Extreme Family Voyaging, the Anasazi Girl Way
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November 13, 2012
Extreme Family Voyaging, the Anasazi Girl Way
by Tim Zimmermann
It's always interesting and worthwhile to hear the thinking and motivations of sailors who are doing something unusual. Last month, I checked in with Webb Chiles, who at 70-plus plans to solo circumnavigate on a Moore 24. And since then I've been chasing after James Burwick, who is making long ocean passages with his partner, Somira Sao, and their two (very) young children aboard an Open 40 called Anasazi Girl.
I first took note of Burwick and his family when he crossed the Atlantic in the summer of 2011. But he isn't very easy to catch up with because, well, most of the time he is at sea. But for the moment, he and his family are settled down in Auckland (for a very good reason--see below), and he was kind enough to answer a few questions about what he, his family, and Anasazi Girl are up to.
Before you read the Q&A, perhaps you should get a taste of what his world is like by reading his account of the passage from Melbourne to Auckland via Bass Strait (which I have no doubt will make you want to read deeper into his fascinating blog because he and his family truly are engaged in something special).
It's also worth watching this video of his 2011 Transatlantic crossing:
TZ: Why are you sailing around the world with your kids, and what does the rest of your route look like?
JB: We are not really sailing around the world. That is not the goal or the plan. We are giving the gift of the sea to the children. We are spending the formative years with them 24/7. We're doing a program of experiential education. We like very much the Southern Hemisphere so we have been sailing in the westerlies downwind. We are in New Zealand awaiting the birth of our third child, due Dec 22. We have no plans at present. This is a real gift for us.
TZ: How have you dealt with questions of safety for the young ones, and what sort of rules and procedures have you put in place?
JB: It is all about risk management. On deck, full body harness, no life jacket. Make the clip [to the safety line] or take the ride [into the sea]. We clip in. No compromising at this time. I sometimes demand crew confined to their berths. The kids know why this is happening, and it is cool with them as this means either story time, book reading, or movies.
TZ: How do your children feel about your voyage?
JB: They are are bit young to ask. Raivo is two and T-bird is four. She was asked upon arrival in Auckland how the passage from Melbourne was. She replied, "It was short, just 10 days."
Are they aware that they are doing something unusual? Yes, they are. They see the other life experience, the rooms with toys and houses with things, and at the end of the day, they want to go back to the boat where it is simple.




