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Seawork navcomms guide replica Phoenician voyage

24 May 2010
The Phoenicia is aiming to recreate the first circumnavigation of Africa which is thought to have been achieved by Phoenician mariners around 600BC .Photo by Trevor Wilkins.

The Phoenicia is aiming to recreate the first circumnavigation of Africa which is thought to have been achieved by Phoenician mariners around 600BC .Photo by Trevor Wilkins.

A replica 600BC wooden ship has rounded the Cape of Good Hope on its epic 17,000 mile voyage around Africa and beyond, with the help of navigational equipment from Seawork exhibitor Raymarine.

The Phoenicia is a primitive wooden vessel with a difference. Unlike the boat used by the original Phoenicians, this one features the latest electronic navigational equipment from marine electronics manufacturer Raymarine.

The vessel was built using traditional Phoenician construction methods and materials, and was designed using evidence from shipwrecks, archaeological finds and advice from scholars.

The Phoenicia expedition (www.phoenicia.org.uk) was conceived by Philip Beale, a former British Royal Naval Officer and entrepreneur, and was launched from Syria in summer 2008. The voyage, which is approved by the Royal Geographical Society, is aiming to recreate the first circumnavigation of Africa, which is thought to have been achieved by Phoenician mariners around 600BC.

Equipment on board Phoenicia includes a Raymarine C80 multifunction display, GPS antenna, AIS receiver for navigational status, ST60+ tridata, wind system and repeater, DSM300 fish finder and Raymarine LifeTag wireless man overboard system.

 On perhaps the most dangerous part of Phoenicia’s adventure, its international crew of up to 16 faced 7m waves and gale force winds which tore their mainsail in two, but they courageously completed their journey round the Cape..

To avoid pirate infested waters, the ship took a long detour out towards the Chagos Archipelago, which meant that the leg from Beira in Mozambique took 11 days and covered 700 nautical miles.

Skipper and expedition leader Philip Beale said, ‘The Raymarine equipment was absolutely crucial in enabling us to navigate  successfully round the Cape. Sailing a sixth Century BC Phoenician ship around the Cape of Good Hope is a huge challenge in itself. We absolutely had to know where we were minute by minute and only Raymarine's chartplotter was able to give us that level of confidence and navigational expertise.’

Phoenicia berthed at the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town, alongside other prestigious sailors including Dilip Donde, India’s first solo voyage in progress circumnavigator, where the vessel was on show to press and public. The voyage will continue up the west coast of Africa, through the Straits of Gibraltar, across the Mediterranean and back to Syria.

Following the Africa circumnavigation, Phoenicia will journey to Britain and is due to arrive this summer.

Raymarine will be exhibiting on Stand Q10 at Seawork 2010.

Images for this article - click to enlarge

The Phoenicia is aiming to recreate the first circumnavigation of Africa which is thought to have been achieved by Phoenician mariners around 600BC .Photo by Trevor Wilkins.

Unless otherwise stated, all images copyright © Mercator Media 2012. This does not exclude the owner's assertion of copyright over the material.




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