Sailor, boat powered by waves arrive in Japan

By Xinhua,

Beijing : Japanese sailor Kenichi Horie said good weather and tasty fish sustained his spirits and body during the more than three months it took to sail from Hawaii to Japan in a boat powered by ocean waves.


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“The sea was so calm, and the weather was so great throughout my journey. That’s why it took me so long,” he said Saturday.

The 4,800-mile voyage, which began in Honolulu in March, ended Friday when his 3-ton yacht docked in Wakayama in western Japan. The trip — which Horie claims was the world’s longest solo voyage in a wave-powered boat — is just the latest journey using green technology for the 69-year-old sailor.

In 1992, Horie pedaled a boat from Hawaii to Okinawa in southern Japan. In 1996, he sailed nearly 10,000 miles from Ecuador to Tokyo aboard a solar-powered boat made from recycled aluminum beer cans.

Horie’s most recent trip would have taken just 10 days in a regular diesel-powered boat. But he said he is raising awareness about ecology, although his endeavors may take a bit longer.

His boat, which relies on wave energy to move two fins at its bow and propel it forward, sailed at an average speed of 1.5 knots — slower than humans walk.

“I’ve been thinking about riding a wave-powered boat for 30 years, and finally my dream came true. The journey was so fun, and it was easy,” he said in a telephone interview from his yacht in Osaka Bay in western Japan.

Horie ate mostly rice and curry that he brought along on the boat, but sometimes ate squid and flying fish that he caught. “They tasted great,” he said.

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