll give you a simple lesson: This huge piece of metal is a self steering system, which allows us to sail in the right direction to the wind without having to actually steer the helm (wheel). Sitting by the helm all day long can be very exhausting and requires tons of attention and focus, therefore are mechanisms such as the autopilot and/or a windvane used. This windvane system will give us the freedom to do all kinds of other things when sailing long or short passages, instead of always having to have one person in the cockpit. The boat will simply sail herself along. This windvane steers the boat with a constant point of sail - which you will manually set for your boat when the perfect wind has been found, this unlike the autopilot - which steers a constant compass course with an electric steering motor connected to the rudder. /T

Hallbergrassy.com

What a nice surprise to find myself and our beloved Caos on the front page of the Hallberg Rassy website.

Fresh delights


From fashion and Breakfast at Tiffany's to a bit more natural things. Nicole and Gar gave us a gift last time they visited us on s/v Caos. A starter kit for sprouting beans! I put these small bastards to sprout last night and am now looking forward to see them grow and try them out for cooking this weekend. Like Nicole said about longer passages, there can come times when one gets really fed up with fish and seafood and you're desperately longing for something fresh - then this is one of the answers. Fresh bean sprouts and alfalfa always on hand, seems to me like a gift from heaven. An ecological treat from mother nature. I'm excited to see how these Mung Beans will develop, will get back with a review in a couple of days. /T

Memories of a past era


When one of my very close and dear friends came to visit us on the boat this summer, she brought with her a stunning pair of Chanel sandals and this piece of art for me as a gift. She was of course thrilled and excited by the fact that I would sail around the world with the man of my dreams but wanted to advice me that "a women should always sail in style" - just what I would imagine both Coco Chanel and miss Hepburn to suggest, if they only were alive.

The preparations for this whole trip has been all about giving and taking, for us as a couple. Alex might have to put up with a couple of stilettos and Hermès boxes taking up space for additional tools or extra provisions, while I had to leave a huge part of my self (materialistically that is) to be able to jump aboard this adventure on such small space. And no greater problem with that, as we both know that togetherness is all about compromises and as we're utterly convinced that this journey and our love is the meaning of our lives for now - but the image of Ms Hepburn hanging here on our wall is a cute memory of what once might have been a big part of me, and what I still am connected to in a subtle way, through some of my beloved friends. Far away on the map perhaps, but always in my heart.

/Taru