How to Sail Around the World For Free

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By Karen Banes

Sailing around the world may not, for most people, be associated with cheap travel, never mind free travel, but if you've ever dreamed of watching the sunrise from the deck of a yacht, out of sight of land, or watching the dolphins playing in your bow wave, these dreams may not be as far-fetched as they sound, even if you have no money, sailing experience, or boat of your own. It is possible to sail around the world for free, and once you know where to look, it's not that hard to find a ride.

A few years ago I decided, as many people do, to backpack around the world. I bought a one-way ticket from Europe to Australia even though I knew a round the world ticket would be more economical. I didn't want to be tied down to a return air fare. I thought I might just hitch a ride back to Europe on a yacht.

It didn't seem that believable at the time, even to me, but that's exactly how I got (half-way) home.

It's the way a lot of relatively inexperienced sailors get around the world, and mostly it costs very little or nothing at all. If you're interested in getting a passage on a boat (as opposed to a professional crew position) there are a few things to bear in mind.

•1. No real experience is necessary, but a willingness to learn is.

I had only been sailing a handful of times, but managed to get a place on a boat sailing out of Darwin to the Indonesian Spice Islands, and on to Lombok, Bali, Jakarta and Singapore.

All the skipper required of me - and the four other non-sailing travelers who had volunteered - was that we went sailing with him once a week for the month before we set off, and made a real commitment to learn the basics.

See all 5 photos

•2. Be willing to pitch in.

You're not on a cruise, or a paid charter. You will be expected to help out with cooking, washing up, and various cleaning and maintenance jobs around the boat, both at sea and in port.

•3. Use your hostel resources.

Backpacking hostels in seaside towns/sailing communities are a great place to find contacts. I got that first trip from a note on a hostel notice board, and I know plenty of people who've done the same thing.

Talk to the locals working at your hostel. They'll often have sailing contacts amongst their friends and family.

4. Hang out at the sailing club.

Upmarket yacht clubs may require you to be a member to even set foot on the premises but most grass roots sailing clubs are casual, friendly, and a great place to have a few beers.

The bar tender at a sailing club is a good friend to make (isn't any bar tender?). He or she will know which skippers are planning long trips and whether they might want extra crew.

•5. Be in the right place at the right time.

Rallies and races mean lots of boats setting off together and more chance of finding a spare place.

The Darwin to Ambon race starts late July, and involves up to 60 yachts setting out from Darwin to the Indonesian Spice Islands (many continue to cruise on to other parts of South East Asia).

The Atlantic Rally Challenge involves around 250 yachts setting out from Gran Canaria in November (many will set out from mainland Spain and Portugal the month before). They aim to arrive in St Lucia in time for Christmas.

These are both events where the emphasis is on fun and comradeship, rather than all-out competitive racing, and there are many more all over the world. Check out what's happening on your travel route before you set off.

 

•6. Don't expect luxury.

If you want to crew a state-of-the-art boat with a trained chef and a cocktail cabinet, apply for a job on a billionaire's super yacht (experience, qualifications and a pristine uniform required).

If you hitch a ride on an average sailing boat you will usually be in fairly cramped conditions. Facilities will be basic. You will be washing in salt water. You may have to "hot-bunk". This involves sharing your bunk with another crew member but is not as much fun as it sounds. It simply means that one of you is on watch, whilst the other sleeps. When it's time for your crew mate's watch, you wake him up and get in his bunk (at least it's warm).

Many boats have more crew than bunks and operate the above system at sea. In port you may find yourself sleeping on the floor or out on deck. (During a warm rainy season I recommend wrapping yourself in a spare sail - surprisingly cozy and almost completely dry!)

•7. Travel light.

Most backpackers do this anyway, but you may have to lighten up even more for a long leg at sea. You'll have really limited storage space. If, for example, you're half way through a long trip, now might be a good time to ship home any extra items you've acquired on your travels, and pass on anything you don't need to other travelers.

•8. Be sure before you set out that this is really for you.

Be honest. Do you get seasick? Claustrophobic? Easily bored? All these can make a long sea journey a nightmare.

Spend as much time with the rest of the crew as you can. You will be stuck with them for a long time. On a 30 foot boat you finally understand what it's really like to have nowhere to go.

