6 minute read

THEY SAILED WITH US

Talk to alumni about Sea|mester and a few things are immediately evident.

Bright and highly articulate, they are clearly motivated and independent, determined to travel their own path through life to make the most of the opportunities they have.

They also uniformly say the same things about the program: that it took them out of their comfort zone and gave them a newfound confidence in their abilities. That they realized they didn’t have to follow a pre-ordained path to success. That the passion, enthusiasm and dedication of their teachers and the staff for what they do was inspirational. And that they formed lasting bonds with their shipmates and have memories of an experience that will stay with them all their lives.

BARBARA BRUCE Princeton University It may seem a long way from spending nights in the Caribbean on an 88-ft schooner to working days as a Trial Preparation Assistant in the Investigative Division of the Manhattan District Attorney’s office, but that’s the journey Barbara Bruce made.

"I’m thinking of doing national security work and this is a great experience while I decide whether I want to go to law school." It’s a course Sea|mester helped her chart.

"I’d just completed my freshman year at Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School and was living a typical college life, sleeping late, going out at night, not feeling terribly motivated. I was in the typical college mold of operating on autopilot."

Sea|mester changed all that. "It completely altered my perception of myself. That summer motivated me and gave me real confidence in my abilities. I developed a totally new perspective. Sea|mester had me trying things I’d never done before. Our Captain used to tell us if we wanted to take a nap, take a nap when we got home. This was the only time we were going to be in such an amazing place doing such amazing things." "I’d sleep on a hammock on deck and get up at 5:45am so I could see the sunrise. And I woke up with such a terrific sense of excitement and energy. That’s not something that happens everyday at home. I remember on our first night passage to Dominica, it was a 12-hour passage over really choppy water, and most of us were throwing up. And I remember thinking that if this were happening anywhere else I would have felt horrible, but here, even seasick, I was just in heaven being on the boat with all the stars and a feeling of contentment."

"I don’t take the people around me or the things I have for granted anymore. I just feel this heightened awareness of the possibilities of life."

MICHAEL PERATICOS University of London Having just completed his Masters in Shipping, Trade and Finance at the University of London, Michael Peraticos decided he wanted to get away from the usual and mundane.

"I wanted to be outside life’s conventional four walls and distance myself from what I think of as stereotypical and unchallenged views of life. I wanted something radically different from what I had done so far, which was to continue straight from University into the Masters program. I wanted to live life to the fullest and try to understand myself." He found Sea|mester through a friend who had been on the program and he thought it would satisfy his desire to travel. He joined Argo in Tarragona south of Barcelona, sailed the Mediterranean, making stops in Gibraltar, Morocco, and then the Canary Islands to pick up supplies. Then it was off on a six-day sail through the Cape Verde islands off the western coast of Africa before crossing the Atlantic to Dominica and finally ending the voyage in the British Virgin Islands.

"It was a profound and intense experience, unlike anything else I had lived. It is hard to describe it to others because you simply have to live certain things to understand them. But I remember a fellow crewmember of mine saying on the 90th day that he was sure that many changes have taken place but that it sometimes took time for them to appear and for you to understand them. We were 30 human beings co-existing within distinct physical boundaries. I think the spirit that existed with my shipmates was unprecedented for me. We grew to be very connected."

Though he is now in Athens working as a shipping consultant, he still feels that same connection to his shipmates.

"The experience that I lived on Sea|mester has certainly empowered me to live life how I see fit and made me believe all things are possible if you use your imagination."

MANI WHITE New College of San Francisco Mani had never had a chance to do a semester abroad, so after graduation she decided it was time to pursue a dream. She had done some sailing in the San Francisco Bay, but had always wanted to know what it would be like to live, learn and travel aboard a boat.

"I didn’t want a cruise ship experience. A semester aboard should be more than a classroom with a waterfront view. Being a part of a working sailing ship was a different way of living and learning because everyone shares responsibility for what they bring to the moment. It’s an opportunity to grow with every minute."

Mani was intrigued and signed up for the 40-day Ocean Star Caribbean voyage.

"My time with Sea|mester and my crewmates gave me training wheels on living a life without compromise. It opened my eyes to infinite possibilities and honed my ability to become the person I aspired to be." She found her calling. Two years later Mani joined the crew of Argo on a 90-day voyage from the Mediterranean to the Caribbean. "I remember one night on watch about two in the morning. A small pod of dolphins appeared in front of our bow wake. You couldn’t see them by any normal light, even moonlight – all you could see were the contours of their bodies flickering with phosphorescence, their wake trailing like fairy dust behind. It left me with a deep sense of wonder at Mankind’s tiny place in a vastly beautiful and diverse world." By the end of the trip she had achieved her goal of obtaining the Master of Yachts 200 ton theory in the hope of one day sailing her own vessel around the world. Now, that dream is coming true. Mani and her fiancé, Andrew, are hard at work building a Farrier-designed 32-ft Trimaran. "It may take us six months, it may take us six years. But it’s something we’ll do." No one who sailed with Mani has the slightest doubt.

PHOTO CREDITS: CHANTALE BÉGIN MATT HARDY & JOSH LIBERMAN MAURICIO HANDLER

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