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!
Download for KindleBuy now for Kindle! Just $6.99!
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.

Danger at the Columbia River Bar detailed in new full-color book

Worlds Most Dangerous

Seafarers have called the Columbia River Bar, located at the mouth of Columbia River in the Pacific Northwest, "the world's most dangerous passage" for more than 200 years. Today, the city of Astoria, Ore., is the home of an elite group of bar pilots. Author Michael E. Haglund and illustrator Eric Baker have combined stories of the bar with tales of dedication and courage from its pilots in a new book, World's Most Dangerous, published by the Columbia River Maritime Museum.

The book starts with the natural history of the Columbia River Bar and its formation during the cataclysmic Missoula floods 15,000 years ago. The book discusses the building of jetties to stabilize the shipping channel, the adventures and tragedies of the bar pilots and their operators, and finally the equipment used by the pilots to transfer to and from great ocean-going ships.

But it's the human story that forms the core of the book. Nowhere in America are the standards higher for a maritime pilot's license than the Columbia River Bar. The long history of dedication of the Columbia River Bar Pilots providing service in extraordinarily dangerous conditions is exemplified in Capt. George Flavel's efforts to save the steamer "General Warren" in 1852. As he left the stricken ship stuck in the sands of Clatsop Spit to summon help, the ship captain called out "Pilot, you will come back?" Flavel shouted, "If I live, I will return." He did, only to find that all hands had perished.

The soft-cover, full-color, 114-page book is now available through the Columbia River Maritime Museum online store for $36.

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