Popular Mechanics - USA (2019-04)

(Antfer) #1
B

April 2019 55

Teresa steers as Ben
checks the charts,
looking for shallow
sections and landmarks
and buoys to navigate
by in Huntington
Harbor, Long Island.

ELOW DECK on the 44-foot sailing vessel
Rocinante, you look up and see only a shape
of sky. You could be anywhere in the world.
Ben Eriksen Carey, the co-owner and
co-captain, washes dishes in the galley’s
foot-pump sink and his wife, Teresa, orga-
nizes laminated charts (land is mapped;
water is charted) at a lap table. A small hammock of
apples sways with the rocking of the boat.
Then a loud knock from above, followed by a New
York yell. Teresa climbs the steep stairs—more like a
ladder—to the deck. The voice again:
“Are you Tuh-ree-suh?”
A pause.
“Yaw preg-nant.”
He’s not wrong. She’s due in a few weeks. Behind
Teresa, Ben chuckles.
The boat happens to be in Huntington Harbor,
on Long Island, this morning. But through cold win-
ters and rolling summer storms, the Rocinante has
been the couple’s traveling home since 2014. Every-
thing they need is stowed in its corners, cubbies, and
cabinets, each carefully labeled. “Spices.” “Dishes.”
“Creamy Stuff.” They’ve sailed to the Arctic, to Pan-
ama, to warm islands and the rainy bays in between,
to quiet moorings where Teresa wrote and Ben worked
as a tugboat captain. Everywhere they went, people
always asked them some variation of “How do you
sail this thing?”

PHOTOGRAPHS BY BETH PERKINS

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