{"id":506,"date":"2019-11-12T08:47:30","date_gmt":"2019-11-12T08:47:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/velocityyachts.com\/blog\/viracocha-iii-the-chilean-reed-boat-built-to-sail-across-the-pacific\/"},"modified":"2019-11-12T08:47:30","modified_gmt":"2019-11-12T08:47:30","slug":"viracocha-iii-the-chilean-reed-boat-built-to-sail-across-the-pacific","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/velocityyachts.com\/blog\/viracocha-iii-the-chilean-reed-boat-built-to-sail-across-the-pacific\/","title":{"rendered":"Viracocha III: The Chilean reed boat built to sail across the Pacific"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Viracocha III is unlike any other vessel \u2013 this 60ft reed boat was built on a remote Chilean beach for a transpacific voyage. Andy Dare explains all&#8230;Adventurer Phil Buck is no stranger to reed boats, having twice before sailed from Chile to Easter Island non-stop. However, his latest project aims to sail more than twice that distance, bypassing Easter Island, aiming for Mangareva Island in French Polynesia, in a boat that will start sinking as soon as it\u2019s launched.<br \/>\n\u201cNobody has done it \u2013 at least [not since] ancestral rafts. We are using a very different sailing system that nobody has tried in modern times that I know of,\u201d explains Buck.<br \/>\nAs the reeds will be continually absorbing water, there will be little time for celebrations in Polynesia, before they head off again, on another 5,000-mile leg to Sydney, making a total voyage of some six months.<br \/>\nOne of the individual tortora reeds which, en masse, form the hull<br \/>\nAdventure sailor<br \/>\nA professional adventurer, Buck cycled from one side of America to the other aged just 17. A few years later, he kayaked coast to coast, then spent ten years climbing the highest mountains in the Americas.<br \/>\nWhen he was 11, Buck read about Thor Heyerdahl, and ever since has dreamt about making his own expedition across the Pacific. Heyerdahl\u2019s Kon Tiki was a balsa raft, but Buck was fascinated by the reed boats of Lake Titicaca and wondered if it would be possible to recreate the voyage on such a boat.<br \/>\nThe most renowned reed boat builders in the world today still live and work on the Bolivian side of Lake Titicaca, specifically the Limanchi family. Heyerdahl had taken the Limanchi family to Morocco to build Ra II for his successful expedition across the Atlantic in 1970.<br \/>\nArticle continues below\u2026<\/p>\n<p>\t\t\t\t\t\tUndaunted \u2013 the 42-inch yacht still hoping to become the smallest boat ever to cross the Atlantic<\/p>\n<p>\t\t\t\t\t\t\tJust 24 hours into his first attempt to sail solo across the Atlantic in Undaunted, his 42-inch yacht, Matt Kent\u2026<\/p>\n<p>\t\t\t\t\t\tExpert advice: How to sail across the Pacific Ocean<\/p>\n<p>\t\t\t\t\t\t\tYou can lose a lot of friends when you\u2019re sailing across the Pacific. After the first couple of photos you\u2026<\/p>\n<p>Buck also sought out the Limanchis and they have built all three of his Viracocha boats. \u201cI learnt from my father at seven years old. I built models, then bigger and bigger boats up to 8m,\u201d explains Juan Limanchi, one of the builders from Huatajata, who is now in his 80s.<br \/>\nBuck\u2019s first reed boat took two years to build. Setting off in 2000, he sailed from Arica, in the extreme north of Chile, 2,850 miles westwards to Easter Island, arriving after 44 days \u2013 relatively fast for such a boat at an average speed of 2.7 knots.<br \/>\nBased on this success, Buck built another boat with the aim of showing it was possible to sail across the Pacific to Australia. They set off from Via del Mar, some 1,000 miles further south, to make better use of the Humboldt Current.<br \/>\nThe two sides of Viracocha III\u2019s hull are bound together and compressed by ropes<br \/>\nThey arrived in Easter Island after 76 days \u2013 much slower than expected, running low on food, with a severe list to one side and with the boat sitting about 1m lower in the water than at the launch. Buck sensibly decided not to continue.<br \/>\nNow, on his third boat, Buck\u2019s experiences have led to some changes for Viracocha III. A system of longitudinal ropes will keep the boat tensioned in the swells, and it also has taller masts and much more sail area.<br \/>\nHe is keeping the whole boat as authentic as possible in its construction, so there is no metal, no plastic, and no nails. The boat is built with simple wooden dowels, together with ropework and knots \u2013 lots of knots!<br \/>\n\u201cI have managed to make three blocks or pulleys to install on the very top of our three masts, critical pieces of equipment as we will need to raise and douse sails quickly through the many storms we expect to encounter from South America to Australia,\u201d says Buck.<br \/>\n\u201cI could have installed metal pins and fasteners for added security but that would have compromised my no metal, self-imposed rule. Will they last the whole six-month voyage? Only time will tell.\u201d<br \/>\nReeds and knots<br \/>\nTo make a reed boat, you simply tie more and more reed together until you get the size of boat you want, but it takes a lot of reeds: about 22 tons. Even for ten experienced Aymaran builders, this process has taken five months.<br \/>\nPort holes are unglazed, and instead covered with painted wooden washboards<br \/>\nAfter being dried in the strong altiplano sun for two to four weeks, the reeds are gathered and tied into \u2018amaros\u2019, or large bundles of approximately 500 reeds, about 50cm wide by 2m long. Hundreds of amaros were then joined together into \u2018chorizos\u2019 along the 18m length of the boat.