
The Argonaut: The Panama Crossing and Onto The Galapagos
In a lengthy update Argo covers some serious ground as the Tisches make their way from the Caribbean though Panama and into the Pacific and the Galapagos.

In a lengthy update Argo covers some serious ground as the Tisches make their way from the Caribbean though Panama and into the Pacific and the Galapagos.

As Argo passes from Columbia to Panama, Randy takes a moment to look back on a country full of beauty and culture.

After enjoying the good life in Port Antonio, Argo sets out across one of the trickiest passages across the Caribbean and breathes a well deserved sigh if relief when the lights of Santa Marta appear.

After leaving the Bahamas, the Argonaut heads south 450 miles to Port Antonio, Jamaica, to take in some well deserved Blue Mountain Coffee and Jamaican Jerk.

Join Randy, Rebecca and their deckhand Tyler for their first adventure on their voyage from Stuart, Florida, to New Zealand as they take the Bahamas by storm aboard their Nordhavn 68, Argo.

Meet Rebecca and Randy Tisch as they embark on an eight month voyage from Stuart, Fla. to New Zealand on their Nordhavn 68.

This aluminum vessel’s throwback design belies its modern systems, all installed for a Great Loop cruise.

The three-stateroom, semidisplacement model has a range of power options and a low air draft.

A solar-power system on our classic trawler lets us spend time moored or anchored with more than enough juice to meet our energy needs.

America’s Great Loop Cruisers’ Association has been helping boaters complete the ultimate voyage for a quarter century.

The steel-hull Nightfall, designed by William Garden, connects generations of this family through a love of cruising.

Larry Graf, the founder, designer and lead engineer of Aspen Power Catamarans, talks about Aspen’s proa hull designs and adventure cruising on his own creations from the Arctic to the Sea of Cortez.

With her vertical bow, reverse raked windshield and indoor-outdoor living space, the Galeon 430 EXP defies categorization.

It is called a razor because it shaves away unnecessary complexities, providing a simple solution to complicated questions.

Remembering Lifelong Marine Journalist Chris Caswell

A Master of Quiet Cruising