Dates & Costs
Jan 21, 2013 - Apr 20, 2013
$23,470
Courses
Up to 8 Courses
available on this trip
Map
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 - 5000 slideright true 40 bottom 80
Bartolome Island, Galapagos taken during S/Y Argo's stopover - 5000 slideright true 40 bottom 80
The sun sets on Argo mid-Pacific Ocean enroute to Tahiti - 5000 slideright true 40 bottom 80
Aerial Photo of French Polynesian Island of Bora Bora - 5000 slideright true 40 bottom 80
The wild side of the Galapagos Archipelago - 5000 slideright true 40 bottom 80
Students checking the rig of S/Y Argo underway. - 5000 slideright true 40 bottom 80
Local visits S/Y Argo in San Blas Islands, Panama - 5000 slideright true 40 bottom 80
S/Y Argo under full sail - 5000 slideright true 40 top 80
Crew of S/Y Argo prepares to celebrate as they cross the Equator
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Blog Entry
Land Ho!
Author: Leah
Location: Underway
Date: 26 MarchNow 18 days into passage across the Pacific, life at sea seems normal. It's not unusual to wake up every few hours thinking you should be on deck for watch. Walking on the high side is out of habit, along with standing with legs far apart to remain balanced. But in just a few hours everything will change, because at 1630 today land was spotted off our starboard bow. As Argo quickly approaches the Marquesas everyone grows more excited to explore the realm of French Polynesia.
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Video Clip
Putting Experience Into Education
SCUBA diving as part of Marine Science courses on Sea|mester
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TellTale News Article
Crossing the Pacific
Author: Leah ShopneckMost of our time over the past few weeks has been spent aboard Argo under full sail, no land in sight. Savoring the pods of killer whales at 6 am, basking in the midnight watches of star filled skies and participating in the infamous equator crossing ceremony. Now two weeks into our journey across the Pacific Ocean via the southeast trade winds, we have not seen land in 13 days, whales in 10 days and another boat in too many days to count. Argo and her crew are enjoying the silence of the open ocean, hearing nothing but the waves and occasional flapping of the fisherman sail. In between our busy routine of classes and watch schedules, students and
staff can be found sitting on deck with a dazed look on their face, staring off into the most impressive sunrises and sunsets. Life at sea changes a person, teaches them to enjoy the simplicities of the natural world and the importance of the relationships you form with the people around you. Over the next 24 days, our love for this new found way of life will only increase until day 90, when we disperse to different parts of the world looking to share our fondest memories of life at sea. Until then, enjoy our written stories and live through our words as we describe a life of constant adventure into the unknown waters.
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Podcast
Listen in to a podcast from the vessel
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Blog Entry
Quiet as a Library
Author: Nathan
Location: Marquesas
Date: 4 AprilCharts littered the salon and galley as we all took the MTE final. Watch team one kept a vigilant watch on deck for the last 70 miles to the Tuamotu's. Argo wasn't going to be stopped, making 10 knots, the crew had to take down sails, which only slowed her to seven knots. Reading our waypoint at 2300 hours, watch team two set up to be hove to for the night. As we stood watch it became even more evident that our time aboard was nearing an end, realizing that we would only prepare Argo for one last sail.
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TellTale News Article
Raising the Sails, Making a Team
Author: Cindy PincusAs we're motoring away from Nuku. Hiva in the Marquesas, our captain calls us all back to the cockpit and announces that today is Sailing Drills Day. He has never quite put it to us this way before and a little ripple of apprehension runs through the students. Unsure of what to expect we receive the briefing; the next island is only a day sail away and this isn't a Mickey Mouse cruise so no Mickey Mouse Naps. We'll be doing sailing practicals all day. Each watch team is in charge of raising one or two sails, completely under the direction of the students with little staff help.
At the very end of the briefing as we make ready to leap from the cockpit and raise the sails, Boomer reminds us, "No monkeys and no muppetry. This is day 75 and you should know exactly what to do." With 15 days left, it somehow all came together like they said it would. The kind of teams that can only be built across the biggest ocean on the planet could now successfully sail a huge schooner from one South Pacific island to another; all in one day, all in good taste and all in one piece. What more could you ask for?
Voyage Itinerary
collapse| 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 |
Frequently Asked Questions
collapse- 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..











