
Charter: Trinkets for Time Travel
Souvenirs are evidence of a life well lived and uniquely documented.

Souvenirs are evidence of a life well lived and uniquely documented.

Sailing on a schedule is famously a recipe for disaster, but on charter you don’t have much of a choice. The adventure is what you make of it.

A spin around the steaming cauldron of the Aeolian Islands makes a bewitching visit to the heart of the Mediterranean.

After a long absence, one sailor finds herself sailing the waters of her youth and contemplating years of change in all its forms.

Spring is in the air and warmer weather is right around the corner. Get ready for the season with SAIL’s adventure issue! Through the Eyes

Lessons learned by others are a great guide when putting together a vacation to remember.

The Charter issue is on the way! Here’s what to look forward to in the April issue of SAIL Magazine. Cruising in the Land of


Stretching the comfort zone can be awesome.

One family treks off the beaten path, on the lookout for some truly special encounters with nature.

Simrad has upgraded their line of chartplotters with the NSS 4, a new model designed with going off soundings in mind.

Nearing the halfway mark of Falken’s passage between the Galápagos and Marquesas

Today we’re celebrating the birthday of one of history’s greatest yachtswomen.

Celebrating its 50th anniversary, Coneys Marine on Long Island has always counted on the power of family.

Bad puns aside, why do cats and sailing go so well together? It’s brain science.

Which modern synonym for “complain” originally was used to describe a ship that tended to round up into the wind due to a bad design

As the second fleet of starters get under way, a quick look at the tracker and the prep that goes into a race of over 2,000 open ocean miles.

Doubting his choices one chilly day, a sailor wonders whether he’ll have to make changes.

Catching and prepping your own dinner while underway is one of those one of a kind cruiser experiences. The process gets a whole lot better with the right gear.

In her first Marion-Bermuda Race as skipper of a Navy 44, Nancy Rhodes and her team of U.S. Naval Academy midshipmen aboard Integrity stuck to their strategy—even when things looked grim—and walked away with bragging rights and an armful of silver.