Tag Archives: Victoria

OceanGybe Presentations

For all of you who are around Vancouver/Victoria, BC, Canada; the OceanGybe crew will be doing a series of public events to help spread our message of plastic pollution in our oceans and raise funds for a western Canada high/junior school tour in the Fall ’09. These have been long promised and now they are coming! Continue reading

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Posted in Blog | Tagged , , | 95 Comments | Show on map

Saanich / Oak Bay / Victoria News

Another quick update, I had a great chat to Andrea Lavigne from Victoria News a couple weeks ago and just recently was perusing their website to see if they had published it yet and came across her wonderful article. Take a look below…


Big blue thrill

By Andrea Lavigne
News staff
Mar 23 2007

Students combine work with a three-year, circumglobal surfing vacation

Call it a pipe dream.

What started off as banter over a few beers, has turned into a three-year research and outreach expedition.

University of Victoria graduates Hugh Patterson and Bryson Robertson share a love of surfing, sailing, adventure and activism; passions they plan to weave together in an exploration project called OceanGybe.

The journey begins this spring and will take them across the Pacific Ocean to remote islands and beaches in the South Pacific and beyond.

By studying ocean reefs few people have ever visited, they will provide documentation that will be used to estimate changes in marine pollution and/or deterioration in the future.

Robertson, a mechanical engineer by trade, is also completing his PhD thesis on the interrelationship between ocean swell and bathymetry – the measurement of ocean depths.

Queens University is contributing to the research by providing a hyperspectral camera that shoots light at a coral face and measures the light reflected back. From the light reflected back, the researchers can tell the what sort of community it is and the health of that community.

It’s a completely non-destructive method, he added.

They plan on sharing their findings with universities and environmental organizations and conducting school presentations along the way.

But it isn’t all work.

An avid surfer from the age of six, Robertson plans on surfing waves only accessible by boat.

“We hope to run into places that haven’t been surfed and hit islands that haven’t been destroyed by the new surf culture people jumping on a luxury yacht, drinking a bunch of beer, watching movies and surfing perfect waves getting back to the essence of surf exploration.”

Robertson has already experienced surfing in far-flung locations. His family moved from South Africa to Canada about 10 years ago. He’s spent the last decade surfing off the Island’s west coast and in that time has noticed increased garbage and pollution.

Hence, a heightened desire to do something about it.

While they’re looking forward to the adventure, Robertson admits he has some trepidation.

Sharks, pirates, rough seas? No, he’s more worried about how his relationship with his best friend, Patterson, will withstand the pressure of living in close quarters for long periods of time.

It’s even been suggested we go to marriage counseling, he laughed.

The pair recently purchased a 40 foot sloop that they’ve renamed Freedom. The sailboat was a natural choice for an expedition documenting the destruction of the world’s coastlines by garbage and chemicals, Robertson explained.

So far, they’ve funded the entire expedition themselves, but are looking for a sponsor. For more information on the expedition, to view their route, or to follow the trip, go to www.oceangybe.com.

alavigne@vicnews.com

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Posted in Blog, Media | Tagged , , , , , , , | 22 Comments | Show on map

CH TV News Broadcast

Two weeks ago while over on Vancouver Island I was lucky enough to get a call from the good folks at CH TV, who were interested in doing an interview about our trip.

I quickly made/changed plans to get over the TV studio as quickly as possible. I didn’t want to miss this opportunity ! After arriving at the front door and buzzing in to say I was there, I was escorted directly to a spot in front of the camera.

A couple questions later and we were done. I was expecting to sit down and discuss the finer details of our trip at length, but we managed to get out the required info before they were off to the next story.

I invited the crew down to our show at Steamers Pub in Victoria that evening for the Sitka / Mother Ocean Surf School event where I would be doing a presentation to the crowd. They arrived promptly at the start of the show, got the required footage and they were off to edit the piece and get it on the news two hours later… incredible.

