• Home
  • About
    • About Julie and Colin
    • In the Media
  • Expeditions
    • Race to Alaska
    • Yukon Gold Rush Row
    • Olive Odyssey Expedition
    • Rowing Around Vancouver Island
    • Rowed Trip – Scotland to Syria by Oar
    • Around the World by Human Power
    • The First Descent of the Yenisey River
    • Running the Amazon
    • Five Years Offshore Sailing
  • Books & Films
    • On Writing and Filming
    • Olive Odyssey
    • Rowed Trip
    • Rowboat in a Hurricane
    • Beyond the Horizon
    • Lost in Mongolia
    • Amazon Extreme
  • Keynote Speakers
    • Selecting a Speaker
    • Keynote Topics
    • Testimonials
    • Clients
    • Colin Angus Bio
    • Julie Angus Bio
  • Adventurer’s Handbook
    • Featured Expeditions
    • Crossing the Bering Strait & Beringian Gap
    • Arctic Survival
      • Arctic Tents
      • Cooking, Food, and Water
      • Clothing
      • Sleeping Bags
      • Sleeping Pads
      • Condensation and Vapour Barriers
    • Ocean Rowing
      • What Time of Year to Row
      • Understanding the Principles of Seaworthiness
      • Equipment
      • Safety Equipment
      • Electrical System
      • Food
      • Ocean Rowboats
      • Miscellaneous Information
      • Ocean Rowing Records
    • R2AK
      • R2AK Records 2015
      • R2AK blog posts
    • Touring Rowboats
    • Cycle Touring
      • The Bike
      • Tires
      • Water
      • Seat
      • Panniers and Trailers
      • Equipment
      • Camping
      • Cycling Destinations
    • Cold Weather Cycling
    • Bike Trailers
    • About Global Circumnavigations
    • Yenisey River
    • Amazon River
    • The Broken Islands Group
  • Blog
  • Contact Us

Adventurers, Writers, and Professional Speakers

team@angusadventures.com
Login

Login
Angus Adventures
  • Home
  • About
    • About Julie and Colin
    • In the Media
  • Expeditions
    • Race to Alaska
    • Yukon Gold Rush Row
    • Olive Odyssey Expedition
    • Rowing Around Vancouver Island
    • Rowed Trip – Scotland to Syria by Oar
    • Around the World by Human Power
    • The First Descent of the Yenisey River
    • Running the Amazon
    • Five Years Offshore Sailing
  • Books & Films
    • On Writing and Filming
    • Olive Odyssey
    • Rowed Trip
    • Rowboat in a Hurricane
    • Beyond the Horizon
    • Lost in Mongolia
    • Amazon Extreme
  • Keynote Speakers
    • Selecting a Speaker
    • Keynote Topics
    • Testimonials
    • Clients
    • Colin Angus Bio
    • Julie Angus Bio
  • Adventurer’s Handbook
    • Featured Expeditions
    • Crossing the Bering Strait & Beringian Gap
    • Arctic Survival
      • Arctic Tents
      • Cooking, Food, and Water
      • Clothing
      • Sleeping Bags
      • Sleeping Pads
      • Condensation and Vapour Barriers
    • Ocean Rowing
      • What Time of Year to Row
      • Understanding the Principles of Seaworthiness
      • Equipment
      • Safety Equipment
      • Electrical System
      • Food
      • Ocean Rowboats
      • Miscellaneous Information
      • Ocean Rowing Records
    • R2AK
      • R2AK Records 2015
      • R2AK blog posts
    • Touring Rowboats
    • Cycle Touring
      • The Bike
      • Tires
      • Water
      • Seat
      • Panniers and Trailers
      • Equipment
      • Camping
      • Cycling Destinations
    • Cold Weather Cycling
    • Bike Trailers
    • About Global Circumnavigations
    • Yenisey River
    • Amazon River
    • The Broken Islands Group
  • Blog
  • Contact Us

Autonomous Atlantic Project Featured in The Martlet

Home Autonomous BoatAutonomous Atlantic Project Featured in The Martlet
Autonomous Atlantic Project Featured in The Martlet
Graphic by Nat Inez, Graphics Contributor

Autonomous Atlantic Project Featured in The Martlet

November 2, 2017 Posted by Julie Autonomous Boat, Media

Read the article online on the Martlet website or below.

Row, row, row your boat gently across the Atlantic

By Megan Warren
November 2, 2017

When Julie and Colin Angus arrived in Costa Rica after 10 000 km and five months at sea, Julie became the first woman to cross the Atlantic in a rowboat.

According to them, Colin became the hairiest man to do the same.