<br \/>\nThirty of these chorizos were then laid along two sides of a platform, each being tied to the next, to form two giant cylinders. In the centre is a smaller inner core, called the \u2018corazo\u0301n\u2019, or heart.<br \/>\nHere Buck has added wooden poles, hoping to stiffen the boat against the Pacific swells. Next, two smaller cylinders of reeds are tied to either side, before the \u2018estera\u2019, or skin, is wrapped around the outside of the whole boat.<br \/>\nReeds are tied together with rope. As the reeds expand in the water, the boat becomes stiffer<br \/>\nThe whole boat is joined together and tensioned using very long sisal ropes, each 685m in length. These ropes are spiralled around one of the bundles and the heart, spaced every 30cm over the entire length of the boat. The same is done on the other side.<br \/>\nThey\u2019re then tightened using a block and tackle, while being hit with a wooden bat to promote an even compression. The two hulls are not directly tied to each other, but each is tied to the heart under tension, holding the boat together, deep inside its core.<br \/>\nRigid expansion<br \/>\nOn land, reeds dry and shrink over time, yet the fibrous rope stretches as it dries, requiring more tightening. Fortunately, the opposite occurs at sea as the reeds expand with the absorption of water and rope shrinks, further tightening and creating an amazingly rigid boat.<br \/>\nFinally, two further large reed bundles are tied to each side to form the \u2018sawi\u2019, similar to gunwales. These widen the boat, and thus the deck, giving the rigging more stability, as well as helping to break the rolling ocean waves.<br \/>\nThe rigging is the only thing that looks remotely similar to something seen in a \u2018modern\u2019 boat, using traditional wooden blocks to tension the natural fibre ropes.<br \/>\nAlong both sides are many \u2018guaras\u2019 or leeboards. These can be independently raised, lowered, or even removed completely.<br \/>\nCrew accommodation in the central deckhouse<br \/>\nStowage is difficult, as there is no interior due to the hulls being solid. The gap between the hulls and the deck has some limited space, but there are three cabin structures built onto the deck.<br \/>\nThe smaller forward one is for stowage, the largest central cabin is the main accommodation area, with four double-level and four single bunks. The aft cabin houses the navigation area, galley and additional stowage.<br \/>\nFrom the aft cabin crew can climb out of a small opening onto a raised deck area, where the helmsman will access the tiller.<br \/>\nIn a test-run of the launch, thousands of volunteers assembled on a Chilean beach to haul the boat towards the shore on wooden rollers<br \/>\nMan-powered launch<br \/>\nIt was only fitting for Viracocha III to be launched in a traditional way, and in February 2018 Buck arranged for a \u2018test run\u2019 to prove it could be done. Using local media to drum up interest, he managed to gather thousands of volunteers.<br \/>\nFirst the boat was lowered from its platform by hand and, with just the muscle power of about one thousand men, women and children pulling on ropes, the boat was moved along a system of wooden rails and rollers toward the sea. It was rather like a Ben Hur film \u2013 but 100 per cent real.<br \/>\nViracocha III at sea after her March 2019 launch<br \/>\nSpecification<br \/>\nLWL: 18.0m (60ft)LOA: 22.5m (74ft)Beam: 4.9m (16ft)Weight(circa): 2,200kg (4,850lb)Draught at launch: 1.0m (3ft 4in)Draught after one week in the water: 1.25m (4ft 2in)Crew: 8-12<br \/>\nFirst published in the June 2018 edition of Yachting World.<br \/>\nViracocha III was successfully launched in March 2019 and reached Tahiti four months later. The boat has remained here ever since, having suffered severe hull damage in the Tuamotus. You can follow their adventures on the Viracocha Expidition Facebook page.<br \/>\nThe post Viracocha III: The Chilean reed boat built to sail across the Pacific appeared first on Yachting World.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Viracocha III is unlike any other vessel \u2013 this 60ft reed boat was built on a remote Chilean beach for a transpacific voyage. Andy Dare explains all&#8230;Adventurer Phil Buck is no stranger to reed boats, having twice before sailed from &hellip; <\/p>\n<p class=\"link-more\"><a href=\"https:\/\/velocityyachts.com\/blog\/viracocha-iii-the-chilean-reed-boat-built-to-sail-across-the-pacific\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Viracocha III: The Chilean reed boat built to sail across the Pacific&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":507,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[5],"tags":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v23.0 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Viracocha III: The Chilean reed boat built to sail across the Pacific - Yachting Blog, Yacht News, Charter Yacht Blog<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/velocityyachts.com\/blog\/viracocha-iii-the-chilean-reed-boat-built-to-sail-across-the-pacific\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Viracocha III: The Chilean reed boat built to sail across the Pacific - Yachting Blog, Yacht News, Charter Yacht Blog\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Viracocha III is unlike any other vessel \u2013 this 60ft reed boat was built on a remote Chilean beach for a transpacific voyage. 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