No messing about with folks in the news industry, trust me… They work hard to get us all the news as quickly as possible. I was amazed at how efficiently they worked on getting the required details, a bit of footage and then, poof, they are gone as quickly as they arrive to get the story on air.

Take a look at the YouTube clip below to see the piece. This aired on Thursday at 11pm and Friday at 5pm.


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Posted in Blog, Media, Videos | Tagged , , , , , , | 14 Comments | Show on map

Vic Maui Thoughts

Reflections on 18 days at sea – by Ryan

What an experience!

2400 miles (if you are lucky) across the Northern Pacific Ocean from Victoria, Canada to Maui, USA. We were at sea for 18 days, completely removed from land, our only contact with civilization a SSB HF radio. Oh yeah, that and the Satellite phone that will work in any weather, at any point on earth. Continue reading

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Posted in Blog | Tagged , , , | 729 Comments | Show on map

Vic to Maui

On Monday, July 3rd, Ryan and the rest of Blue Moves II left on their vogage to Maui as competitors in the Vic Maui Sail Race…

Every two years since 1965, men and women with a sense of adventure and a desire to test their limits navigate the 2300 nautical miles between Victoria, BC and Maui, Hawaii.

More than a 16-day voyage of discovery, for many it is an opportunity to overcome personal challenges, to test mental and physical limits, and to rekindle a belief in the importance of enriching one’s life with extraordinary experiences and challenges. This voyage, where Ryan and crew match wit and skill against nature, is not only a personal quest of each crew member but a chance to honour those who are facing one of nature’s cruelest challenges.

Multiple Sclerosis is like an unforgiving storm-force gale, lashing a body with unforgiving force and exacting both mental and physical toll that seems endless. Check it out at www.bluemoves2.com.

Follow the race and Blue Moves II progress on the Vic Maui website: www.vicmaui.org

A little bit of history about the race: The first Vic-Maui race was sailed in 1965. The race was a dream of RVYC member Jim Innes who at that time was a Captain for Canadian Pacific Airlines. Jim apparently talked incessantly about the idea of such a race originating in Victoria and ending some 2308 nautical miles away in Maui. He convinced three other skippers to start with him off Brotchie Ledge in 1965. With Jim in his Lapworth 36′ “Long Gone”, there was Lol Killam of RVYC with the 45′ sloop “Velaris”, Ron Ramsay of the Royal Victoria Yacht Club with the 45′ ketch “Norena of White” and Boo Paskel from Seattle Yacht club with his 73′ ketch “Tatoosh”.

The race and the weather were typical for most of the races to follow. Westerlies in the Juan de Fuca Strait, left turn down the coast to about the latitude of San Francisco followed by a right turn with the northeasterly trade winds filling spinnakers and the downhill sun run to Maui. Three boats finished the race some 15 days later at Kahalui Harbour on the north coast of Maui with the fourth “Tatoosh”, having used the iron spinnaker greeting the three arrivals with Mai Tais.

During their stay in Maui they met up with the originators of what would become the Lahaina Yacht Club. Upon returning to BC waters both Jim and Lol proceeded to convince the RVYC and the newly organized LYC to jointly sponsor such a race and thusly the Vic-Maui International Yacht Race was born. The first official race was in 1968 with some 14 boats entered. Bill Killam’s Porpoise III swept the fleet first to finish and first on corrected time. She took 17 days, 6 hours and 50 minutes.The race, heralded as a FUN RACE has encouraged both the ardent racer and the cruiser racer. It has been held every even year since 1968 with 2004 being our 19th race.

The number of entrants has ranged from 14 to 37 boats with 24 registered in 2002.Records have been broken many times since this first race of 1968. The current record holder is “Grand Illusion” skippered by James McDowell of the LYC who completed the race in 9 days, 2 hours and 8 minutes in 2000 beating out the previous record of 9 days, 19 hours and 36 minutes set by “Pyewacket” skippered by Roy Disney in 1996.

Jim Innes passed away on November 9, 2001 but the race goes on as part of his legacy.

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Posted in Blog | Tagged , , , , , , | 14 Comments | Show on map