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Salt on the Wind: Canoes, Currents, and the Revival of Ocean Wayfinding (The stories of the navigators and canoe builders bringing back ocean voyaging without instruments)
Coles
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Salt on the Wind: Canoes, Currents, and the Revival of Ocean Wayfinding (The stories of the navigators and canoe builders bringing back ocean voyaging without instruments) in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $19.99
Original price: $23.99

Coles
Salt on the Wind: Canoes, Currents, and the Revival of Ocean Wayfinding (The stories of the navigators and canoe builders bringing back ocean voyaging without instruments) in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $19.99
Original price: $23.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
When you step aboard a double-hulled canoe that sails beyond sight of land without screens, you are stepping into a different idea of knowledge. This book opens that world, following crews who practise ocean wayfinding as both science and ceremony in a century ruled by satellites and shipping lanes.
Through 18-22 vivid life stories, it traces how guilds of pacific master navigators reclaimed polynesian navigation from museum labels and turned it back into a living, demanding craft. Readers sit in on night lessons with the star compass navigation circle drawn in sand, feel the pull of long swells under bare feet, and watch youths from diaspora cities wrestle with fear, seasickness, and belonging on their first open-ocean legs.
The stories do not sentimentalise the past. They follow hard arguments about safety, insurance, and when to permit non instrument voyaging at all. They show builders balancing tradition and epoxy in every double hulled canoe, women crossing thresholds into roles once barred to them, and communities debating who speaks for indigenous ocean knowledge in front of cameras and funders. Along the way, canoes become classrooms for climate justice, carrying witnesses over dying reefs and plastic-choked gyres.
For readers of narrative history, environmental writing, and cultural revival, this is a chart to a different way of moving through the world: slower, more relational, and unafraid of depth. It offers no easy heroics, only the steady work of keeping a fragile, beautiful practice alive on a restless sea.
When you step aboard a double-hulled canoe that sails beyond sight of land without screens, you are stepping into a different idea of knowledge. This book opens that world, following crews who practise ocean wayfinding as both science and ceremony in a century ruled by satellites and shipping lanes.
Through 18-22 vivid life stories, it traces how guilds of pacific master navigators reclaimed polynesian navigation from museum labels and turned it back into a living, demanding craft. Readers sit in on night lessons with the star compass navigation circle drawn in sand, feel the pull of long swells under bare feet, and watch youths from diaspora cities wrestle with fear, seasickness, and belonging on their first open-ocean legs.
The stories do not sentimentalise the past. They follow hard arguments about safety, insurance, and when to permit non instrument voyaging at all. They show builders balancing tradition and epoxy in every double hulled canoe, women crossing thresholds into roles once barred to them, and communities debating who speaks for indigenous ocean knowledge in front of cameras and funders. Along the way, canoes become classrooms for climate justice, carrying witnesses over dying reefs and plastic-choked gyres.
For readers of narrative history, environmental writing, and cultural revival, this is a chart to a different way of moving through the world: slower, more relational, and unafraid of depth. It offers no easy heroics, only the steady work of keeping a fragile, beautiful practice alive on a restless sea.


















