sailing the synthetic sea

Charles Moore, founder of the Algalita Marine Research Foundation, discovered the North Pacific Gyre in 1997. Here you’ll find Algalita crew member Anna Cummins’ account of her trip to the North Pacific Gyre. Originally printed in Wend Volume 3 Issue 4, “Sailing the Synthetic Sea” is the only first-hand account of what it’s like to visit the Gyre currently on the web.

Sailing the Synthetic Seas

by Anna Cummins

December 22, 2007: Three weeks before departure

Though I was fairly certain I would look back on this moment and wonder what I had been thinking, it was an opportunity I couldn’t refuse: a month at sea, crossing the North Pacific Ocean in winter, a novice among an all-male crew of seasoned sailors. The mission, to investigate the rapid increase in plastic trash in our oceans, was one I’d been fascinated with for years.

From the comfort of the cozy Santa Monica cafe where we met with Captain Charles Moore to discuss the upcoming voyage, the prospect of raging seas seemed at once incomprehensible and terrifying. I cradled my steaming latte and pretended to follow as the crew launched into a detailed discourse on weather, while poring over the maps and navigation charts that covered the table. In reality, I heard little more than the captain’s sober warning: “This will not be an easy trip…our mission may be aborted due to severe weather.”

The discussion of safety equipment did little to quell my mounting anxiety. The idea of bobbing about in a survival suit amid roiling swells, GPS devices notwithstanding, seemed absurdly risky, especially from the warm comfort of this west side cafe.

As if reading my thoughts, Captain Moore looked me straight in the eye:

“So, Anna, have you had any further sailing experience since Guadalupe Island? You realize this will be much rougher…”

Moore was referring to my only other experience at sea, four years earlier with him aboard the same ship that would soon carry us across the Pacific. I had first met Moore in 2002, at a conference in Santa Barbara, and was haunted for weeks by his presentation. His documentary film Synthetic Sea detailed the steady accumulation of plastic waste in the Pacific, to levels so high that plastic outweighed zooplankton in some areas by a factor of 6 to 1. Far from a merely aesthetic issue, it seemed our plastic junk was infiltrating the marine ecosystem.

I jumped at the chance to volunteer aboard his 2004 research trip to Guadalupe Island, to gather evidence of plastic ingestion by seabirds 150 miles off the coast of Baja California. We spent several days traipsing around the starkly beautiful, uninhabited island looking for bird boluses. Evidence we found aplenty: Of the 30 stomach samples we collected from Laysan albatross, 100 percent contained plastic particles.

What had seemed to me a bona fide sailing voyage was by the captain’s standards a mere paddle in a puddle. Now, four years later, I couldn’t boast of any new experience. He put it more directly:

“Are you sure you can handle this trip?”

Read the rest of the story here.

[Photo: Joe Paschal]

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