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4+ Works 487 Members 10 Reviews

About the Author

Daniel Hays is the coauthor, with his father, of the bestseller My Old Man and the Sea, which was reprinted in fourteen foreign countries. He has worked as a field supervisor at a therapeutic wilderness program for troubled teenagers, holds a second-degree black belt in Tae Kwon Do, a master's show more degree in environmental science, and a captain's license for boats rated up to twenty-five tons. He and his father were the first Americans to sail around Cape Horn in a boat under thirty feet in length. He lives in Idaho but still owns Whale Island. And Whale Island still owns him show less

Includes the name: Daniël Hays

Works by Daniel Hays

Associated Works

Storm: Stories of Survival from Land and Sea (2000) — Contributor — 44 copies

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Common Knowledge

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male

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Reviews

Not bad. It's a bit uneven, as the narrator bounces back forth between the father and son. Hasn't aged very well, seems to be a bit "of its time". All in all though, a quick enjoyable read. More of a relationship development story than an exploration, man against nature, kind of thing. Long live Tiger!!
 
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hhornblower | 5 other reviews | Jul 6, 2016 |
My Old Man and the Sea by David and Daniel Hays is about a father and son (respectively) and the growth of their love and respect for each other, and perhaps not inconsistently, the flowering of their independence. That in itself is not so unusual, but most fathers and sons don't build 25 ft sailing yachts to sail around Cape Horn.
The tip of South America has probably the worst weather for any kind of sea vessel of any place on earth. It can take months to beat and tack back and forth against the howling winds that sweep unhindered by any land mass around the bottom of the globe. They were not so foolish as to sail from east to west, so they took a short cut through the Canal on to Easter Island then back around from the west via the Horn. Their voyage covered 17,000 miles and lasted 317 days.

They had an interesting system of reefing the sails for various kinds of weather. It was color-coded with a mnemonic system that related to fear levels. "Red for the first reef stands for 'mere general fear.' [fifteen knot wind] If it blows over twenty, one turns green with nauseating terror, and secures the green line, which is the second reef. Next if it's blowing over thirty knots and shock has set in (the blood has left your extremities), you pull the blue line for the third reef. If the wind picks up more than that, you're scared to death. White is appropriate. That makes the sail tiny."

The voyage continues as father and son explore their past and prior relationship. David remembers Dan's constant pranks at boarding school that necessitated a plea to the headmaster for reinstatement. Dan fears his father's age and other inadequacies - cooking is a jointly recognized incompetence of his, only half-jokingly referred to as "time spent in the galley area, after which, the food scraped out of the utensils and off the walls is served."

David speculates why small boat voyages became a British specialty after the war: " ... the cold and damp and bad food on a tiny boat were indistinguishable from home; they didn't realize that they weren't in their living rooms."
… (more)
 
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ecw0647 | 5 other reviews | Sep 30, 2013 |
Read this a few years ago and absolutely loved it. Couldn't put it down and read it in one afternoon!
 
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andrearules | 5 other reviews | May 13, 2013 |
A trio of husband, wife and preteen sell it all and move to an isolated island for a year - escaping the world and society at large - this diary-of-sorts really pulls you along. Daniel Hays shows himself, warts and all, and the struggles that landed them on the island and their time there, good and bad. Only very rarely does the writing get repetitive and self-aborbing - worth the read.
 
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Cherizar | 3 other reviews | Sep 14, 2011 |

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Works
4
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½ 3.6
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ISBNs
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