Japanese Sailor to Cross Pacific by Wave Power
by news.com.au on 16 Mar 2008

Kenichi Horie on his waveboat SW
Japanese master sailor and environmentalist Kenichi Horie will set off this month on a first-of-a-kind trans-Pacific voyage powered only by waves.
The 69-year-old solo yachtsman and his boat made from recycled materials will embark on the 7000km trip from Honolulu on March 16 bound for Japan, his agent said today.
His double-hull boat, named Suntory Mermaid II, is equipped with two special fins at the front that can move like a dolphin's tail each time the boat rises or falls with the rhythm of the waves.
The theory is that a vertical motion can drive it forward at a speed of three knots.
'Throughout history, mankind has used wind for power, but no one has appeared to be serious about wave power,' Mr Horie said late last year.
'I think I'm a lucky boy as this wave power system has remained virtually untouched.'
The 9.5m boat - which is made partially of recycled aluminium and has the slogan 'Earth Partnership'painted on both sides - is expected to arrive in the Kii Channel in western Japan in May.
Mr Horie made international headlines in 1962 when he became the first person to sail solo across the Pacific to San Francisco at the age of 23.
He went on the three-month voyage despite breaking Japanese law, which at the time did not allow its citizens to sail on their own out of the country.
Since then, he has made 10 sailing trips across the Pacific and around the world.
If you want to link to this article then please use this URL: www.sailworldcruising.com/42655

