Main Menu

Find Your Adventure

Compare lots of different vessels to find the right sail training adventure for you.

Follow these easy steps to get started:

    1. Select “What Sort of Adventure?” you’re interested in.
    2. Decide “When?” you’d like to go.
    3. Choose “Where?” you want to sail.
    4. Click “Take a Look” to find out more about an individual vessel, or “Compare” up to three.
    5. Once you have chosen the vessels you would like compare, click the “View Comparison List” button.
    6. Head over to your chosen vessel’s page and click on “Find Out More” to book directly with the vessel operator.

Read Our Privacy and Cookie Policy

Search by class
Search by location

Choose a Vessel

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

Morgenster was launched in 1919 as a herring lugger “Vrouw Maria” SCH 324 for the fishing company den Dulk. She was built at the shipyard Boot in Alphen. In 1927 she was motorised (200 HP La Meuse) and extended for another 7 meters. There she got her new name “Morgenster”. She continued as a motorised […]

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

Built in1954 in Les Sables-d’Olonne, France at the shipyard Union et Travail. Was operated for years by the group Refuge des Marins in Brittany until the 1980s when it was purchased by Christian and Suzanne de Parada in 1986. Used for sail training with youth.

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

Spirit of Bermuda is a purpose-built sail training vessel based on civilian Bermudian-type schooners built in Bermuda between 1810 and 1840. The original hull shape was adapted from the Bermuda-built Royal Navy “Shamrock” class: fast dispatch / patrol vessels that ran from the Royal Naval Dockyard northwest to Halifax and southwest to Jamaica to contain […]

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

Roald Amundsen was built in 1952 in Roblau/Elbe as a NVA tank logger for the former GDR’s National People’s Army. In 1992, the boat builder Detlev L ll and his friends from the society `Learn to Live on Sailing Ships` turned her into a brig as part of a programme against unemployment. Roald Amundsen made […]

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

4.5

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

The organisation which is based in Ockero – Sweden operates both Astrid Finne and Hawila. Astrid Finne is crewed with scouts and young Swedish students. The design is a ‘Colin Archer’.

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

The STS Leeuwin II is Western Australia’s own Tall Ship based in Fremantle WA. The Leeuwin is a three-masted barquentine. It was built to a design by local naval architect Len Randell by Australian Shipbuilding Industries Pty Ltd (now BAE Systems Australia) and launched on 2 August 1986 as sail training ship. It is operated […]

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

Merisissi III is owned and run by the Sea Scout Troop from Turku in Finland. She has participated in the Cutty Sark Tall Ships Races in 1988, 1992, 1996 and 2000 replacing the wooden Merisissi III which took part in the Cutty Sark Tall Ships Race in 1972.

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

Toronto Brigantine Inc. operates two brigantines, the sail-training vessels Pathfinder and Playfair. They were both designed and built as sail training vessels for TBI by Francis A. McLachlan in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Playfair was built for Toronto Brigantine Inc. as a sail training vessel. She was commissioned by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II in 1973, […]

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

Brian Boru named after the last High King of Ireland, is a beautiful wooden hulled, traditionally built and rigged gaff ketch. Originally launched in 1961, she worked as a herring ring-netter up until 1989, she was then sold and under new ownership she functioned as a general fisher, up until her decommissioning in 2006.   […]

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

Aglaia was built by the Colin Archer Club in Stockholm, a club that was founded in 1975 to rebuild hulls based on the famous Norwegian rescue vessels of the last century. Her hull was one of 30 built at the time and bought by a salesman from Hamburg in Germany, who worked on completing the […]

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or

Kapitan Głowacki was built around 1942 in Germany as a semi-military ship. She was abandoned after the war and found by some Polish people lying in the sand in the North-West corner of Poland. She was quickly renovated as a sailing ship and served as a training vessel undertaking various exercises for maritime schools in […]

The maximum of 3 Vessels are in your comparison list.

or