Explore history with the Fyddeye Guides || Enjoy amazing adventures at sea!

Explore history with the Fyddeye Guides || Enjoy amazing adventures at sea!

The Fyddeye Guide to America's LighthousesBuy print book now!Buy print book now! Just $17.95!
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The Fyddeye Guide to America's Lighthouses makes your heritage travel planning easier by showing you hundreds of fascinating and historic lighthouses you can visit today on the east coast, Great Lakes, Gulf Coast, and the west coast. Alaska and Hawaii included!
Bet: Stowaway DaughterDownload for KindleBuy now for Kindle! Just $2.99!
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In the ebook historical novel Bet: Stowaway Daughter, Lisbet "Bet" Lindstrom stows away aboard a tall ship to save her father from prison. Amazing adventures and daring rescues. Now on Smashwords!
The Fyddeye Guide to America's Maritime HistoryBuy print book now!Buy print book now! Just $24.95!
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The Fyddeye Guide to America's Maritime History is a comprehensive travel guide to more than 2,000 tall ships, lighthouses, maritime museums and other maritime heritage attractions. Perfect for budget travelers, use the Guide to plan your trips to our historic sites!
Blowing Out The Stink: Life on a Lumber and Cod Schooner, 1897-1947Download for KindleBuy now for Kindle! Just $2.99!
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Blowing Out the Stink—a fisherman’s phrase for doing laundry at sea—tells the true story of the 1897 schooner Wawona and the quirky adventures of her captains and crews in the North Pacific. Now on Smashwords!

joe_150x150About the Author — Joe Follansbee is the author of seven books, including three books on streaming media. He also works as the communications director for the tall ships Lady Washington and Hawaiian Chieftain.  He lives in Seattle with his wife, two daughters, and four chickens.

Review: Tillamook Passage a rare view into early years of the Oregon Coast

Tillamook Passage: Far Side of the PacificTillamook Passage: Far Side of the Pacific, by Brian D. Ratty. Published by AuthorHouse, 331 pages, hardcover, $29.95.

Native Americans rarely take center stage in historical fiction with strong maritime themes, but Tillamook Passage: The Far Side of the Pacific is an exception. And the author, Brian Ratty, adds an even rarer element, the unique native cultures of the Pacific Northwest coast, which have deep sea traditions and technology that still amaze modern mariners. Tillamook Passage explores this history more deeply than almost any historical novel for young adults in recent years.

Ratty starts with one of the least known, but most important sea voyages in American  history. In 1788, the sloop Lady Washington and the full-rigged ship Columbia Rediviva set out from Boston on a trading expedition. Captain Robert Gray aimed to become the first American seafarer to trade for furs on the Northwest Coast and sail west for Hong Kong and back to Boston. He would become one of the first Americans to circumnavigate the globe.

Enter a fictional crewman, Joseph Blackwell, a Boston teenager anxious to strike out on his own. But he gets more than he bargained for when he is marooned at Tillamook Bay on the coast of what would be known later as Oregon. With him is Marcus Lopez, a character based on a real crewman aboard Lady Washington who was killed in a skirmish with the Tillamook tribe in 1788. But what if Lopez and the fictional Blackwell survived the fight and were left for dead by Lady Washington? From this point, Ratty speculates how Blackwell and Lopez adapt and eventually thrive in an alien culture.

Ratty’s story is full of rich descriptions of life aboard ship and particularly life among the native peoples of Oregon. By having Blackwell adapt western sailing technology to indigenous sea-going canoes, Ratty shows how a single individual can have a dramatic impact on an entire culture. And by having Blackwell trade with people from the Smith River just south of the Oregon border to the mouth of the Columbia River, Ratty surveys the global political situation as Spain, Great Britain, Russia, and the U.S. compete for the riches of the Northwest. Tillamook Passage is a grand tour of the Oregon Coast before America understood its boundless possibilities.

Watch the video trailer for Tillamook Passage: Far Side of the Pacific

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Maritime History Guide