
Guest contributor Creed O'Hanlon with a follow on story to his last contribution:
A Poetic Pair
 
    I'd never  heard of Emmanuel  and Maximilien Berque until I came across a link to one of their  videos on Thomas Nielsen's  Wharram-oriented blog. It took nine minutes, the time needed to view  an excerpt from their award-winning documentary, Inside Outside, on YouTube, to  realise that they were the natural inheritors of Moitessier's spiritual  mantle. Identical twins, born 58 years ago in  Morocco, they spent their early twenties in France where they were among  the first to surf – and photograph – the various banks and point breaks  along the east coast of the Bay of Biscay. In the early Eighties, they  built a 4.8 metre trimaran daysailer in plywood and dubbed it Micromegas I. With little  sailing experience but an interest in celestial navigation, they set off  for the Canary Islands, west of Morocco, in what became a gruelling  series of stormy coastal and offshore passages. They spent over a year  living in the open air on the tiny vessel. Not surprisingly, it put them  off sailing for another decade. Then, in 1995, they  designed and built a beautiful, strip-planked, lug-sail ketch, Micromegas II, just four-metres long.  They sailed it – without engine, electronics or basic safety equipment –  first across the Atlantic, from the French beachside town of Contis,   to Guadeloupe, in the Caribbean, then to Miami, Florida.    In 2003, two years after their  account of this voyage, Les Mutins De  La Mer, became a minor best-seller in France, they did it again.  They designed and built a strip-planked, 6.5-metre, lugsail  schooner-rigged proa (pictured above, centre), Micromegas III,  weighing just 300 kgs. With even less  equipment – this time, leaving compasses, sextant, watch, almanac,  nautical tables, radios and GPS ashore – they set off from the Canaries  towards the small island of La Desirade in the Carribean, relying only  on the sun, moon, stars and swell direction to guide them. 27 days  later, their landfall was perfect.  Inside  Outside follows this pair of laid-back, aging surfer dudes –  turned film-makers – as they undertake what is, by any measure, one of  the truly extraordinary small sailboat voyages of the past century.  Always in tune with the sea, despite the obvious discomfort of their  vessel, they're so damn cheerful and at such ease, even under pressure,  that it's tempting to dismiss them as reckless. They aren't. They just  have a loose, joyous empathy – typical of surfers – with the ocean's  mutable environment, underpinned by a zen-like willingness to abandon  the usual human impulse to try to exert a semblance of control over it.I  can't help but envy their... soul.
I'd never  heard of Emmanuel  and Maximilien Berque until I came across a link to one of their  videos on Thomas Nielsen's  Wharram-oriented blog. It took nine minutes, the time needed to view  an excerpt from their award-winning documentary, Inside Outside, on YouTube, to  realise that they were the natural inheritors of Moitessier's spiritual  mantle. Identical twins, born 58 years ago in  Morocco, they spent their early twenties in France where they were among  the first to surf – and photograph – the various banks and point breaks  along the east coast of the Bay of Biscay. In the early Eighties, they  built a 4.8 metre trimaran daysailer in plywood and dubbed it Micromegas I. With little  sailing experience but an interest in celestial navigation, they set off  for the Canary Islands, west of Morocco, in what became a gruelling  series of stormy coastal and offshore passages. They spent over a year  living in the open air on the tiny vessel. Not surprisingly, it put them  off sailing for another decade. Then, in 1995, they  designed and built a beautiful, strip-planked, lug-sail ketch, Micromegas II, just four-metres long.  They sailed it – without engine, electronics or basic safety equipment –  first across the Atlantic, from the French beachside town of Contis,   to Guadeloupe, in the Caribbean, then to Miami, Florida.    In 2003, two years after their  account of this voyage, Les Mutins De  La Mer, became a minor best-seller in France, they did it again.  They designed and built a strip-planked, 6.5-metre, lugsail  schooner-rigged proa (pictured above, centre), Micromegas III,  weighing just 300 kgs. With even less  equipment – this time, leaving compasses, sextant, watch, almanac,  nautical tables, radios and GPS ashore – they set off from the Canaries  towards the small island of La Desirade in the Carribean, relying only  on the sun, moon, stars and swell direction to guide them. 27 days  later, their landfall was perfect.  Inside  Outside follows this pair of laid-back, aging surfer dudes –  turned film-makers – as they undertake what is, by any measure, one of  the truly extraordinary small sailboat voyages of the past century.  Always in tune with the sea, despite the obvious discomfort of their  vessel, they're so damn cheerful and at such ease, even under pressure,  that it's tempting to dismiss them as reckless. They aren't. They just  have a loose, joyous empathy – typical of surfers – with the ocean's  mutable environment, underpinned by a zen-like willingness to abandon  the usual human impulse to try to exert a semblance of control over it.I  can't help but envy their... soul. (Incidentally,  check out the Berques' library of  personal photographs.  Like James Wharram,  with whom they appear to have something of a Sixties' philosophical  kinship, the Berque twins aren't shy about showing nude  images – emphatically NSFW – of some of the women who distract them  between and during voyages. The Berques' friends win hands down when it  comes to sex appeal – probably another essential difference between the  French and the English.) Above: All photos by Emmanuel and Maximilien  Berque
(Incidentally,  check out the Berques' library of  personal photographs.  Like James Wharram,  with whom they appear to have something of a Sixties' philosophical  kinship, the Berque twins aren't shy about showing nude  images – emphatically NSFW – of some of the women who distract them  between and during voyages. The Berques' friends win hands down when it  comes to sex appeal – probably another essential difference between the  French and the English.) Above: All photos by Emmanuel and Maximilien  Berque
I discovered these guys a few years back and wondered at their propensity to find such attractive crew.
ReplyDeleteTheir most recent Micromegas is a beautiful dory and truly a work of art. VERY talented men.
doryman