
Los Ticos
Del Viento gets a visit from family on the Isla Espiritu Santo.
Del Viento gets a visit from family on the Isla Espiritu Santo.
When you have a well followed blog, its easy to be recognized in the charter capital of the world.
Splashing your boat for the first time after being on the hard for so long is always a bit of a nail biter.
Warm weather, friendly faces and untold adventures await the crew on Chiloé Island.
The coming months will bring the longest journey Del Viento has taken, from Mexico to French Polynesia.
On board Del Viento, there are no blue jobs or pink jobs.
There was a time in my life where this sort of rigid organization was not necessary to move from A to B, but having kids threw all that out the window. For us, this is the only way to maintain order—and sanity—during what can be a pretty stressful and hectic time: the pre-departure panic.
After a 24-day Pacific Crossing, the crew of Galactic is giving themselves 24 days to do boat maintenance and projects in Chile, while also taking in the culture.
“Can you stave off your hunger for a couple hours longer, in favor of doing something really cool?”
How does that even happen? The crew of Del Viento finds out.
This video might just make your day.
No matter how many people who have done the trip before, no matter how commodotizied and normalized the activity might seem to us, it really is a big deal, sailing to South America with the family, across the bleedin’ Pacific Ocean and all. If only there was a little more food on board…
Del Viento gets a visit from family on the Isla Espiritu Santo.
When you have a well followed blog, its easy to be recognized in the charter capital of the world.
Splashing your boat for the first time after being on the hard for so long is always a bit of a nail biter.
Warm weather, friendly faces and untold adventures await the crew on Chiloé Island.
The coming months will bring the longest journey Del Viento has taken, from Mexico to French Polynesia.
On board Del Viento, there are no blue jobs or pink jobs.
There was a time in my life where this sort of rigid organization was not necessary to move from A to B, but having kids threw all that out the window. For us, this is the only way to maintain order—and sanity—during what can be a pretty stressful and hectic time: the pre-departure panic.
After a 24-day Pacific Crossing, the crew of Galactic is giving themselves 24 days to do boat maintenance and projects in Chile, while also taking in the culture.
“Can you stave off your hunger for a couple hours longer, in favor of doing something really cool?”
How does that even happen? The crew of Del Viento finds out.
This video might just make your day.
No matter how many people who have done the trip before, no matter how commodotizied and normalized the activity might seem to us, it really is a big deal, sailing to South America with the family, across the bleedin’ Pacific Ocean and all. If only there was a little more food on board…
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