No-one expects a long sailing trip to complete without some friction, but if you really think you might get to the stage where you could happily kill and eat these people (hey, you've been living on canned goods and stale crackers for a few weeks now!) it might be as well to re-think before you're a four day sail from the nearest (uninhabited) island.

 

•9. Don't expect to be paid.

There are great paid positions for experienced sailors, but that's not what we're talking about here. You will basically be hitching a lift.

Some skippers will support you during the trip as a thank you for your hard work. Others will expect you to make a financial contribution towards food supplies and other expenses such as fuel and cooking gas.

Make sure you know exactly what your skipper expects before you commit to the trip.

•10. Collect and keep contact details of everyone you meet during that first trip.

Get the ‘phone number and email address of your skipper, crew, the crew members of other boats, staff at marinas and sailing clubs, and anyone else you meet along the way.

On a wet Wednesday back in your home town, or stuck in a cubicle selling pet insurance next winter, I can almost guarantee you're going to want to make a few calls.

Comments

salt profile image

salt 3 years ago

fantastic, I will add a link to my backpacking blog. Thanks.. magical!!!

kev8 profile image

kev8 2 years ago

Great article,really enjoyed reading and some great tips!

prasetio30 profile image

prasetio30 Level 8 Commenter 2 years ago

Sailing for free around the world is wonderful experience. United with the sea. Sail with nice boat and fishing on the deck is very beautiful. I want to take a part.

travelespresso profile image

travelespresso 2 years ago

Awesome article and great tips. Good for you....sounds great. Thanks for sharing.

jdaviswrites profile image

jdaviswrites 2 years ago

this is a dream of mine. must try it out. great article!

Coolmon2009 profile image

Coolmon2009 Level 4 Commenter 2 years ago

Enjoyed reading this article. Good information thank you

maritimer profile image

maritimer 2 years ago

This sounds like a dream trip. I have heard of a bunch of websites that hook up volunteer crew with boats. Create a dream and then figure out a way to make it happen.

De Greek profile image

De Greek Level 2 Commenter 2 years ago

Excellent! Interesting even to an old geezer like me :-))

kelgs13 2 years ago

I am an experinced sailer. Sailing is no vacation it is hard work, if you are not use to the sea there is a good chance you will get sick, 80% of people I take out on my boat who are not experinced want to get back to land less then 1 hour later the another 10% will last for over 2 hours when the sea is rolling. The seas and oceans can be overbearing to some,their is no time for fishing or margaritas when your in 15 foot rolling seas for a week strait. While sailing may seem like a dream to some it is just that a dream.

Karen Banes profile image

Karen Banes Hub Author 2 years ago

You're right kelgs13. I don't suffer with seasickness but a lot of people do. And you certainly don't want to commit to a long trip if you're one of them. Having said that, on my big trip everyone suffered short bouts of seasickness (including the skipper who had 30 years of sailing experience!) but no-one suffered long-term. There are some great seasickness medications on the market now, for those who do suffer - although you have to be careful. On a long trip you'll be on regular night watches and don't want to take anything that might make you drowsy!

Wayne Orvisburg profile image

Wayne Orvisburg 2 years ago

Not that I plan on doing any of this, but I never even thought about going out to sea in this manner. Interesting!

learntosail profile image

learntosail 2 years ago

Karen,

Great article and insight. I crew aboard sailboats when I can. As you say, it the crew working together that makes it all worthwhile.

Karen Banes profile image

Karen Banes Hub Author 23 months ago

Thank you all for your comments. Would love to hear from any of you who try this out (or something similar). Best of luck to anyone who is thinking about it :)

captiantim68 profile image

captiantim68 18 months ago

Nice work. My family is currently preparing for a circumnavigation on our sailboat.

Keep up the great work, I enjoy reading your hubs.

Joe Soap profile image

Joe Soap 17 months ago

really cool hub

scubadoggy profile image

scubadoggy 15 months ago

This is a great hub, one of my dreams is to sail around the world, but on my own boat eventually... Awesome!

Karen Banes profile image

Karen Banes Hub Author 15 months ago

Great dream to have scubadoggy, hope you found a little bit of inspiration here!

RussellLHuey profile image

RussellLHuey 9 months ago

Very fascinating hub. Wanna experience sailing.

Matt Phillis 2 months ago

Im in the very early stages of looking at bringing a Gulet home from Turkey. This made for some good reading, Im hooked on all the stories I'm gathering.

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