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From dream location to dream location... Sign up and step aboard your new campus, S/Y Argo, in the sailors rendezvous island of Antigua and prepare yourself for 90 days, 12 credits, over 6500 nautical miles and some of the more incredible destinations the planet has to offer.

Sail to Bonaire and wake to flocks of Venezuelan flamingos flying through a misty sunrise. Anchor behind tiny uninhabited islands covered with coconut trees that support the Kuna Indians of the San Blas. Toss the dock lines up to the lock workers of the Panama Canal, cross the lake and prepare to enter the Pacific Ocean. Watch the latitude hesitate on zero as we cross the equator. See blue-footed booby birds hitching a ride on deck back to the Galapagos Archipelago. Linger no more as every day of the next 20 will be spent at sea until we make landfall in the Polynesian Islands of the Marquesas, the place where Paul Gauguin found his inspiration and love. You too will love arriving in Tahiti in the Society Islands, but, after all, that's just a place to secure the schooner. You will have secured lifetime memories along the way.

Life Aboard

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  • Voyage Snapshots

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      Getting to know the locals in Nuka Hiva, Marquesas
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      Bartolome Island, Galapagos taken during S/Y Argo's stopover
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      The sun sets on Argo mid-Pacific Ocean enroute to Tahiti
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      Aerial Photo of French Polynesian Island of Bora Bora
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      The wild side of the Galapagos Archipelago
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      Students checking the rig of S/Y Argo underway.
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      Local visits S/Y Argo in San Blas Islands, Panama
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      S/Y Argo under full sail
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      Crew of S/Y Argo prepares to celebrate as they cross the Equator

Voyage Itinerary

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Area Ports of Call
Caribbean Antigua, Saba, Nevis, Guadeloupe, Dominica, Martinique, St. Lucia, Bonaire, Curacao, Aruba, San Blas Islands
Panama The Panama Canal
Galapagos Santa Cruz, Floreana, Isabela
Easter Island** Key West
Marquesas Manihi, Apataki, Rangiroa
French Polynesia Moorea, Tahiti
*Please note that all destinations (**especially Easter Island) are weather dependent and subject to change.

Frequently Asked Questions

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Our 90-day Global Sea|mester Voyages offer the most comprehensive experience in terms of the geographical area covered and both academic and vocational classes and certifications earned. During the program, up to 12 academic credits are offered through the State College of Florida for the Basic Seamanship, Student Leadership, Oceanography and Marine Biology classes taught aboard. In addition, there are several vocational courses offered for those looking to further their professional development in the maritime industry. For more information on our classes, please visit our courses page.
During the voyage students earn a number of different certifications. Those new to scuba diving will have the opportunity to achieve the PADI Open Water Scuba Diver certification and certified divers may earn their PADI Advanced Open Water. Students looking for a more scuba focused program should consider one of our Caribbean programs as they offer more opportunities to dive. In sailing, all students will challenge the International Yachtmaster Training (IYT) International Crew Certificate and most will also challenge the Navigation Master. Those selecting the Professional Skipper & Crew Training Course can earn up to and including the IYT Master of Yachts 200 ton Theory Certificate. All students will complete First Aid and CPR certification.
A maximum of 26 students and 7 staff will sail aboard for this voyage, split between both males and females.
This voyage is run aboard our 112-foot sail training schooner S/Y Argo. Launched in June 2006, her design is the product of the close collaboration between Langan Design Associates of Newport Rhode Island and Sea|mester. Argo is a two-masted staysail schooner and is certified and inspected by the British Maritime and Coastguard Agency as a Category "0" vessel, allowing her unrestricted operation in the world's oceans. For more information on Argo, please visit our vessel information page.
From the moment you arrive, you'll move aboard and live on board full-time. If you've never lived aboard a yacht before, you'll find that there are a lot of differences to living on land! What's the head? Where's the lazarette? How do you pump the bilge? Argo has 9 dedicated sleeping areas so there's enough room for us all to sleep down below in our own bunk.
Six professional staff members live aboard full-time. There will be the Skipper, the First and Second Mate and two Marine Biologists (who are typically also diving instructors) and a sixth staff member who could also be an EMT or someone with other special skills. Take a look through our staff page for more information.
In the Caribbean, we'll experience the steady trade winds blowing 8-14 knots and the average temperature is 80°F with 76% humidity and 79°F water temperature. Once we pass through into the Pacific, temperatures will vary from 70 to 90 degrees. It is likely that we will see varying weather conditions during our Pacific crossing.
Periodically, we will be in locations from which students may call home. Each country has a different communication system, so dialing procedures change at each destination.
    • Local Phone Cards: Students may purchase local phone cards at each island. While quite expensive, this is our recommended method for ensuring a long distance connection.
    • Credit Card Calls: The most universal (yet most expensive) method of paying for a call is to use a valid credit card with operator assistance.
    • International Calling Card: We suggest contacting the major phone card providers for their information on the latest rates and access numbers (which are different for each island). In our experience, only international (non-prepaid) calling cards such as AT&T and Sprint, will work and then only with the correct access numbers.
  • GSM Cellular Phones: We actively encourage students to bring their GSM (tri-band or quad-band) cellular phones aboard because they may work in many global locations. However, while aboard we do have guidelines as to when students can and cannot use them because the environment we strive to create aboard relies very heavily on each individual remaining focused on the group and our experience. Being tied to the modern world of "instant communications" can, in certain circumstances, be a hindrance to the personal and group processes aboard. We feel that there is ample opportunity to make calls during personal time ashore..
The easiest way is for students to place a quick call home to let Mom and Dad in on what's going on! Sometimes this doesn't happen though, so we instigated a trip update system in which, at the end of each day, the student skipper of the day writes a few remarks in the log. At various times (typically once every 3 or 4 days) this is typed up and posted on the Sea|mester website along with photos and the occasional podcast. This way, Mom and Dad can vicariously live aboard too!
Sorry to say that we will not be able to facilitate any mail drops to the vessel during the program. But, just because you can't receive mail doesn't mean that you can't send it!
Our vessels do not have computers or Internet connectivity, so email contact will be very limited. Students will be able to receive and send limited e-mail while ashore visiting internet cafes. These are becoming more popular, so you may want to make sure you have an email set up through an account such as Gmail or Yahoo.
Please call us on +1.941.924.2900 for specific information on CDC recommended immunizations for this program.
All US and Canadian students traveling on this voyage need to have a passport which is valid for a minimum of six months after the date of departure from the Program. Visitors from certain countries other than the US, UK and Canada may require visas. To confirm whether or not a visa is required for any part of this voyage, please call us on +1.941.924.2900

Meet Sea |mester

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