Flying ROUND THE WORLD In A Boat! - YouTube

Channel: Stefan Drury

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Good morning welcome to a beautiful morning here. This is Port Phillip Bay
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behind me here in Melbourne. Now before we start today a very quick history
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lesson. So back in the 1930s Qantas used to operate flights from Australia to the
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UK just like they do now but back then they were called Qantas Empire Airways
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and the flights used to take 10 days and they'd have to stop 30 times along the
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way. And there's one man here in Australia who wanted to recreate that
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epic era of aviation and started a trip flying a flying boat not just here to
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the UK but around the whole world.
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Now his name is Michael Smith he was voted
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the Australian Geographic adventure of the year back in 2015 and that's who
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we're gonna go meet today.
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Yes so this is Port Phillip Bay just here in Melbourne you've got the city just
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out of shot over to one side behind me is where the ferries go to Tasmania you
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can see and just over the other side of the bay is a place called Williamstown
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and that's where the Royal Yacht Club of Victoria is based and that's an
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important thing to know for this story because that's where Michael set off
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from on his epic adventure taking seven months in a flying boat that has no
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autopilot and cruises it around 80 to 90 knots flying around 25 countries and
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stopping 80 times on his own to fly around the world.
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Man I thought my adventure flying around outback Australia for two weeks in the
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series I thought that was epic but to meet someone who's flown around the
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world I mean this is something I've always wanted to do I've got a bunch of
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questions about the route he took and the aircraft he flew and I'd love to
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hear some of these stories along the way so let's go meet Michael now.
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Can you tell us a little bit about the aircraft and why did you choose that was
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the plane that you wanted to fly. Well partly it's the plane I had, so it was
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partly the convenience. Here's one I prepared earlier! So this is the Searey
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she's a wonderful little single-engine flying boat of course it's
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a flying boat because the hull of the plane lands on the water as opposed to
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like a Cessna on floats. The wheels go up and down out of the way but look I
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was really enamored by that old nineteen thirties period when Qantas first flew
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from Sydney through London you know and it went from taking six
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weeks by ship to only ten days by air. It kind of has that look and feel of those
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old style planes that's why I have painted it silver so I look like an old plane.
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And you know I used to often think I wish I could have been on those Qantas
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flights back then so I actually did some research into how could we charter a
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plane to retrace it couldn't make that work and so decided to just do it in the
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plane I had which was the Searay.
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You had modifications made to the aircraft as well.
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Yeah quite a bit so it instead of four hours fuel it has 12 hours fuel
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built into it as into the fixed tanks and then I had the ability to add a
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couple of extra bags which we're getting up to 21 hours of fuel. Before we just
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have a quick look at the route that you trace around the world the one question
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that I want to know and I'm sure everyone does is - why? Ah that's a good
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question. Look I'm must point out it didn't start as a circumnavigation I
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mean since I was a 15 year old boy reading books about Joshua Slocum you
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know either Robin Lee Graham and Chichester those amazing mariners of the
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past that I've, I've always known that one day I wanted to sail around the
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world. And and my plan here was actually just to tly to retrace that Qantas route.
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I wanted to fly from Sydney to London in a flying boat and and I thought you know
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it was going to be an eight week trip and what an amazing life experience that
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would be. You know I've always loved traveling you know I say I enjoyed
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flying but I love traveling. And then I got to London and
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the trip had gone so well no my wife met me and she said you sure you don't want
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to keep going yeah you've always talked about doing a circumnavigation are you
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sure you don't want to keep going I have this sense that if you don't keep going
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that no sooner we get home then you'll start planning another trip! And so I did
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but that drew it out from being just a two-month trip it ended up taking me
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seven months because as I you know I quickly learned actually going Sydney to London
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or Melbourne to London was relatively easy year over land most of
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the time plenty of airport options. But once I left London you know crossing the
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Atlantic became typically 8 to 10-hour flights.
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S o this is what I really want in
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my office Michael you've got the actual route that you flew around here in the
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office this is cool can you give us an overview of so where did you start where
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did you go? Yeah like I do love a big map! Right so I started down here in
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Williamstown which is where I live in Melbourne I flew down to first a place
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called Raymond Ireland which is in the Gibson Lakes which is an island where my
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Mum lives. I landed on the water and pulled up to see her because I hadn't
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actually told her what I was doing and it's important to tell your mum if
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you're going away. I'd landed at Rose Bay and I took off at 7 o'clock
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in the morning from Rose Bay to begin the actual retracing of the route and
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stopped at some of the places at Qantas used to land so they used to stop at
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Karumba for a refueling and Groot Island and then this was the first time that I
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had flown into Class Charlie airspace first time I've flown internationally
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and and it's amazing how nervous I was about this first leg which was ended up
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being about a four-hour flight to Dilli which was interesting because none of
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the airports here had AVGAS so we'd always have to go off to petrol
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stations and get petrol. Now luckily one of the great things about taking the Searey
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was with that Rotax engine we could use AVGAS or petrol, and I
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had eight flexible jerry cans with me you know these bags that you can go off
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so, quite entertaining sometimes getting in a taxi and going
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the petrol station and putting 160 litres of fuel in the boot and going
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back to the airport. Then to Singapore and then through Malaysia, Thailand,
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Chittagong this is where I started there are few places that I wanted to land
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they used to land on the river in Calcutta but Indian authorities wouldn't
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let me do that. And work my way across into Pakistan
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Dubai. Now Dubai was really fun so I landed
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it Dubai International Airport right, and can you imagine how intimidating it is?
