Rookie Dutch backpackers to sail from Australia to the Netherlands

Backpackers Jordy van der Voort and compatriot Daniel Wiessing have been stranded in Australia since the closure of international borders.

But the pair have hatched a plan to get back home to the Netherlands.

The pair – who met on a Dutch backpacker Facebook page – is now preparing to make the 13,000 nautical mile journey from Australia back to Amsterdam by boat, setting off May 4.

However, they’ve described themselves as inexperienced sailors, which they reportedly acknowledge is “a bit of a problem”.

They plan to do a crash course in sea sailing before making the journey.

It comes after 29-year-old van der Voort’s recent purchase of a 47-foot ferrocement ketch called Samara, following the sale of his backpacker truck earlier this month.

He reached out online to Wiessing, who was reportedly sold on the boat as soon as he saw its name.

“I just knew I had to do this,” he told SBS Dutch, explaining that he recently met a Swiss girl named Samara for whom he has “deep feelings”.

The would-be sailors hope to sail the Panama Canal route to the Netherlands. If they are not ready in time, the only other option would be to wait six months for the opening of the Suez Canal.

Both routes are seasonal, but everything will depend on the situation.

And then there’s the potential for piracy, with the vessel crossing the dangerous waters of the Gulf of Aden. The captains, however, are unphased.

“We have nothing of value that can be stolen,” they told SBS Dutch.

According to Wiessing, who searched Facebook to see if there was any interest in sailing back to Amsterdam in a not-yet-purchased “corona-free catamaran”, there has been a huge amount of curiosity in the trip from fellow Dutch backpackers.

Van der Voort says he aims to take four crew members, including himself and Wiessing – even though the vessel reportedly sleeps eight.

The pair also plan to stock up on canned food and rum (beer, the pair say, takes up a lot of room), and will take turns steering Samara.

Additionally, they have eight life vests on board, a fully equipped dinghy, a satellite phone, and possibly more crew members.

They are also equipped with a social media account to keep the world up to date with their journey, and new navigation gear as the previous equipment “got fried during a lightning storm with the previous owner” – they seemingly hadn’t been made aware prior to purchasing the boat.

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