We want to discover the world on our own sailing boat for the next two years. We set off from Italy in September and sailed via the Balearic Islands, the Spanish mainland and through the Strait of Gibraltar to Tangier, Morocco. We continued on the Atlantic, first to the Canary Islandsand then together with our good friend Stefan to Cape Verde and finally we crossed the Atlantic to Tobago together. After four months of island hopping in the Eastern Caribbean, we made the leap to Curacaoin the south-west and then to Panama. After a brief two-week visit home, we crossed the Panama Canal from the Atlantic to the Pacific. On the pacific side of Panama, we explore the beautiful Pearl Islands and the natural paradise of Coiba, before sailing as far as Boca Chica, almost at the border to Costa Rica. This period is marked by several unplanned trips home due to a family member’s serious illness. We therefore decide to return to the Atlantic after almost a year in the Pacific. We transit the Panama Canal for a second time. After leaving Panama, we are sailing for a week to Jamaica, which we get to exoplore for a few days. From here, we will head via the Bahamas and Bermuda to the Azores, where we intend to spend the summer.
We are sailng here right now
Passage from Jamaica to the Bahamas
The second leg of our journey back to Europe takes us from Jamaica to the Bahamas…
Let’s go through the Panama Canal
We are sailing our 10-metre sailboat through the Panama Canal, a masterpiece of engineering that connects the Atlantic Ocean in the north with the Pacific Ocean in the south…
Oh, how lovely Panama is
Nach einer schnellen 5-tägigen Überfahrt von Curaçao nach Panama, kommen wir mit den ersten Sonnenstrahlen am Morgen in den San Blas Inseln an…
Atlantic Part 1: Next stop Mindelo
The next big leg is coming up for us, namely approx. 1000 nautical miles from Lanzarote to Mindelo, Cape Verde. We expect this first Atlantic leg to take around 9 days…
Atlantic Trial: 6 days from Tangier to Lanzarote
Our longest crossing so far is coming up, and it's on the Atlantic….