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I'm coming down to land and I work out there are eight aeroplanes
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lined up waiting for me to land because they've had to make sure there's no wake
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turbulence. And there's an A380 at the head of the queue and yeah I worked out
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that there are about 3,000 people watching me land. So I worked my way
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through I had to land in Saudi Arabia to find a find a place where I could get
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fuel, into Akbar where Lawrence of Arabia was and Tel Aviv and work my way
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up through Europe in to Crete, Italy. I did make a diversion from the
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original route they used to land on a Lake Brindisi but I went to Lake Como
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because the opportunity to land on Lake Como which has got the oldest flying
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operational base there. Yeah. And meet those amazing people and
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my wife flew in commercially and met me there and we had a lovely time before I
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then you know went around to Marseille up through France, and in to Southampton.
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And Qantas of course didn't land in London on the Thames they landed in
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Southampton. So I landed outside of Hythe right on Southampton water where Qantas
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used to land and which was pretty cool. Then headed off to London and that
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was meant to be the end of the trip but as I said after chatting with Anne
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for a bit I decided to keep going. So went over to Ireland up to Scotland
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Iceland which was just gorgeous and then one of the most amazing parts of the
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trip was flying from Iceland across to Greenland.
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The most beautiful scenery because there was ice flow everywhere so I was
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actually flying over the ocean at 500 feet and then
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down to Canada a couple stops and then into Maine to clear customs and then I
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went to the airport and was kind of thinking wow, jeez I've crossed the Atlantic
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what do I do now? And I thought well I better fly the Hudson. I read up on the
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FAA notes on how do you do that you have to transit down the length of Manhattan
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and I flew down and you have to be flying right next to New York City and
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looking down and you see the Statue of Liberty and you think I can't believe
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I'm here and as as I was flying back I thought well I suppose the next thing is
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I should land on the Hudson. So I made the call you know Searey
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Northbound over intrepid 800 feet descending for to land on the Hudson and
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I expected someone to get really excited like what the hell why someone landing
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on the Hudson? But there was just radio silence. But I did it a splash ago on the
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Hudson and just thought how cool is this. I mean obviously someone
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else famously landed on the Hudson a couple of years before me. Yes. But he
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left it there! I went to Florida and did the annual on the plane where it was
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built at the Searey factory in Florida and then I must say this part of the
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trip was magnificent. I flew into New Orleans and I decided that to get across
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America I really wanted to fly the length of the Mississippi. It took me
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about a week to get from New Orleans all the way up to the source so some nights
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I'd just land on the river tie up to a tree on the bank there's lots of little
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sand islands in the middle of the river so I've kind of felt like Huck Finn!
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Anyway that was great fun all the way across to Seattle and then I
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worked my way up into Alaska. Now most people when they think about crossing
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the Pacific they think about lots of fuel bags going to Hawaii and then you
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know island hopping but the Searey and I couldn't get that far so I had
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to follow up north and you know work my way across the Aleutian Islands to Adak.
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And here's where it got really interesting because from Adak I
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actually thought the trip was going to be over. I was trying to get permission
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to land in Russia but after several months of trying I finally accepted it wasn't
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going to happen. So I'm sitting here in Adak and I
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worked out it would take me about 22 hours to fly from here to Japan,
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but I could only, the absolute maximum was 21 hours of fuel but just as I was
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getting ready to give up I looked on Google Earth and I found that there was
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this island called Attu which is an abandoned Island. It was occupied during
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World War 2. It used to be in the Cold War, it had a naval base there. On Google Earth
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it looked like the runway was still in reasonable condition and I
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worked out that if I flew the five hours to Attu and if I knew I had fuel then it
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would be about 19 hours to Japan. So I flew from Adak out to Attu and I left
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some of my fuel bags on the side of the runway and then I flew back to Adak, I
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waited a week for the weather to get better and then on this really big day I
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filled up the plane I went and landed it Attu, topped up those extra five bags of
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fuel and then took off an hour or two later I took off and I flew
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what turned out to be an 18 hour flight down to Japan, 14 hours of that was in
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the dark. Because I wanted to arrive in Japan when you know in sunlight.
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So that was a very tough trip you know I'm not IFR I do have Night VFR but still
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it was pitch-black dark out there over the ocean it was overcast I had 30 knot
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tail winds so I did plan for a day when I had really good tail winds. I'd
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thirty knot tail winds for about the first third of the trip and then they slowly
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petered it out. But I ended up with down here where you can see that little curve
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is I had to make a diversion as I got down here there were 50 knot headwinds. I
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was doing 30 knots over the ground or over the water and turned out the
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airport was fogged in so I had to divert to another part of Japan. I worked my way
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back down through Australia and you know I've got home seven months later it was
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an incredible trip I wasn't in a rush obviously because it took seven months,
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but I made a real point of trying to at least have one day off between flying
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and sometimes two. Now you've got a book as well Michael and a video so if you want
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to find out more about Michael's adventures and what he got up to there's
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a book and a DVD available? That's right so go to Southern Sun dot voyage
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that's www.SouthernSun.voyage and there's details
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there's story and photos on the web but you can also buy the book and a DVD.
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Yeah brilliant it's a fascinating read it really is and the movie's well worth
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watching as well. You think movie first then the book yeah?
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Absolutely the movie's kind of that the happy beautiful way to see the trip and
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then the book peels back the layers and explain some of what went right and what
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went wrong along the way. It's awesome you'll love it. That was
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really nice to meet you thanks Michael, thanks for your time. Fantastic thanks.