Wooden Philippine boats to retrace historic China voyage

Agence France-Presse

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Wooden Philippine boats to retrace historic China voyage

AFP

The crew members on the 3 'balangay' replicas hope to make it to Xiamen by May 2

MANILA, Philippines – Crafted from a centuries-old design, 3 identical wooden boats set off from the Philippine capital for China on Saturday, April 28, to retrace a historic trip by a Filipino sultan and showcase longstanding maritime ties.

The 29 crew members on the 3 vessels – two propelled by engines and the third by sail – hope to make it across the South China Sea or West Philippine Sea, a near-1,000-kilometer (620-mile) voyage, to the eastern city of Xiamen by May 2.

The 18-meter (60-foot) boats are replicas of a “balangay”, a type of vessel used in the region as far back as 320 AD.

Sultan Paduka Batara – who ruled part of what is the Philippines today – sailed to China on a balangay in 1417 to pay tribute and to trade, expedition leader Arturo Valdez said, but fell ill and died there.

Spain later colonized the Philippine islands in the 16th century.

Valdez hopes it is a case of fourth-time lucky: winds and rough seas forced his team back on 3 previous attempts using similar vessels.

“This boat is a replica of an ancient boat. It is not an all-weather boat. You have to fix it up. It is very vulnerable to weather and sea,” he told reporters.

Rough seas are forecast late next week. The state weather bureau in Manila expects a period of good weather from Saturday to the morning of May 2 but after that, conditions could get rough, he added.

The crew, which includes 3 women, are hoping they can slip through before the bad weather hits their route, Valdez said.

Engines were installed on two of the boats to comply with Chinese maritime regulations that prohibit wind-powered vessels from docking alone, Valdez said.

Valdez, who previously led a Filipino expedition that climbed Mount Everest, said he is aware of the implications of the trip at a time when the Philippines and China still have a territorial conflict over parts of the South China Sea.

But he said his voyage will demonstrate how the people of Southeast Asia crossed the high seas in the past to maintain contact.

“These waters never divided us. These waters unified us,” he said. “And this boat, as a replica of an ancient boat, is a symbol of that relationship.” – Rappler.com

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