Please select your home edition
Edition
Rolly Tasker Sails 2023 LEADERBOARD

A Polar Odyssey with a difference

by Strana.ru/Sail-World Cruising on 3 Aug 2013
Polar Odyssey storm SW
Here is a sailing club that must be like no other - yet they have existed for 30 years, building and sailing boats and sailing them around the world. Sailing boats like no other, sailors like no other.

Members of the Polar Odyssey sailing club have been making wooden sailing ships in Petrozavodsk for over 30 years.
Where is Petrozavodsk, you ask? Why it is in the Republic of Karelia, in Russia, east of St Petersburg.



For centuries, the coast dwellers from Karelia and Arkhangelsk were the masters of the seas – intrepid travelers that navigated uncharted waters to discover new shores. Yet, their achievements have since been mostly forgotten, lost to all but historians and boat enthusiasts.

It is these enthusiasts who now try to keep the glory days alive: they reconstruct historic ships based on old drawings and descriptions, and then test them out on the water, following in the footsteps of their predecessors.


'It is necessary to sail.' The Polar Odyssey sailing club from Petrozavodsk has been following this ancient mariners’ motto for 32 years now. Here, they build exact replicas of historic ships - to date, more than 30 schooners, kochs, frigates and old Slavonic sailing boats.

With the firm hand of the club’s founder and president, Victor Dmitriev, at the helm, Polar Odyssey ships have sailed no fewer than two dozen seas and three oceans.

How it all began:
In 1978, Victor, who was a senior researcher at a machine building institute at the time, managed to get his hands on an old boat with a 20 horsepower engine. The newly christened Polar Odyssey then took the captain, his family and three student sailors on their first voyage, from Petrozavodsk to Leningrad.

During the trip, Victor became convinced of the fact that the seafaring traditions were dying out, and swore to dedicate his life to the reconstruction of historic ships. So he set about getting a team of expert engineers and workers together (the club now has its own design bureau).

In 1987, the club finished its first reconstruction project – the koch Pomor – a boat powered manually with oars and a sail. The Pomor has traveled the northern sea routes, visited the shores of Scandinavia and even made it to Canada and Alaska.


'We didn't have any real kind of navigational equipment on the koch,' says Victor. 'We used a compass and the stars, just like in the olden days. Nothing could vex me after an experience like that, and I felt like I could navigate perfectly well in thick fog – I’d acquired a sixth sense of sorts. It really came in handy when I was sailing in the Mediterranean. And I can confidently navigate through the islands in the White Sea, even when there is practically zero visibility.'

From small ships to a drifting log cabin:
The dock masters at the Petrozavodsk Maritime Historical and Cultural Center are currently busy building new ships – a ‘lodya’ (an old Slavonic sailing boat like a Viking ship) and some kochs.

Victor draws attention to the lodya: 'She’s going to a priest in Tolyatti. As for the kochs, they’ve been earmarked for an expedition – they’re going to sail around the world northward. They’ll set off from Petrozavodsk, sail through the Sukhon and Dvina rivers, toward the White Sea and Solovki . From there, the boats will be delivered by train to Ust-Kut, before they head down the Lena River to Tiski and along the coast to Anadyr. We’ll be following the route set out by Semyon Dezhnyov [a famous Russian navigator and explorer of Siberia].'

The newly built koch boat differs from its predecessors in that it has a motor – just in case it is needed. Eight people can just about squeeze into the cabin, with another four on deck. It took the shipbuilders just three months to put the ship together; it took slightly longer for the lodya.

'Right now, we’re working on a prototype for a drifting station,' Victor says.

'It’s becoming increasingly difficult to find suitable ice flows for research stations in the Arctic. The Americans put research platforms on icebreakers. But we’re building a small ship with materials that are not very magnetic, such as wood and composite materials. It’ll be a mini houseboat, a floating log cabin. We’re developing the kind of technology that will eventually be used in drifting stations – lightweight materials, a simplified hull shape and a lift motor.'

Maritime museum:
Victor revealed that the club turns into a yacht marina in the summer . 'Yachting isn’t particularly popular in Russia. A lot of people don’t even know what it is: they think it’s something that is ridiculously expensive, something for the likes of Mr. Abramovich. But that’s not the case. The word ‘ yachting’ actually comes from the Dutch and means ‘a boat for recreation’ – and that could mean anything from these gigantic yachts you see oligarchs in to tiny little boats,' he says.


