Content pfp
Content
@
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
1/34 My small family spent two years of our lives essentially stateless, stranded at sea, 18,000km from home, floating on 40ft of fiberglass. 'Freedom to transact' literally became a matter of life or death. This is our storyπŸ‘‡
32 replies
39 recasts
131 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
2/34 Australia locked its citizens out from returning during the pandemic. My family (wife and three kids 3, 5 and 6 months old) were sailing on a catamaran in the eastern Caribbean at the time. We ended up there for two years waiting out the pandemic.
4 replies
0 recast
21 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
3/34 When the pandemic hit, we essentially became stateless. For a time, all countries within sailing distance closed their borders to Australian-flagged vessels. No flights or cruise ships. My son couldn't renew his passport, and we had to get him temporary (refugee) papers.
1 reply
0 recast
17 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
4/34 Initially, we got locked down for 91 days on our boat in an overseas territory of France. The gendarme nautique (water police) prohibited us from leaving the boat. We technically weren't even allowed to swim off the boat at anchor.
1 reply
0 recast
20 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
5/34 Early on, desperate to get the kids some exercise, we took the dinghy to an isolated beach. The gendarme came with guns and megaphones to enforce our isolation. The next day, a mini aircraft carrier arrived, and military control was implemented on the island.
1 reply
0 recast
17 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
6/34 Hurricane season arrived while we were still in lockdown, ramping up the stress. We provisioned to head to sea if a hurricane approached; stateless, the last resort plan was to drift at sea, waiting out the season. I studied the weather manically.
1 reply
0 recast
16 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
7/34 Months passed, hurricanes became imminent, the outlook dire; then Grenada saved us. They let 1,200 stranded boats in, despite their borders being completely shut. A tiny poor country was saving us when my own affluent country was blocking its citizens. This hit home hard.
3 replies
1 recast
30 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
8/34 We sailed 3 days non-stop to Grenada. Too late in the season, we faced terrible weather, experiencing multiple frontal systems, winds of 30-40+ knots, and at one point, three tornadic waterspouts closed in around us while the gooseneck bolt on the boom vibrated loose.
1 reply
0 recast
17 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
9/34 Two more weeks of quarantine, then freedom after 4 months restricted to the boat. NOAA then issued a hurricane warning with a track map directly over us. We scrambled to prepare and tie to the mangroves. Thankfully, it fizzled out and passed just south of us (blue dot).
1 reply
0 recast
16 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
10/34 As time went by, we became forgotten citizens. 'Freedom to Transact' issues began to arise. We had been living in Canada for the 3 years prior on global expert visas. Canada had also locked us out (it remained open to citizens & PR but not to work visa holders).
1 reply
0 recast
17 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
11/34 Our Canadian bank cards expired, and we needed to physically be in Canada to activate new ones. Subsequently, our online banking account was suspended for suspicious activity. Again, we were required to go into a branch to remedy, which was impossible.
1 reply
0 recast
16 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
12/34 Our Australian bank access also became restricted. After roaming overseas for too long, our Australian phone SIMs expired and we lost access to our 2FA numbers needed for access to our bank accounts there.
2 replies
0 recast
14 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
13/34 To obtain a new SIM, we needed to provide government-approved ID and activate from within Australia. Again, the familiar response was 'come into the bank and we can sort this out'. Loss of freedom of movement essentially led to a loss of freedom to transact.
1 reply
0 recast
18 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
14/34 Fortunately, we had access to family who could help us out, and the bank agreed, after much pleading over the phone, to accept a phone number of a family member for 2FA. But the lesson was clear: without Freedom to Transact, you have very limited options to sustain life.
1 reply
0 recast
17 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
15/34 The Australian government had also placed a Level 4 travel ban on the entire world for its citizens, previously reserved only for war zones. This immediately rendered both our travel and health insurance policies void due to exemption clauses for travel to Level 4 areas.
1 reply
0 recast
13 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
16/34 The Panama Canal then shut to vessels under 80ft. And so began two, often stressful, years at sea, 18,000km from home, reliant on the benevolence of small foreign countries to provide the very shelter that our own country refused to render.
1 reply
0 recast
13 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
17/34 In this crazy chapter of our lives, we faced numerous challenges, yet savoured incredible family experiences. Chiseled by the stress, we entered a heightened state of existence, ultimately transforming it into the most extraordinary time of our lives.
