Mālama Honua: Hōkūle‘a—A Voyage of Hope

Mālama Honua: Hōkūle‘a—A Voyage of Hope

Through photography, interviews, crew stories, and a foreword by Desmond Tutu, the hardcover Mālama Honua shares the travels of a double-hulled canoe named Hōkūle’a. Built in the 1970s, this sailing canoe was created to revive the art and science of ancient Polynesian wayfinding techniques: understanding the distinct patterns of ocean swells, reading the stars for clues, predicting the weather from animal behavior and wind. No GPS, National Weather Service, or Apple products allowed. Because as one of the book’s modern day navigators says, “If you can read the ocean…you will never be lost.” The book begins in 2014 and covers a multi-year boat journey to communities in New Zealand, Australia, Africa, and South and North America, steered onward by captain Nainoa Thompson, the first native Hawaiian since the 14th century to sail without modern instruments from Hawaii to Tahiti. Visually luscious, educationally inspiring, and totally badass—how many times have you relied upon your smartphone today?—this book is a treasure of hard-won knowledge and experience.
Buy at Bookshop.org
Publisher Patagonia
Published 2017
Related Wild Words
blowhole cerro de trincheras  SEH-roh deh trin-CHEH-rahs tsunami tsoo-NAH-mee siguliaksraq  sig-oo-lee-AK-sraq aputi  ah-POO-tee looming LOOM-ing
###

Back to Wild Books