Home
Categories
EXPLORE
Comedy
Society & Culture
News
Sports
History
Business
Technology
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
Loading...
0:00 / 0:00
Podjoint Logo
PT
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts125/v4/12/86/59/1286596d-dcef-6243-9e14-63b975c96dec/mza_8102793174205180510.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
Jim Brown
86 episodes
2 days ago
This ongoing series of “capers” tells of epic voyages, castaway survivors, swashbuckling characters, family cruises, cultural setbacks, technical breakthroughs, racing triumphs, and the “seasteading” lifestyle. Revealed within these stories are many details of design, construction, operation and seamanship. Since World War Two, the emergence of truly modern, lightweight vessels – recreational and commercial, multihull and monohull, power and sail – constitutes a sea change in marine architecture that may well persist for generations to come. Because modern seafaring has advanced so fast, and yet history often neglects its oral heritage, now is the time for us to gather and share this legacy.
Show more...
Wilderness
RSS
All content for Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown is the property of Jim Brown and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
This ongoing series of “capers” tells of epic voyages, castaway survivors, swashbuckling characters, family cruises, cultural setbacks, technical breakthroughs, racing triumphs, and the “seasteading” lifestyle. Revealed within these stories are many details of design, construction, operation and seamanship. Since World War Two, the emergence of truly modern, lightweight vessels – recreational and commercial, multihull and monohull, power and sail – constitutes a sea change in marine architecture that may well persist for generations to come. Because modern seafaring has advanced so fast, and yet history often neglects its oral heritage, now is the time for us to gather and share this legacy.
Show more...
Wilderness
Episodes (20/86)
Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
85: BUY THE BOAT BACK
5 years ago
18 minutes 5 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
84: THE FLEDGLING EAGLE
6 years ago
33 minutes 50 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
83: CUTTING BACK
7 years ago
11 minutes 47 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
82: "REAL" BOAT, REAL SKIPPER (Part 3)
7 years ago
30 minutes 20 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
81: "REAL" BOAT, REAL SKIPPER (Part 2)
7 years ago
29 minutes 14 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
80: "REAL" BOAT, REAL SKIPPER
7 years ago
33 minutes 2 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
79: ANCHORAGE CONVERSATIONS (Part 2)
7 years ago
29 minutes 33 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
78: THE 100' FOUR HULLER
7 years ago
32 minutes 4 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
77: KNOT MY PROBLEM
7 years ago
33 minutes 28 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
76: REALITY EN SHTICK​
7 years ago
17 minutes 13 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
75: ONE, TWO, THREE OR FOUR (yes, 4) HULLS?
7 years ago
20 minutes 16 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
74: A BOAT FOR TWO BUBBAS
7 years ago
29 minutes 25 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
73: THE ANCIENT FUTURE
7 years ago
23 minutes 31 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
72: THE MULTIHULL PHENOMENON
7 years ago
30 minutes 27 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
71: HOW SEARUNNERS CAME TO BE
7 years ago
20 minutes 50 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
70: PRISON ISLAND
7 years ago
26 minutes 34 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
69: WITH A CREW OF FOUR (ONE GESTATING)
7 years ago
32 minutes 13 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
68: SETTING THE SCENE
7 years ago
37 minutes 32 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
67: PROMISE MADE
7 years ago
31 minutes 45 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
66: THE LAST NEXT CHAPTER
7 years ago
27 minutes 37 seconds

Nautical Lore – Modern | Oral narratives of modern seafaring watercraft with multihull pioneer Jim Brown
This ongoing series of “capers” tells of epic voyages, castaway survivors, swashbuckling characters, family cruises, cultural setbacks, technical breakthroughs, racing triumphs, and the “seasteading” lifestyle. Revealed within these stories are many details of design, construction, operation and seamanship. Since World War Two, the emergence of truly modern, lightweight vessels – recreational and commercial, multihull and monohull, power and sail – constitutes a sea change in marine architecture that may well persist for generations to come. Because modern seafaring has advanced so fast, and yet history often neglects its oral heritage, now is the time for us to gather and share this legacy.