Swing, Palmyra Atoll

Crew opportunity & Goodsailor.com

Posted on by Nick

Just a quick post to mention a good friend of mine is sailing his freshly rebuilt Westsail 32 from Darwin around to Cairns in late August / early Sept, and is looking for worthy crew. He’s in his late 20s, so probably someone around that age who is up for a bit of an adventure will fit the bill. No money involved, just the potential for an amazing trip. You can contact me for further info, and I will put you onto him if you fit the profile!

In other news, I’m experimenting with quick-blogging things I come across at Goodsailor.com.

What should I do with this blog?

Posted on by Nick

Ok, I have been thinking about this for months. Many, many months… It seems simple… But, to me unfortunately it’s not: I don’t know what to do with this blog. I’m not going to shut it down – Quite the contrary. I actually have a lot to write. I come across interesting things related to the ocean and sailing nearly everyday, and I’d like to write about what I find and see. I just don’t know whether to do it on this blog, and turn it into a daily sailing blog, or whether to leave my infrequent but more personal postings here, and blog daily on general topics elsewhere?

What do you think? Should I create an offshoot blog elsewhere to blog daily on, or should I do it here? My internal dialogue says this: Bigoceans.com is the personal website of myself, related to my sailing from the UK to Australia. There is lots of personal content, and videos, photos etc… It’s always been a personal blog, and essentially since I am land bound right now, I’d like to write about other things not related to my own personal endeavours.

Plusses for Bigoceans.com: I have a following here. I have quite a few Twitter follows. Lots of people find this site through Google search.

Negatives for Bigoceans.com: Blog becomes too commercial and too broad/general, diluting my own content and site.

Plusses for a fresh blog offshoot: New start, daily content from the beginning, clear intentions.

Negatives for a fresh blog offshoot: Starting from the ground up, neglecting Bigoceans.com, splitting myself across two blogs on a very similar topic.

I need some help! What should I do?

Fundraising in the 21st Century

Posted on by Nick

It wasn’t long ago, that aspiring adventurers would shimmy up to the Royal Geographical Society, with polite invitations, noble yet firm handshakes, and an air of sophistication, to charm the powers at be for possible funding and support for their proposed wanderings. Devoid of Powerpoint presentations, I imagine Shackleton during that heroic age of antarctic exploration, standing on a small stage at a Society function, fumbling with large dusty globes, charred maps and stories of a theoretical point on the earths surface he planned to reach – Pitching a journey from England across the oceans and ice pack, in order to trek to a point on earths surface, where the imaginary lines of coordinate parallels all converge into one: The south pole.

Today it’s a little different. For those that have watched my journey since this blog began in 2006, you may have remembered that I had a Paypal donate button (controversial for some, apparently!). I had asked people who enjoyed my writing, videos, and photos, to make a contribution to keep me going. I figured it was like a voluntary donation for reading a free book… Some months ago, I pulled all the data down from Paypal, and put it in a spreadsheet. I was surprised to see that over my sailing and blogging heyday, I had raised close to $10,000. It only ever trickled in; a few dollars here and there (with a few notable exceptions), but it really added up, and my trip probably wouldn’t have happened without it.

Some may or may not know, that I also work with Roz Savage on her website – Through my company, we sponsor Roz by building, hosting & maintaining the current incarnation of her web presence, which is her primary medium for getting her environmental message out, and maintaining contact with the outside world while she rows across oceans.

With all this in mind, we recently we launched an early release web application to assist in adventure fundraising, coming up with the idea over a few drinks at a dim bar in Melbourne, when Roz flew through en route to Perth and explained her by-the-mile dilemma. The current implementation was rapidly deployed to fit with Roz’s departure schedule some weeks ago – The project is called Nomaddica, and is currently still in private testing, but with any luck we will add features and make it public in the not too distant future. You will see Roz has been using this app to raise funds by the mile for the last several weeks, and has been quite successful… If you’re interested in learning more in the future, sign up by clicking the ‘get invite’ link located on Roz’s project page – Perhaps while you’re there, consider supporting her efforts! You could also contact me personally if you had a specific and upcoming project in mind where Nomaddica might be useful.

And so on the topic of fundraising… My friends Ben & Teresa from the US East coast are raising funds to go on an epic sailing voyage in search of an iceberg, and to make a documentary on sailing, simplicity, adventure and the environment. They’re using Kickstarter to raise awareness for their project, and in just 13 days the campaign ends – So if you love sailing, want to see more documentaries from grassroots sailors and documentary film makers… Then pretend you’re at the Royal Geographical Society, sipping cognac and watching adventurers pitch their ideas at the monthly dinner banquet… And watch their pitch video:

Nick.

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