Comments
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On lookout duty in the bows --bows?? Maybe she meant 'on lookout in the bow' no two bows on a monohull
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hard sell ads spoiled this vid. clicked it off.
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Really loved this adventure and felt like I was right on board with the crew! Great time and voyage I always imagined wonderful up in the North Atantic, but would never feel sea and cold worthy enough to endure for 4 months !! Oh my no.... But thank you all for doing it !!!
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jack wolfskin!
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Wonderful photography and interesting subject matter. Many thanks.
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realy amazing Video....
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I love sailing videos but let's be honest if there isn't any chicks in bikinis what's the point in watching
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nice
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Greenland used to be GREEN.....THEN IT FROZE....MAYBE ITS GOING GREEN......has nothing to do w human activity
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As soon as they mentioned "global warming" I stopped watching this fucking Leftist shit!
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the moment where you look a german documentation, which is translated to englisch, as a german :D
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wow! awesome trip.
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wish i would be onboard
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the narrator should learn how to pronounce Newfoundland otherwise beautiful photography and ship
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Lucky guys!
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The experience of nature at a walking pace is very special indeed. There is very little to compare it to in the modern world.
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I wish i could do this
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is that James May I hear narrating this amazing film?
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One damn satisfying video....How come I never knew of that sort of life?....
Arved Fuchs and his team on their most recent expedition across the North Atlantic begins on the 80-year-old sailing ship "Dagmar Aaen", from Greenland's west coast, via Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Ireland and Scotland to the North German coast. It is a journey full of unforgettable experiences: unspoilt nature, rugged coasts, remote islands and extraordinary people who live with and off of the sea. For more than 30 years, German Arved Fuchs has undertaken ships expeditions to the most remote regions of our planet. He is mostly attracted to ice. There, on the west coast of Greenland, the cutter Dagmar Aaen, spent seven long winter months. This is where the five part series begins, which will come to an end after 12.000 nautical miles (ca. 22.000 kilometres) and more than four months later in the native North Sea.