Please select your home edition
Edition
Sea Sure 2025

Plea to sailors of the world- It's not too late to save the ocean

by Nancy Knudsen/Sailors for the Sea on 13 Oct 2012
Dr Ned Cabot sailing - hear his plea SW
I spent two months sailing in the Baltic a couple of years ago, and I was struck by the virtually complete lack of sea life. In 64 days of sailing, we didn’t see a single marine mammal of any sort. They have nothing to eat. There are practically no fishing boats to be seen in the Baltic and no seagulls, because there are no fish. It is a dead sea thanks to man’s over fishing and pollution.

These are the words of Dr Ned Cabot, a firm supporter of Sailors for the Sea, who lost his life last month sailing, swept overboard in a tragic incident off the east coast of the USA. Read on for the rest of his story and hear his plea:

I grew up sailing, starting at age two. I’ve been at it for over sixty years and traveled over 75,000 ocean miles under sail in the North Atlantic the Arctic Ocean, the Baltic Sea, the Mediterranean, the Caribbean, the Aegean, the North Pacific, the South Pacific, and the Southern Ocean. From the glaciers of Greenland and Spitsbergen to the wilds of Cape Horn and from the mountains of Alaska to the islands of Greece and Tahiti, I’ve covered a fair amount of the Earth’s oceans. The sea is in my blood. It’s a big part of what makes me tick. And it’s a huge part of what makes our planet both beautiful and livable.

After a career in academic medicine, I took relatively early retirement to spend more time at sea and devote more of my energies to enjoying, studying, and preserving our ocean environment. Seventy percent of the Earth’s surface is covered by our oceans, yet we know more about the surface of the moon than we do about the bottom of the sea. But we, the Earth’s inhabitants, are measurably causing the gradual deterioration of our greatest resource. We are acidifying the oceans due to massive increases in the concentration of CO2 in our atmosphere, which affects the entire ocean ecosystem, from corals to shellfish. We are polluting our harbors and bays with run-off from our farms and factories. We are contaminating the sea with plastic trash and oil spills. And we are depleting fish stocks around the world to dangerous levels that may never be able to recover.

I spent two months sailing in the Baltic a couple of years ago, and I was struck by the virtually complete lack of sea life. In 64 days of sailing, we didn’t see a single marine mammal of any sort. They have nothing to eat. There are practically no fishing boats to be seen in the Baltic and no seagulls, because there are no fish. It is a dead sea thanks to man’s over fishing and pollution.

For the past thirty years I have served as a trustee of the Sea Education Association, which teaches oceanography to college students and offers them the experience of spending six weeks at sea doing research on one of our tall ships as they learn to sail and become directly acquainted with all the issues surrounding the health and benefit of our oceans. And more recently I joined the board of Sailors for the Sea, a non-profit organization that is attempting to educate and engage the boating community as a whole in these same issues.

It’s not too late to act. We must do all we can to save the most precious resource we have on the surface of the Earth. But we must do it now.

About 'Sailors for the Sea:
Sailors for the Sea was founded by David Rockefeller Jnr., an avid racing sailor and deeply committed to the environment. It is a comparatively new voice for ocean conservation, educating and engaging the sailing and boating community in the worldwide protection of the oceans.
For more information, go to their www.sailorsforthesea.org!website.
RS Sailing 2021 - FOOTERRooster 2025Maritimo M50

Related Articles

Sydney Hobart – The rise of the plateau
At about 15 hours into it all, there is but 1.5nm separating the race leaders Here we are, about 15 hours into it all, and there is but 1.5nm separating race leader, Master Lock Comanche from LawConnect, with SHK Scallywag about another 1.5nm further adrift. Note that Lucky is right there too, and Callisto is in 12th place
Posted today at 5:07 pm
We want you on the podium in 2026
Here's 10% off and a free hat! For dinghy sailors, the most transformative performance tool is the smartlink² Atto. The world's smallest load sensor for sailing, it easily installs in any performance-critical line, like the vang, cunningham, outhaul and more
Posted today at 12:00 pm
Rolex Sydney Hobart: Strong winds and 4m seas
Seas of about 4metres are forecast for a position east of Eden on the SE corner of the NSW coast. Fresh southerlies are forecast to continue into Saturday for the leaders in the 80th Rolex Sydney Hobart Race, with seas of about 4metres forecast for a position east of Eden on the SE corner of the NSW coast.
Posted today at 9:41 am
Rolex Sydney Hobart: Surprised early leader
LawConnect clung to a narrow lead in the early miles as the fleet hit strong southerlies Out on a fast and unsettled Tasman Sea, Christian Beck sounded both surprised and quietly satisfied as his 100-footer LawConnect clung to a narrow early advantage in the opening hours of the 2025 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race.
Posted today at 8:03 am
Rolex Sydney Hobart underway
LawConnect took an early lead out of Sydney Heads Defending Line Honours champion LawConnect might have taken an early lead out of Sydney Heads but its archrival Master Lock Comanche lead the fleet as the 2025 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race heads down the New South Wales coast.
Posted today at 5:24 am
Sydney Hobart – I should be so…
Lucky. It was ominous. Why so incredible? Well, it was only for around five minutes, but the signs.. Lucky. It was ominous. Why so incredible? Well, it was only for around five minutes, but they deployed their new North Sails A2 just about as quickly as LawConnect, who definitely won those bragging rights BTW, as well as first out the Heads.
Posted today at 3:35 am
RSHYR 2025 | More Race Day Updates by BCM
More action quayside ahead of the 2025 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Race Day - December 26 2025 - the 80th Rolex Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race and Bow Caddy Media bring us more action quayside.
Posted today at 12:06 am
Sydney Hobart – Death Valley or Plateau of Pain
It could be Death Valley that gets you. If it doesn't, then perhaps it will be the Plateau of Pain It could be Death Valley that gets you. If it doesn't, then perhaps it will be the Plateau of Pain caused by the large and slow High that is sitting over Tasmania. This particular Editorial stems on from Ocean Graders' Delight
Posted on 25 Dec
Rolex Sydney Hobart: Tough decisions for Day 1
Fresh southerlies are expected in the opening stanzas asking some tough questions of navigators With fresh southerlies forecast for the start and first day, to the surprise of no-one, the race record is not under threat.
Posted on 25 Dec
RSHYR 2025 | Race Day Updates by Bow Caddy Media
80th Rolex Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race and Bow Caddy Media bring us the race day action Race Day - December 26 2025 - the 80th Rolex Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race and Bow Caddy Media bring us the action.
Posted on 25 Dec