
Tosca, Indra, Anita and Connor onboard Om with the drifter buoy they will be deploying in the Atlantic Odyssey
Already 9 days at sea! So far, it has gone much more quickly then we 
 expected, as there always seems to be something to do, or see.
Tosca and Indra have been baking almost every morning, coming out with 
 brownies, banana bread, lemon cupcakes, lemon cake, banana cake, and 
 cooking has been on full throttle, as we want to eat as much of the 
 fresh vegetables and fruit as we can! A washing line has been hung over 
 the cockpit, and we have feasted twice on beautiful MahiMahi fish.
Yesterday, we almost caught something bigger… a huge shadow was 
 following the lure, but I think it discovered that the pink plastic 
 squid was not in fact, a squid. Thank goodness it didn’t grab onto it, 
 or we would no longer have a fishing line!
We’ve had 3 flying fish land on deck (all only discovered the following 
 day, so they were horribly dried up), and we have sighted two turtles. 
 We never see turtles in New Zealand, so it was so amazing seeing those 
 beautiful animals up close! We have heard from “Song Of the Sea” that 
 they saw a turtle tangled in netting. That was very sad to learn, when 
 you think of how many other turtles there must be in the ocean affected 
 by human waste. Thankfully the guys decided to stop and untangle it and 
 the turtles we have seen looked healthy, one we think very old as it had 
 barnacles growing over its shell.

Sea turtle spotted during Atlantic Odyssey crossing in 2013
So far, however, only one sighting of a plastic container. This doesn’t 
 necessarily mean that there isn’t plastic,as we have learnt from The 
 Ocean Pollution forum. I wonder how Sea Dragon is going with their tests 
 on micro plastics and toxins though, sometimes it scares me thinking of 
 so many tiny, tiny pieces of plastic floating through the sea. How we 
 can’t see them. But we swim in them, play in them, watch sea animals 
 live in them. Before leaving Lanzarote, we went on a beach clean up with 
 the Sea Dragon team, which was such a great experience. I’m so, so glad 
 we went, it was there, on the beach that I saw for the first time the 
 tiny colored pieces of plastic floating in little pools on the beach. 
 Washed up by the sea. I’d never seen that before, and it came as a 
 sudden shock, the realization of what the planet is becoming. I don’t 
 want my children to grow up going to the beach, finding plastic, and 
 swimming in it.
There was almost more netting washed up on the beach then plastic. WHY 
 would fisherman want to throw nets into the sea? They fish from its 
 waters, and they abuse it. I think it just comes down to the fact that 
 some people perhaps can’t relate to the sea. They look at it, but they 
 can’t love it. Which is why I think that the science program for sailors 
 was such a great Idea. Sailors love the sea. They live on it. They watch 
 it, and breathe its fresh air. They are keen to contribute and raise 
 awareness.
Connor, Indra, Tosca and I have prepared the Secchi Disk. We had to 
 spray paint it white, as it was more of a grey but now it’s ready for 
 use. We got a reply from Pascal, giving us the position for the 
 deployment of the buoy, so when we pass the 50 degree longitudinal line, 
 we’ll write our names on it and throw it into the sea, watching it bob 
 away into the distance. We’re excited about being able to track down 
 where it is in the ocean, even when we go home!
We’ve had beautiful weather for a few days now – the trade winds are 
 starting to kick in! The swell and the wind is coming from behind, the 
 sky is blue and so is the sea. And the air is definitely getting warmer! 
 We are going at a constant speed of 7 knots during the day, but the wind 
 usually dies down at night. And we are heading straight for Martinique!
Will update on our life on board again soon.
From Connor and The Girls.
The young crew on Om are: Connor (16), Anita (15), Tosca (13) and Indra (9).











