·S3 E101
Episode 101 - They Had No Compass, No Map, and No Business Finding Tahiti: And They Found It Anyway
Episode Description
In 1976, a 62-foot wooden canoe left the coast of Hawaii carrying a crew of fifteen people and zero instruments. No compass. No GPS. No sextant. No radio. The navigator was a man from a tiny island in Micronesia who had never been to Tahiti and had no map of how to get there. And 2,500 miles later (33 days at sea) he sailed directly into the harbor. Like he'd done it a hundred times. Using nothing but the stars, the swells, the wind, and the birds.
This is the story of the Hōkūleʻa. It’s not just a sailing story. It's a story about what happens when a culture almost disappears - and then decides not to.
Chapters
- (00:00:00) - The Canoe That Sailed From Hawaii to Tahiti
- (00:01:39) - A Hawaiian Culture That Almost Disappeared
- (00:04:06) - Percpendicular Word of the Week
- (00:04:50) - Polynesian culture in the Pacific
- (00:05:43) - Was Hawaiian culture extinct in Hawaii by 1970?
- (00:09:05) - How Did the Polynesians Find the Islands?
- (00:14:07) - The Polynesian Voyaging Society
- (00:17:50) - The Man Who Made It To Tahiti In 33 Days
- (00:21:16) - The Story of Tahiti's Wayfinders
- (00:22:42) - White Guys On The Canoe
- (00:25:34) - Moana: Learning From The Movie
- (00:27:28) - Fun Facts About The Titanic
- (00:27:37) - 7 Mind-Blowing Facts You Didn't Know About Sea Turtles
- (00:28:42) - Three Fun Facts About The Polynesian Voyaging
- (00:30:46) - A Canoe Sailed Around The Earth Without a Instrument
- (00:34:48) - A Canoe Made to Read the Ocean