Latitude=22 N Longitude=175.5 W Course=284o Speed=18.4 kt Temp=26 C (79 F) As we sail west from Hawaii, Colorado slips further and further away. One of the unexpected ways this is becoming clear to me is that on many evenings, we are told to set our clocks back one hour. Our clocks are now 5 hours
Polynesian Voyagers
We spent just 17 hours in port in Honolulu on January 12. The evening before we arrived in Hawaii, we had a raucous all-ship’s meeting in the large classroom. It was standing room only. The atmosphere was electric — after 8 days at sea, we were SO ready to disembark and begin our land adventures!
Rocking and Rolling
1:30 PM Thu Jan 9 23 N, 143 WWe’re sailing just south of due west at 11 knots over 17,150 feet of waterSea surface temperature is 19 C/66 F and the air temperature is 20 C/68 F Finally getting in the swing of things here on Semester at Sea. Students are great – asking loads
Partway Through 1st Crossing
7 AM Mon Jan 6: Lat 26d 41′ 72″ N ; Lon 125d 54′ 41″ W. We sailed from Ensenada into the sunset on Jan 4, and we’re now crossing the blue water of the North Pacific Gyre about 20% of the way to Hawaii. What a transformation in shipboard life since the
Student Embarkation Day!
The students are on board! We boarded 557 students and 24 lifelong learners this morning, and are now preparing to sail over the horizon, away from phones and facebook and land (and probably this blog). We will spend the next 8 days crossing the blue ocean to Hawaii, crawling along the surface at about 23
Orientation
As our Executive Dean Sue Weitz said this evening, “We brought together dozens of faculty and staff from all over the world, and in three days POOF! We created a University!” We’ve been on the ship since Jan 1, but we’re still docked in San Diego. We’ve spent the past three days doing a seemingly