The Polar Odyssey Maritime Museum resembles a big cabin, with brigantine sails on the table and ropes hanging from poles. The walls are adorned with stands, each of which is dedicated to a particular voyage: the Northern Sea routes and the Mediterranean; the journeys to Svalbard, Canada and Alaska.

There are maps, photos of sailors and people from distant lands, old navigational equipment and pieces of wrecked ships – the living and growing history of the Polar Odyssey.

There is another photo, one of Boris Yeltsin. It reads: 'I had a great time on the boat, taking in nature and going fishing – just like it was the first time I’d ever been sailing. A job well done by the coast dwellers. Let’s set out a route for them – Peter the Great and the voyage to the North Pole. There’s a need for it. I’ll give you a hand! Thanks! The President of the Russian Federation.'

In July 1997, Yeltsin took a tour aboard the St. Nicholas (a replica of a 17 th -century trading boat) during a trip to Kizhi.

The boat traveled to the local skerries, and the president did not move from the deck, attaching worms to the fish hook so his security guard could catch perches. They managed to catch about a dozen small ones.



For more information: http://polar-odyssey.org

First published in Russian in Strana.ru

Boat Books Australia FOOTERZhik 2024 March - FOOTERJ Composites J/45

Related Articles

The Transat CIC: how to follow the start
The 48 competitors will leave Lorient heading for New York on Sunday Switzerland's IMOCA racer Oliver Heer: Now I have my back to the wall. Inside, personally I feel a lot of pressure.
Posted today at 5:45 pm
52 Super Series 2024 starts this weekend
The counters have returned to zero After thrilling end to the 2023 52 SUPER SERIES circuit which saw Germany's Platoon, owned and steered by Harm Müller-Spreer, win the season title on tie-break, the five regatta 2024 circuit opens on Sunday.
Posted today at 5:04 pm
Last Chance Regatta at Hyères, France Day 6
Six Olympic dinghy places claimed by emerging nations Six of the eight men's and women's dinghy Olympic places on offer at the Last Chance Regatta were claimed by sailors supported by the World Sailing Emerging Nations Program on a rain-soaked final day of qualification at the Semaine Olympique Française.
Posted today at 4:36 pm
Antigua Wingfoil Championship Race Day 1
Participants of all ages and backgrounds at Antigua Sailing Week Against the lush green mountains of Antigua, colourful Wingfoil sails adorned the horizon, marking the commencement of Antigua Wingfoil Championship Race Day 1 during Antigua Sailing Week.
Posted today at 12:06 pm
Cup Spy Apr 25-26: Three Sailings and a Reveal
Kiwis and Italians while American Magic popped out of the shed for a mast fitting Two teams sailed today - one in Auckland and the other in Cagliari. American Magic gave an unexpected reveal today, when the US Challenger opened the shed door and saw daylight for the first time.
Posted today at 10:16 am
Hamilton Island Race Week accomodation
The most popular Race Week properties available now Hamilton Island Race Week is fast approaching and we have some prime race week viewing spots available where you can watch some of the world's best racing yachts sail by and be close to all the celebrations.
Posted today at 5:40 am
59th Congressional Cup at Long Beach Day 2
First four advance to quarter-finals Closing out the opening round-robin stage of the 59th Congressional Cup today in Long Beach, the top four teams - Ian Williams/ GBR, Jeppe Borch/ DEN, Dave Hood/ USA and Gavin Brady/ USA, each advance to the Quarter-final stage of the event.
Posted today at 3:40 am
Finns and French finish Ocean Globe Race
Galiana WithSecure and Evrika excape the windhole 40nm from the finish line It was a long, painfully slow final two days to complete their circumnavigation. But, finally, Galiana WithSecure FI (06) and Evrika FR (07) crossed the Royal Yacht Squadron finish line in a moody windless, moonlight Cowes arrival.
Posted on 25 Apr
No major fears for Sunday's Transat CIC start
There will be no initial gales to contend with, rather a relatively light winds start As all of the Transat CIC skippers convened this morning at Lorient's La Base for the main briefing before Sunday's start of the 3,500 miles solo race across the North Atlantic to New York, ideas about the weather are the main topic of discussion.
Posted on 25 Apr
Last Chance Regatta at Hyères, France Day 5
Sister act seals Olympic spot in windsurfing Czech sisters Katerina and Barbora Svikova took gold and silver in the three-rider final of the women's windsurfing competition on day five of the Last Chance Regatta in the south of France.
Posted on 25 Apr