Please select your home edition
Edition
Selden 2020 - LEADERBOARD

Paddle your own canoe - from Phuket to California

by Fraser Morton, Phuket Gazette on 2 Feb 2010
The pair plan to start their amazing voyage on 10 March Phuket Gazette
Two Phuket kayakers are getting ready for a spot of exercise: the world’s longest paddling expedition, a 14,000-mile voyage from Phuket to California in a 20-foot wooden boat. American Ryan Doran, 26, and Phatum Thani born Piya ‘Mr X’ Sukunthai, 28, plan to leave Nai Harn Beach on March 10 – and they won’t be back for a while.

During their paddle, which they expect to take 20 months, they will pass through Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan, Japan and Russia before braving a 217-mile leg across the Bering Sea, one of the world’s most treacherous expanses of ocean. If they successfully make the crossing, they will continue on to Alaska and Canada, and the lower 48 US States.

If all goes according to plan, the pair will port in Ryan’s home city of San Francisco, California, a few pounds lighter and just in time for Christmas next year. Their own parents have branded their trip ‘crazy and dangerous beyond belief', but for Ryan and Mr X the adventure is a life-long dream. Currently in training, they can be seen most days paddling off Nai Harn Beach, and Promthep Cape in their Phuket-made kayak, Say-Lee (liberty).



Some sea kayakers have paddled sections of Ryan and Mr X’s planned voyage – but no one has ever gone the full way.
Hypothermia and huge waves will be their main concern when navigating through the South China and Bering Seas.
The first to paddle across the Bering Sea was Jon Turk and his team, who completed the feat in 2000. Turk’s team had to contend with 20-foot waves, navigate through ice shelves and withstand nine long days of sub-zero temperatures and zero visibility shrouded in a blanket of fog. They survived and the crossing is still heralded today as one of the world’s greatest-ever kayaking expeditions.

Ryan and Mr X claim they will be able to paddle the 217 miles through the Bering Sea in under two weeks’ time. A safety boat will tail them on this leg of their voyage. “If we capsize in those conditions it will be extremely difficult to flip it back over, and huge waves and hypothermia are a very real threat,” Ryan said. But he added: “If anyone can do it, it’s us.”

Ryan said the pair are paddling for themselves; not to break records, but to quench their appetite for the ultimate adventure. “People wanna hear like, ‘oh you’re paddling for breast cancer or you’re paddling for Aids,’ and the reason we we’re paddling is, we’re paddling for us.” “This is our adventure, and it’s what we want to do with our lives,” Ryan said.

Full story: http://www.phuketgazette.net/archives/articles/2010/article8302.html

Sea Sure 2025Doyle_SailWorld_728X90px_cruise BOTTOMAllen Sailing

Related Articles

2025 World Match Racing Tour Final day 2
Shock upsets as world no. 3 and no. 4 exit WMRT Final in Shenzhen Two of the highest-ranked skippers in world match racing were eliminated on Day Two of the 2025 World Match Racing Tour Final in Shenzhen Bao'an, as treacherous light-wind conditions delivered a major upset and blew the competition wide open.
Posted today at 4:37 pm
Sandberg PalmaVela 2026 opens entries
Two flagship events in the Palma Bay and the Balearic archipelago Entries are now open for Sandberg PalmaVela 2026, which has confirmed the dates for its two major events and will once again position Palma Bay as a key international hub for competitive sailing at the start of the European season.
Posted today at 3:53 pm
CRAB Board of Directors Elects Two New Members
Mike Huddleston and Jake Iversen join the board for a two-year term The Chesapeake Region Accessible Boating Board of Directors has elected Mike Huddleston and Jake Iversen to the board for a two-year term in January, 2026. The CRAB Board also voted to re-elect current officers for another one-year term.
Posted today at 2:38 pm
XR 41 - IRC Version Hits the Water
Increased stability and noticeably stronger upwind and reaching capability We're excited to announce that the IRC-optimized XR 41 has officially been launched and completed its first rounds of testing.
Posted today at 2:30 pm
2026 RORC Transatlantic Race Runners & Riders
A highlight of the 2026 global offshore racing calendar starts on Sunday The 2026 RORC Transatlantic Race is ready to start from Marina Lanzarote on Sunday 11 January. The race will see 21 teams take on the 3,000 nautical-mile voyage west across the Atlantic to Antigua.
Posted today at 2:17 pm
2026 NWSA/SCYA Women's Sailing Conference
Announced for March in Long Beach, California The National Women's Sailing Association (NWSA) and Southern California Yachting Association (SCYA) have collaborated to bring the Women's Sailing Conference to Long Beach, California.
Posted today at 1:09 pm
ILCA Oceania & AUS Open & Youth Championship day 5
Queensland's Mara Stransky leads the Aussie females Queensland's Mara Stransky is the leading Australian female sailor in the ILCA 6 Gold Fleet competing in the 2026 Oceania and Australian Open and Youth Championships in Hobart.
Posted today at 10:42 am
GLOBE40 Leg 4 Update
Leaders cross the antimeridian Today at 06:45:31 UTC and 06:50:19 UTC, the two leaders of the GLOBE40, BELGIUM OCEAN RACING - CURIUM and CREDIT MUTUEL, crossed the antimeridian, giving the former a 4'48" advantage.
Posted today at 9:33 am
2026 Moth Australian Nationals Day 3
What was planned as a race turned into a full-blown four-hour water adventure It was one of those days on the water — the kind where the forecast shrugs its shoulders and says, "You're on your own."
Posted today at 9:08 am
2025 GL52 Racing Highlights
From Pensacola to the Great Lakes, 2025 was an epic year for GL52 racing From Pensacola to the Great Lakes, 2025 was an epic year for GL52 racing.
Posted on 6 Jan