Please select your home edition
Edition
MarkSetBot

He did it! Horie has crossed Pacific by Wave Power

by Nancy Knudsen on 7 Jul 2008
Kenichi Horie on his waveboat SW
He's done it! As reported in Sail-World in March, Japanese master sailor and environmentalist Kenichi Horie set off on March 16 this year, on a first-of-a-kind trans-Pacific voyage powered only by waves.

The 69-year-old solo yachtsman and his boat made from recycled materials embarked on the 3800nm trip from Honolulu bound for Japan, expecting to arrive 'sometime in May'. Well it took longer than he thought, but on July 04, he did it, arriving at the port of Wakayama in the channel between Honshu and Shikoku Islands, just before midnight, thus becoming the first person in history to cross and ocean powered by wave power.


His 9.5m double-hull boat, made partly of recycled aluminium, named Suntory Mermaid II, was equipped with two special fins at the front that move like a dolphin's tail each time the boat rises or falls with the rhythm of the waves.

The theory said that that a vertical motion could drive the boat forward at a speed of three knots. In the event, he averaged 1.5 knots, not the fastest way to travel, but it could spell the dawning of yet another innovative green way of transiting oceans.

'Throughout history, mankind has used wind for power, but no one has appeared to be serious about wave power,' Mr Horie said late last year.

'I think I'm a lucky boy as this wave power system has remained virtually untouched.'

About Kenichi Horie:

Mr Horie made international headlines in 1962 when he became the first person to sail solo across the Pacific to San Francisco at the age of 23. on arrival in San Francisco without a visa, he was first arrested, but when the Mayor found out what he had just done, he pardoned him, gave him not only a visa, but the Keys of the City.

He had left on the three-month voyage despite also breaking Japanese law, which at the time did not allow its citizens to sail on their own out of the country.

Since then, he has made 10 sailing trips across the Pacific and around the world, many of them in extraordinary vesseld.

In the seventies, he did two 'fairly normal' solo circumnavigations, the first from east to west , then from north to south.

However, long before it was fashionable, he started favouring natural ways of transportation:






In the eighties he sailed a solar boat from Hawaii to Chichijima. In the nineties he sailed from Hawaii to Okinawa in a pedal powered boat, and then from Ecuador to Tokyo in a solar boat made of recycled aluminum. This crossing covered 10,000 miles in 148 days which earned the Guinness World Record for the fastest ever crossing of the Pacific in a solar-powered boat.

Then, in 1999 he sailed from San Francisco to Japan aboard a boat made primarily from recycled materials. The boat, Malt's Mermaid II, was a 32ft catamaran constructed from 500 beer kegs. The rigging consisted of two side-by-side masts with junk rig sails made from recycled plastic bottles. This boat is on display Okura Beach, Akashi.

In 2002 he sailed from Nishinomiya to San Francisco aboard the Mermaid III, which was a replica of the original Mermaid constructed from a variety of recycled materials, including whiskey barrels for the hull, aluminum cans for the mast and plastic soda bottles for the sails.

Pantaenius Sail 2025 AUS FooterHenri-Lloyd Dynamic RangeSea Sure 2025

Related Articles

Big Open Day crowds for Lake Samsonvale WSA
Over 280 people flocked to the LSWSA clubhouse and grassed lake foreshore Cars started flooding into the Lake Samsonvale Water Sports Association from eight O'clock on Sunday morning and kept volunteers busy directing traffic until late afternoon as the grassed and treed parking areas around the club house filled.
Posted today at 9:36 am
RS Venture Connect World Sailing class status
Following a unanimous vote at the World Sailing AGM RS Sailing is proud to announce that the RS Venture Connect Class has been formally awarded World Sailing Class status, following a unanimous vote at the World Sailing Annual General Meeting (AGM) held on Saturday, 8th November.
Posted today at 8:15 am
The Red Army at Manly 16ft Skiff Sailing Club
And you thought you had a busy week? Manly 16ft skiff sailor Greg Windust has four kids aged between 10-15 all sailing at the club while also sponsoring/funding four skiffs and having an involvement with two Flying 11s and two Manly Juniors.
Posted today at 5:06 am
Predictwind A-Class Catamaran Worlds - Day 2
Racing has been abandoned for Day 2, with the strong wind forecast for today and this evening. The Predictwind A-Class Catamaran World Championships are underway off Milford Beach. Racing has been abandoned for Day 2, with the strong wind forecast for today and this evening, already hitting the race area.
Posted on 11 Nov
PredictWind A-Class Cat Worlds 2025 Day 1
The culmination of many months work by the Milford Cruising Club Today was the culmination of many months, possibly years of hard work by the Milford Cruising Club, and the NZACCA's David Haylock, in particular, as the 2025 PredictWind A-Cat Worlds finally got under way.
Posted on 11 Nov
Coaching, Over-Coaching, Coaches Sailing and Fun!
A topic of discussion in many of my recent chats A topic of discussion in many of my recent chats, and when I've been out and about at events, has been coaching. How it's done, and the impression it leaves on those learning, has profound ramifications on success and participation.
Posted on 11 Nov
Ken Read on his recent induction into the NSHOF
Ken Read on his recent induction into the National Sailing Hall of Fame Eighteen years is a long time, but I can still recall the sounds of carbon-fiber skins grinding on each other aboard PUMA's Volvo Open 70 Avanti as we pound into small chop on the waters of Block Island Sound.
Posted on 11 Nov
Predictwind A-Class Catamaran Worlds - Day 1
Several of the world's top catamaran sailors resumed battle on a challenging Day 1. Several of the world's top catamaran sailors resumed battle on a challenging Day 1 of the Predictwind A-Class Catamaran World Championships.
Posted on 11 Nov
World Sailing Annual Conference praised as success
The General Assembly was the last meeting of the 2025 World Sailing Conference. World Sailing President Quanhai Li and World Sailing CEO David Graham have praised the success of the 2025 World Sailing Annual Conference, a week which culminated in the election of two female Vice Presidents to deliver a gender-balanced Board.
Posted on 11 Nov
WASZP All-Stars Invitational
Where the Best WASZP Sailors Rise! Being named an All-Star is a statement: you're one of the best. Earn your place. Make your mark. Become a WASZP All-Star.
Posted on 10 Nov