Julie and Colin Angus are adventurers, best-selling authors, and riveting keynote speakers. Their adventures have seen them travel from Scotland to Syria by bicycle and rowboat, sail the Mediterranean to trace the origin of the olive tree (with a 10-month-old in tow), and go from Portugal to Costa Rica in a rowboat.

“Yeah, we really like boats,” joked Colin.

On Oct. 26, the duo spoke about their 2006 human-powered trip at the Maritime Museum as part of the Nautical Nights Speaker series. They kept the audience at the edge of their seats, describing the rush of having two weeks to prepare a rowboat for five months on the water — the bittersweetness of sailing away from shore, and the feeling of being crammed in the cabin of a rowboat for three days in a hurricane.

They also spoke of their current project: they want to build the world’s first autonomous boat that will successfully cross the Atlantic, unmanned. The boat is set to launch in summer 2018 from L’anse aux Meadows, NL, where it will cross the ocean to the shores of Ireland.

 

Graphic by Nat Inez, Graphics Contributor
“It’s something we thought about while we were rowing across the Atlantic because we were there for so long, every day, watching the ocean,” said Julie.

“You see it in all conditions, you see all the different wildlife, you see amazing weather things. We thought [it] would be an amazing way to study the ocean — if we could have boats that just travelled across the ocean slowly like us and we could monitor it?”

Julie and Colin have teamed up with UVic’s Engineering department to create the boat, which will be live tracked on the Weather Network website. Twenty-seven autonomous rowboats have attempted to cross the Atlantic, but all have failed due to technical malfunctions, sharks and foul weather.

“Somebody’s going to do it one day, so we’d like to have a shot at it,” said Julie.

Julie completed a Masters in molecular biology here at UVic, and a undergraduate degree in biology and psychology at McMaster University. She says that her science background has helped shape her adventures.

“I think having a science background really sculpts the way that you view things,” said Julie. “You have a hypothesis, you test it. Observations are very important. Also, being on the ocean, it’s a changing environment. With climate change, the ocean is changing rapidly. Just being able to observe the changing conditions [on the ocean] and the write about them in my books after — it’s a huge influence.”

Julie described their sail to track the source of olive tree, which she led as a National Geographic Expedition, as just “another example of my science background and adventuring coming together.”

To young adventurers, Julie offered the following advice:

“It’s about figuring out what you like in life. Where your interests are, where your passion is, and having the courage to follow those dreams. Sometimes it can be scary, following a non-traditional route, because you need the security of a job, it’s very entrepreneurial. You have to know what you want, if that’s something that suits your personality, and we each find our adventures indifferent things. It’s very individual.”

Nautical Nights is a series of presentations at the Maritime Museum on the last Thursday of each month. Tickets to their next event can be found on the Maritime Museum website at www.mmbc.bc.ca/tag/nautical-nights/.

Tags: autonomous boatmedia
Share
0

You also might be interested in

Olive Odyssey Cover

Olive Odyssey Shortlisted for BC Book Prize

Mar 17, 2015

Julie’s most recent book Olive Odyssey has been shortlisted for[...]

Our Newest Project: Across the Atlantic Ocean by Unmanned Autonomous Boat
Autonomous Boat Prototype

Our Newest Project: Across the Atlantic Ocean by Unmanned Autonomous Boat

Oct 20, 2017

We’re excited to announce our newest project: an attempt to[...]

Autonomous Boat featured in today’s Times Colonist

Autonomous Boat featured in today’s Times Colonist

Dec 7, 2017

Our Autonomous Atlantic Crossing is featured in today’s Times Colonist. [...]

Find us on

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

* indicates required

search our site

Categories

  • Autonomous Boat
  • Boat Design
  • Book Excerpt
  • Events
  • Featured Expeditions
  • Insights & Musings
  • Keynote Speaking
  • Media
  • Olive Odyssey Expedition
  • Race to Alaska (R2AK)
  • Rowed Trip Expedition
  • Syrian Refugee Sponsorship
  • Uncategorized
  • Updates
  • Vancouver Island Circumnavigation
  • Yukon River Row

Tags

amazon river autonomous boat boat plans and kits book canoing cycling documentary education environment expeditions insights kayaking media motivational speaking newsletter olive odyssey olive oil public events R2AK refugee sponsorship rowed trip expedition rowing sailing syria travelling with kids trekking vancouver island yukon river

In the Media

Contact Us

Send us an email and we'll get back to you soon.

Send Message
Contact us to discover how we can deliver an energizing talk that will inspire you and your staff. Contact Us

© 2025 · Angus Adventures.

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
Prev Next