1 reply
0 recast
16 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
18/34 Navigating through immense technical and geopolitical intricacies, we journeyed using little more than wind across 15 countries & territories during the pandemic. With the absence of cruise ships/flights, the Caribbean's remote tranquility echoed the serenity of the 1950s.
1 reply
0 recast
13 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
19/34 Sailing into endless sunsets, dolphins playfully surfed our bow's wake, as the stars emerged in the evening sky. We saw numerous volcanic islands materialise on the horizon, and explored untouched jungles and secluded waterfalls.
1 reply
0 recast
14 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
20/34 We spent time with the kids wildlife spotting for monkeys, iguanas, bird colonies. Exploring volcanic landscapes, relaxing in hot springs. Swimming and diving over the reef with turtles and schools of fish. Just enjoying the sea and each other as we watch the kids grow up.
1 reply
0 recast
13 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
21/34 Endless hours at the beach meeting other stranded families from all over the world with vastly different backgrounds but ultimately a shared story. A common experience to bond us together.
1 reply
0 recast
13 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
22/34 We ran our own renewable power systems; solar and wind into a lithium bank. We made our own water via a small desalination unit, caught our own fish. Drank rum punch and watched the green flash from more remote beaches than one could expect to see in tens of lifetimes.
1 reply
0 recast
15 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
23/34 Not all roses obviously. The flip side was the challenges of raising a baby girl and two boys including doing home school in a confined space. Coming up to speed under duress as landlubbers with the realities of sailing, navigation, weather routing, and all boat systems.
1 reply
0 recast
10 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
24/34 Constantly working on the seemingly infinite list of boat maintenance jobs. Endless time spent provisioning and looking for parts. Fitting in the time to work remotely to keep us alive financially. Dragging anchor in midnight squalls, having other boats drag around you.
1 reply
0 recast
10 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
25/34 Enduring sleep deprivation from anchor alarms and a breastfeeding infant, we somehow persevered on multi-day sails without access to additional crew, testing our limits. We then faced extended lockdowns and quarantines everywhere upon arrival.
1 reply
0 recast
11 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
26/34 The mental angst of that initial 91 days of lockdown in the hurricane belt hoping that boarders would open somewhere for Australian flagged vessels before the hurricane season started will be with me for life. Certainly the hardest thing we have done as a family.
1 reply
0 recast
12 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
27/34 The 18 months that followed was a sublimely beautiful yet at times crushingly difficult; in hindsight the most meaningful time in our lives. When we finally made it home to Australia after two years floating on 40ft of fiberglass, it felt like an alternate reality.
1 reply
0 recast
11 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
28/34 People at home stressing about the smallest of issues and arguing over trivial things. The Australia I left, a nation of prolific travellers, was now scared of foreigners in a way I had never thought possible in my life. Something had been lost in the population here.
1 reply
0 recast
15 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
29/34 They had their own lockdown trauma. In a bizarre way being stranded at sea liberated us from it. Forged by circumstance, intermeshed into the physical world around us, our preconceived boundaries of what was possible in life physically and emotionally had been removed.
1 reply
0 recast
11 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
30/34 Yet in other ways it led to a kind of PTSD reintegrating into society. Everyone took for granted simple freedoms like freedom of movement, freedom to always be able to return to your home country, and freedom to transact. We knew first hand how fragile it all was.
1 reply
1 recast
14 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
31/34 I held back releasing ocean work or even this story as I needed time to process the experience. After two years of being back on land I created the Intrepid Ocean series to attempt to work though these thoughts and emotions.
1 reply
0 recast
14 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
32/34 The experience highlighted the fragility of the global norms and governance systems we take for granted. I strongly recommend everyone reads punk6529's thread on why freedom to transact underpins all other rights. https://twitter.com/punk6529/status/1494444624630403083
1 reply
0 recast
21 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
33/34 Now after almost three years back in Australia are back on our boat in the Caribbean to finish what we started. The kids are now 4,8,10. So here we are again on the precipice about to jump off. To find out who we truly are, as individuals, as a family.
1 reply
0 recast
13 reactions

intrepid ⛡️ pfp
intrepid ⛡️
@intrepid
34/34 I hope you've found this thread interesting. I recently did a 6529 meme card on my experience here "Seize the Memes". If you would like to support me please consider commenting on and retweeting the first tweet in this thread πŸ™
12 replies
0 recast
38 reactions

wizard not parzival pfp
wizard not parzival
@shoni.eth
Thanks for sharing it was very thought provoking
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction