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The Seasteading Institute Discussion Forum

Log In Welcome to the discussion forum of The Seasteading Institute [Admin] (1) Possible uses for seasteads [General] (11) New forum member here [Introductions] (2) Openess of mind and codes as key ingredient for progress and prosperity [Business] (5) Thinking about burial at sea [General] (2) Maximum depth | tubular concrete structures | hydrostatic load | spheres | ( 2 ) [Engineering] (32) Power Generation [Engineering] (15) New algorithm from MIT could protect ships from 'rogue waves' at sea [Engineering] (2) Seasteading the only true path to Utopias [Law and Politics] (2) Private Justice Now - ReTRN Indiegogo Campaign [Business] (1) Nowhere Island and the 2012 Olymics [General] (1) Ice as a viable landstarter [Engineering] (2) Oil Refinery on the Ocean [Business] (8) Podcast: SeaZones Compared to Nation States? Tom W. Bell Explains [Blog] (3) Extreme Waves and Ship Design [Engineering] (13) Picture the Ramform ( 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 ) [General] (308) Bob Ballard | family seastead | low road | small starting point | [General] (3) "spar type" offshore platforms | flip ship | tubular floating structures | shell structures [Engineering] (10) WAVE-E "Wave Breaker" Contest [Blog] (3) Water Propaganda & Additional Entertainment Media [General] (12) City Sewage and Food Supplies, as a combined topic ( 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 ) [General] (254) SeaSteading City Theory.Why The SeaStead Prototypes are Doomed to Fail ( 2 3 ) [Introductions] (47) Oceanic Data Centers ( 2 ) [General] (27) "Ellmer Sphere" Ocean Sphere ( 2 ) [Engineering] (35) Podcast: Robert Ballard & 3D-Printed FLIPsteads [Blog] (5) A Constitution for Seasteads: The Las Portadas Investment Culture ( 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ) [Business] (144) Applying Seastead Concept to "Refugees" [Projects] (14) Geopolymer Concrete, the perfect seasteading material ( 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 ) [Engineering] (239) Does Seastead Now Have Any Form of Law or Covenent Ready to Go for the Benefit of Inventors or Investors Ready to Move Now? [Law and Politics] (3) End of Year Message [Blog] (3) next page Home Categories FAQ/Guidelines Terms of Service Privacy Policy

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The Seasteading Institute Discussion Forum

Patri Friedman – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Patri Friedman

Patri Friedman of the Seasteading Institute in Helsinki on 13 May 2011.

Patri Friedman (born July 29, 1976 in Blacksburg, Virginia) is an American libertarian activist and theorist of political economy.[3] He founded the nonprofit Seasteading Institute, which explores the creation of sovereign ocean colonies.[4][5][6]

Friedman grew up in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, and is a graduate of Upper Merion Area High School, class of 1994, where he went by the name Patri Forwalter-Friedman. He was named after Patri J. Pugliese, a close friend of his parents.[7] He graduated from Harvey Mudd College in 1998, and worked as a software engineer at Google.[8][9] As a poker player, he cashed in the World Series of Poker four times.[10]

Friedman was executive director of the Seasteading Institute, founded on April 15, 2008, with a half-million-dollar donation by PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel.[11] The Institute's mission is "to establish permanent, autonomous ocean communities to enable experimentation and innovation with diverse social, political, and legal systems".[12][13] This was initially a part-time project one day a week while working as a Google engineer the rest of the time[8] but Friedman left Google on July 29, 2008 to spend more time on seasteading.[14] He and partner Wayne Gramlich hoped to float the first prototype seastead in the San Francisco Bay by 2010.[15][16] At the October 2010 Seasteading social, it was announced that current plans were to launch a seastead by 2014.[17]

Since attending the Burning Man festival in 2000, Friedman imagined creating a water festival called Ephemerisle as a Seasteading experiment and Temporary Autonomous Zone. Through the Seasteading Institute, Friedman was able to start the Ephemerisle festival in 2009, aided by TSI's James Hogan as event organizer and Chicken John Rinaldi as chief builder. The first Ephemerisle is chronicled in a documentary by Jason Sussberg.[18] Since 2010, the event has been annual and community-run.

On 31 July 2011, Friedman stepped down from the position as Executive Director of Seasteading Institute, but remained chairman of the board.[19] Later, he co-founded the Future Cities Development Corporation, a project to establish a self-governing charter city within the borders of Honduras.[20][21]

In 2012 it was announced the initiative would be halted due to the changing political climate of Honduras.[22]

During his poker career, Patri Freidman was predicted to become a world champion by Card Player Magazine.[23] He claims to have created AI bots for online poker.[24]

Patri is the grandson of Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman[25] and economist Rose Friedman and son of economist and physicist David D. Friedman.[25][26] He is divorced and has two children. As of December 2015, he is engaged.[27]

More here:

Patri Friedman - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

FAQ | The Seasteading Institute

Piracy gets a lot of reports in the press and is featured in movies, but its a relatively rare phenomenon when compared to land-based crime. According to the State of Maritime Piracy 2013 Report published by Oceans Beyond Piracy (OBP), a project of theOne Earth Future Foundation, a privately funded non-profit organization:

In East Africa, Somali pirates attacked 23 vessels in 2013, of which 4 were successful.

In the Gulf of Guinea off Western Africa, 100 vessels were attacked, with 56 successful.

In the entire Indian Ocean, 145 suspicious approaches, were reported with 8 exchanging fire.

Dryad Maritime Intelligence, a maritime operations company, confirms that no vessel has ever been hijacked with an armed security team on board. Seacurus, a marine insurance broker willing to pay kidnapping ransoms, says they cut insurance costs by up to 75 percent if ships employ private armed guards. Roughly two-thirds of ships carry private armed security personnel.

Pirates typically lurk offshore of unstable regions in the world, such as the Horn of Africa, the Gulf of Guinea, or between the 17,500 islands of Indonesia. Much has been made of the live global piracy map provided by the Commercial Crime Services, showing all piracy and armed robbery incidents reported in a year. But it doesnt look as bad as the Spotcrime maps of the major city where the Seasteading Institute is located. These reveal scattered crime, mostly concentrated in bad neighborhoods, with a small percentage involving violence. When a global piracy map covering two-thirds of the earths surface cant accumulate as many incidents as Spotcrime maps of American cities, we know were in relatively safe territory.

If danger within Pakistan, Iran, Yemen, and Somalia doesnt make us fear all land everywhere, then danger off their coasts shouldnt cause us to fear all oceans everywhere.

There are larger organized criminal groups involved in piracy that capture entire ships and their goods (often worth tens of millions of dollars). These groups have even been known to use forged documents to obtain a new load of cargo from legitimate shippers, and then steal it. It is worth noting that these groups specifically target container ships. This is not at all surprising, given that container ships only have a few crew and vast amounts of nicely boxed cargo. A cruise ship has fewer marketable goods, and many more people to handle. A cruise ship might have 100 times more passengers and crew per dollar of movable cargo than a container ship. A simple cost/benefit analysis suggests why pirates tend to focus on the latter.

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FAQ | The Seasteading Institute

Seasteading – Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

El seasteading (contraccin de sea mar y homesteading colonizacin) es un concepto de creacin de viviendas permanentes en el mar, llamadas seasteads, fuera de los territorios reclamados por los gobiernos de cualquier nacin en pie.[1] Al menos dos personas de forma independiente comenzaron a usar el trmino: Neumeyer Ken en su libro Sailing the Farm (1981) y Wayne Gramlich en su artculo "Seasteading - Homesteading on the High Seas" (1998).

La mayora de seasteads propuestos son buques crucero modificados, plataformas marinas readaptadas e islas flotantes hechas a medida, mientras algunos de los sistemas de gestin propuestos guardan parentesco con el de ciudad-estado.[2] Hasta el momento no se ha creado un estado en alta mar que haya sido reconocido como una nacin soberana, aunque el Principado de Sealand es una micronacin en disputa constituida en una plataforma marina abandonada cerca de Suffolk, Inglaterra.[3] Lo ms parecido a un seastead que se ha construido hasta ahora son grandes naves de alta mar que a veces se llaman "ciudades flotantes" y pequeas islas flotantes.

Fuera de la Zona Econmica Exclusiva de 200 millas nuticas (370 km), que los pases pueden reclamar de acuerdo con la Convencin de las Naciones Unidas sobre el Derecho del Mar, en alta mar no se est sujeto a las leyes de nacin soberana alguna que no sea la bandera bajo la cual un barco navega (ver aguas internacionales). Algunos ejemplos de organizaciones que utilizan esta posibilidad son Women on Waves, que permite abortos a las mujeres en los pases donde los abortos estn sujetos a estrictas leyes, y las estaciones de radio piratas navegando por el mar del Norte durante los aos sesenta (como Radio Caroline). Al igual que estas organizaciones, un seastead podra ser capaz de aprovecharse de las leyes y reglamentos ms flexibles que existen fuera de la soberana de las naciones, y tener en gran medida un autogobierno.

El Seasteading Institute, fundado por Wayne Gramlich y Patri Friedman el 15 de abril de 2008, es una organizacin formada para facilitar el establecimiento de comunidades autnomas flotantes sobre plataformas martimas operando en aguas internacionales.[4][5] El artculo de Gramlich de 1998 "SeaSteading. - Homesteading en alta mar", describe el concepto de steading asequible, y atrajo la atencin de Friedman con su propuesta de proyecto de pequea escala.[6] Los dos comenzaron a trabajar juntos y registraron su primer "libro" colaborativo en lnea en 2001, que explora aspectos del seasteading, desde la eliminacin de residuos hasta los pabellones de conveniencia.

El proyecto tuvo la exposicin meditica en 2008 despus de haber llamado la atencin del fundador de PayPal Peter Thiel, que invirti 500000 $ en el instituto y desde entonces ha hablado en nombre de su viabilidad, y ms recientemente en su ensayo "La educacin de un libertario" publicado en lnea por Cato Unbound. El Seasteading Institute ha recibido la atencin de los medios, como CNN, la revista Wired, y la revista Prospect.[7][4][8][9] "Cuando Seasteading se convierta en una alternativa viable, el cambio de un gobierno a otro sera un asunto navegar hacia otro inclusive sin siquiera salir de su casa", dijo Friedman en la primera conferencia anual Seasteading.[4][10][11]

More:

Seasteading - Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

David Friedman – Legal Systems Very Different From Ours …

Full credit to the Seasteading Institute. Source: http://www.seasteading.org/2009/11/da...

David Friedman's website: http://daviddfriedman.com

At the 2009 Seasteading Conference, David D. Friedman customized his academic seminar entitled Legal Systems Very Different from Our Own as the basis for his presentation, narrowing in on the two possible high-level legal situations for a seastead: one arising from existence inside the territorial waters of an existing state, and one emergent of a clearly independent existence out on the high seas.

There are theoretically endless legal configurations possible, but it can be difficult for residents of ostensibly monolegal systems countries in which only one system of legality applies to all citizens in all places to imagine how polylegalities could arise and be of benefit to a seastead. Friedman uses examples from history and the actuality of legal process in modern life (particularly tort law versus criminal law in the United States) to demonstrate that polylegal states have been far from marginal in human societies and may strongly inform the formation of certain seasteading configurations.

Friedman's perspective draws from a staggeringly colorful variety of historical legal systems and anthropological situations, from modern gypsies to saga-period Iceland to classical Athens, and many more. Will the first Seasteads arise first from, as David Friedman puts it, "a sort of a collection of different kinds of nuts" in a polylegal agglomeration, or from situations far more homogenous and uniform? Listen to his talk and envision the possibilities!

See the article here:

David Friedman - Legal Systems Very Different From Ours ...

City floating on the sea could be just 3 years away – CNN.com

(CNN) -- A floating city off the coast of San Francisco may sound like science fiction, but it could be reality in the not-too-distant future.

The Seasteading Institute has drawn up plans for a floating city off the coast of San Francisco.

The Seasteading Institute already has drawn up plans for the construction of a homestead on the Pacific Ocean.

One project engineer described the prototype as similar to a cruise ship, but from a distance the cities might look like oil-drilling platforms.

According to the plans, the floating cities would not only look different from their land-based counterparts, but they might operate differently, too.

Patri Friedman, a former Google engineer who now works for the Seasteading Institute, said floating cities are the perfect places to experiment with new forms of government.

Some of the new political ideas the group is tossing around include legalizing marijuana and making intellectual property communal -- so that everyone would take ownership in art produced on the city at sea.

"The idea isn't just about getting away from rules or getting rid of rules. It's about a system that encourages experimentation with different political systems," he said.

Friedman said the floating city may be built in modular pieces so that city blocks and neighborhoods can be recombined to create new urban layouts.

The idea of building cities on the sea is not new, he said, but the Seasteading Institute has come closer to realizing the goal than others.

"A lot of people over the past hundred plus years have had this idea and even specifically building cities on the ocean to try out new forms of government," he said. "But they've pretty much been totally imagined and if they did try, they totally failed."

There are several unknowns about future attempts to create floating cities, said Christian Cermelli, an engineer and architect with Marine Innovation and Technology, based in San Francisco.

Cermelli, who is part of a team of designers creating a blueprint for the first seastead, said it's unclear if construction is possible -- or what it would cost.

Still, a prototype for the idea may be finished in as little as three years, he said.

Friedman said seasteads are loosely based on oil rigs, but with important modifications.

"We care more about sunlight and open space, so the specifications are different," he said. "Also, oil platforms are fixed in place. We think it's important to have more modular cities. So you would build a city out of buildings that can actually be separated and rearranged."

Cermelli said the ocean cities may use technology from suspension bridges "to expand the space at sea and basically get a roomier platform."

Friedman says the idea of seasteading has met a range of reactions.

"Some people think we're crazy. A lot of people think we're crazy," he said. "Some people think terrible things could happen, others think it would be great."

About 600 people have joined the Seasteading Institute.

Some of them, like Gayle Young, say the idea is exciting partly because it's so different.

"I love the idea because it's audacious. It's big," she said. "It's about pushing frontiers."

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City floating on the sea could be just 3 years away - CNN.com

Ephemerisle: The First Step in Seasteading or Just a Party?

Aug 7, 2015 9,158 views

Ephemerisle 2009, (photo: Liz Henry)

About a hundred miles east of the Pacific Coast, the San Joaquin River and the Sacramento River collide with the east side of the San Francisco Bay. The result is a sprawling delta, as socially and politically fraught as it is beautiful. Dragonflies mate in its marshes, children wade, and vacationers fish, carefully avoiding the 800-foot cargo ships that slice like metal icebergs down deep-water channels from the bay. 40 miles northeast, in Sacramento, Californias congress hotly debates how to ration the states diminishing supply of fresh water.

Once every summer, for one week, the Delta gets even more surreal. A couple hundred people, many of them members of the San Francisco tech community, float a bunch of boats into one of the more spacious coves, drop anchor, and lash their craft together into islands. There, they form an ad hoc, quasi-techno-utopian society.

This is Ephemerisle: the strangest, most anarchic, boisterous and buoyant party-cum-libertarian-social-experiment on earth.The festival was started by people with the ultimate goal of floating free from California and its turmoil, from the United States and its economic regulations, and getting away from it all, literally.

Step 1 to Colonizing the Open Ocean: Throw a Festival?

Patri Friedman, 2011 (photo: Hannu Makarainen)

Ephemerisle was the brainchild of Patri Friedman, a small-statured software engineer with a dark beard and bright demeanor, grandson to the Nobel-winning economist Milton Friedman. Milton Friedman was a famous advocate of classical liberalism, free markets, and small government. In the early 2000s, his grandson was in a graduate program in computer science at Stanford University, and had some pretty radical ideas about how to put his grandfather's ideas into practice.

I want to live in freedom, he wrote, (by which I mean at least libertarianism, if not anarcho-capitalism). Unfortunately, no such political system is implemented on a significant scale anywhere in the world.

Thus, he concluded: I am interested in helping to create a new libertarian country.

There were, of course, obstacles to this goal. To Patris eye, one in particular stood out: [A]lmost all land is controlled by governments, which tend to be very reluctant to give up sovereignty. Like many before him, Patri looked to the ocean as his frontier.

If youre a certain distance from the coast of any country, youre in international waters. If the vessel youre on is registered under a countrys flag, that countrys laws apply. If the vessel isnt registered, most bets are off (with a few notable exceptions -- laws against piracy still apply, for example). Boats in international waters have been used to circumvent regulations on gambling, surgeries, broadcast bandwidth, and more.

Although its been the ambition of many separatists, nobodys ever been able to establish a sovereign state on the high seas. Of the attempts that have been made, none could have been called successful, (the closest call, the Principality of Sealand, was an old military fort off the coast of the UK, held by the family of a pirate radio DJ since the 1960s. The fort used to be in international waters, but the UK has since extended its territorial waters, technically annexing Sealand.)

Thats becauseseasteading, the establishment of permanent dwellings on the open ocean, ishard.A lot of things we land dwellers take for granted -- not-drowning, charging a laptop, having food to eat today and tomorrow and the next day -- become a lot more challenging on the open ocean. It should be no surprise that many, many people think seasteading is impossible.

Seasteadings proponents say it isnt impossible, it just has a funding problem: existing solutions cost money to implement, and the solutions that dont exist yet cost money to develop. But even they admit its a hell of a funding problem.The funding necessary to launch even the simplest floating city was in the billions, leaving most proposed projects dead in the water, so to speak.

Still of a floating city in "Waterworld" (1995)

Patri dreamed up the festival, Ephemerisle, originally as an answer to that funding problem.

He was inspired by the writings of Wayne Gramlich, an older programmer and aspiring seasteader whose work Patri found online. Instead of planning elaborate floating metropoli, Gramlich proposed seasteading the ocean much like American settlers homesteaded the midwest: one by one, or family by family, on a budget. To this notion, Patri suggested another way to baby-step towards seasteading:

[Previous seasteading] projects all suffered from too much ambition. They attempted to tackle a difficult problem all at once, rather than dividing it into realistically small pieces. Realistically small, for a country, may not merely mean space, it may also mean time.

Patri had already witnessed one temporally limited proto-country: Burning Man, a massive, spectacular, week-long art festival in the desolate Black Rock Desert, Nevada. There, tens of thousands of people camp together in an ad hoc city of art, inclusion and radical self-expression. The feats of engineering, social organization, and creativity that tens of thousands achieve, given one a week in a wasteland chemically incapable of supporting life, inspired Patri. It also struck him as a potentially harnessable force."

Perhaps, Patri thought, he could throw a festival like Burning Man on a temporary seastead in international waters. It could be a raft-up -- attendants could boat out to the event and lash their vehicles together to make a large, artificial island. Because the island would only exist for the duration of the festival, Patri named it Ephemerisle, a portmanteau of ephemeral and isle.

Unlike Burning Man, where participants are still subject to the laws of the United States, Ephemerisle would offer attendants true autonomy from American government. Also unlike Burning Man, which bans cash transactions between participants at the event, Ephemerisle would embrace money and commerce, as a respected feature of society. And also unlike Burning Man, Ephemerisle would be unticketed, free to anybody who could get there.

If people liked the festival enough, Patri thought, they might start staying out there for longer year after year, and invite their friends. It would grow both temporally and in population. For that to happen, the island itself would have to grow, too. Over time, maybe these people would be motivated to solve a lot of seasteadings hard engineering problems, so Ephemerisle could continue to grow. As Patri later explained his thinking:

If there was some difficult but solvable technical problem that those people had to solve that to get Burning Man to a place where they didnt have to pay a large portion of ticket fees, [...] [and] where they didnt have U.S. legal requirements, could that community of [...] amazing builders and creators [...] solve that problem? Hell yes.

That community of inspired enthusiastic people, they could solve a technical problem, no problem. [...] They solve a lot of really tough problems because theyre inspired to do so.

Patri bought ephemerisle.com in 2001, and seasteading.org in 2002 (he has said of Ephemerisle, One third of the reason why I wrote all of this down and put up a website about it is because I really like the name.) For a long time, not much happened. He reached out to and befriended Gramlich, who also happened to live in the Bay Area. In 2002, the two of them floated a few homemade crafts onto Patris pool and called them poolsteads (Might stick a plant or two on top just for fun.)

Then, half a decade later, Patri and Gramlich met Peter Thiel.

The Vision Meets the Money

Seasteading Contest WinnerAndrs Gyrfi's design for a modular seastead

Patri was, and still is, a man of many blogs. He's blogged about everything and anything: seasteading, fatherhood (he has two children), romance, libertarian politics, novels, and nutrition. In 2007, he announced that he and Gramlich were working on a book on seasteading. Eventually, his blogs found their way to the screen of an independently-minded libertarian venture capitalist, bent on funding ideas most sane people thought were crazy.

Enter Peter Thiel. The year is 2008. Thiel was a founder of PayPal, an early investor in Facebook, and a founder of the venture capital firm Founders Fund. Founders Fund specializes in revolutionary technologies, claiming in its manifesto that VC culture's shift to incrementalist investments has held back innovation. We wanted flying cars," they write, "instead we got 140 characters. In 2008, Thiel himself had funded anti-aging research via the Methuselah Foundation, and the Singularity Institute, (which would later become the Machine Intelligence Research Institute: MIRI).

Patri and Gramlich had not made much technical progress on seasteading since 2001, but their thinking on the subject had significantly developed. Patri and Gramlich envisioned a future in which thousands, if not millions, of artificial islands dotted the oceans. Their idea was that archipelagos of these micronations would increase market competition between governmental systems, and lower the cost to an individualleaving a system they didnt like:

Rather than adapting policy to voter preferences, local governments can keep policy constant and allow consumer-citizens to adopt whichever bundle of services best matches their preferences. If consumers can vote with their feet, local government planners do not face the same information deficit as central government planners.

Patri and Gramlich theorized that this competition for citizens would drive up the quality of governing systems, and allow people better and more granular choices. They even suggested the islands could be designed so that individuals who wished to change affiliation could just untie their house and the land it was built on, and float away.

Apparently this vision fell into the category of flying car visions of the future. Thiel, Gramlich, and Patri met, and Thiel invested $500,000 for the partners to found the Seasteading Institute. Thiels eventual total investment in the Seasteading Institute was a reported $1.25 million in 2011.

Poke around the Seasteading Institutes website and youll find 8 Moral Imperatives to make seasteading possible. Whether or not you believe their claims, seasteading -- or at least its rhetoric -- had gone from one mans hearts desire to help start a libertarian country, to a philanthropic cause to save the world via its economies.

It is a way for people to unilaterally bring about change and make the world a better place, Peter Thiel said in 2009 as the keynote speaker at the first Seasteading Conference.

And part of that mission was Ephemerisle.

Although Patri said most of those resources were going towards a top-down approach -- investing in businesses and engineering research -- Ephemerisle remained part of the plan. We see it as a parallel, cheaper, bottom-up option, he said in at the first Seasteading Conference, days before the first Ephemerisle, that reduces our risk by having it in our portfolio. In addition to trying to architect and engineer the worlds first floating countries, the Seasteading Institute started planning a big, floating party.

The Man Who Made Things Float

Chicken John Rinaldi at the first Ephemerisle, 2009 (cropped photo: Christopher Rasch)

Patri is a slick little shit, isnt he? San Francisco artist Chicken John Rinaldi tells us. Swindling millions of dollars for absolutely nothing.

Chicken John is the man who built the first Ephemerisle. When planning the event, Patri asked his friends in the Burning Man community a lot of questions about how to organize a festival. He was also asking people whether they knew anything about boats, about floating platforms, about camping for extended periods on water.

And he kept getting the same answer: Well, I dont know. Call Chicken John! At least, thats what Chicken John says.

Chicken John was a member of the famed Cacophony Society, the artists, street artists, and performance artists who organized the first Burning Man, and the first Santacon. In 2007, he ran for mayor of San Francisco, telling the Chronicle, "The government should be like someone you want to invite to the party, not someone you would call to do your taxes.

Chicken John knew a thing or two about boats, because of a series of collaborations he did from 2006-2009 with street artist Swoon. Swoon makes boats, Chicken John wrote of the projects. Well. She causes boats to be made. Like static electricity causes lightning and thunder.

The premise was simple. Swoon would design towering Winchester mystery structures out of trash and scrap. She and her friends, including Chicken John, would voyage on and live on them for months at a time -- part as art, part as an experiment in communal living, and part just for fun. Chicken John's job was to stick recycled motors on the junk boats, make them go, and make sure they didnt sink.

I knew what I was doing, Im a mechanic, Chicken John tells us, about starting the project in 2006. But I didnt know how anything floated, I had no idea. Nothing. From nowhere.

He learned. They took their first boats down the Mississippi in 2006 and 2007, and another fleet down the Hudson in 2008. Eventually we packed them all in shipping containers, and then floated across the Adriatic Sea, Chicken John says. On that voyage, they took their craft 250 miles from Slovenia to Venice. We crashed the Biennale while Yoko Ono was getting her lifetime achievement award.

One of Swoons Swimming Cities, docked (photo: RJ)

When Patri approached him in 2009, Chicken John might have been the worlds leading expert on the mechanics and perils of doing weird stuff on the water, including living on it. He was also a self-described rich, white Republican, which might have made him seem more culturally approachable to the likes of Patri and Gramlich. Patri commissioned him to build Ephemerisle 1.0s central platform.

I was like, sure, Ill do your project for you, Chicken John says. He says he thought the seasteading aspect of the festival was for fun, or funny, and didnt know the seasteaders were serious when he agreed to work with them. Anybody who says theyre going to build seasteads on the open ocean is an asshole and a swindler. Yeah, sure were gonna build seasteads on the ocean. And then the moon!

When Chicken John joined, Patri had already changed his position on what qualified as a realistically small first version of the festival. They were still going to start small in terms of duration and population -- 100 people, one weekend. But given the state of seasteading technology, and the dearth of practical nautical experience within the institute, (The prototypical seasteader was a nerdy tech entrepreneur, Patri told us), debuting the festival on international waters was deemed too ambitious. The first Ephemerisle had to take place somewhere with calm waters, predictable weather, and easy access.

They chose a spot on the San Joaquin-Sacramento River Delta called Disappointment Slough. It was close to a marina that often rented out houseboats, designed to be lashed together for large parties. Its very common to tie boats together like that, Chicken John says. Its the best way to anchor a bunch of boats close together -- if you anchor them separately, the waves smash them together and you damage the boats.

The boats werent designed for large waves, which is something the Seasteading Institute hoped to figure out in later years, as international waters were still on Ephemerisles roadmap. The secondEphemerisle was to take place on the San Francisco Bay, one year later. After that," he had said, "this is a big step that may take more than one year, wed like to take it to the coast. [...] And then, the ocean.

Ephemerisle 1.0

Ephemerisle 2009 (photo: Christopher Rasch)

The first Ephemerisle was documented in an eight minute video by Jason Sussberg -- at the time a Stanford MFA student in film. About a hundred people showed up on eight houseboats, which they eventually lashed to Chicken Johns platform. There was food, drink, dancing and general revelry. As Reason Magazines Brian Doherty claims in the film, it delivered on its main promise: Theres a central space, 100 people are on it, enjoying themselves, most of the little things are docked to it.

But there was also a lot that went wrong -- things went over budget, and building the island and its platforms took twice the time expected (We have a lot of optimists here, someone observed, as construction that was supposed to be complete Friday morning continued into Saturday.) Merely anchoring a single boat in a current proved more challenging than expected.

The film ends with a shot of Patri on a derelict ship, soberly recapping the weekends lessons. I think I have a better idea now of just how hard [...] the ocean is, he says to the camera. [Water] makes everything more difficult, it makes everything more expensive, it makes everything take longer. I think seasteading is still worth going after in spite of that.

Doherty also brings up a criticism in the film: Im not entirely certain I can see the throughline between this and the end of seasteading goal. Seasteading has to involve economic activity, and this is not that. Youre like building a cult around seasteading! This is great! Were all in this together-

Lonely Islands Im on a Boat! starts playing in the background, and Doherty starts laughing and drops the rest of his sentence. And the dance party has begun! he says, waving a can of PBR at a group of people singing atop a houseboat.

Chicken John at the first Ephemerisle, (still from Jason Sussberg)

All the shots of Chicken John in the 8 minute film are of him working. Theres not a lot of people here that are very salty, he says in one clip, meaning nobody there knew much about being on the water.

They basically spent a bunch of money on a weekend camping trip and it failed miserably, he tells us, of that first year.

According to him the build was even more difficult than the documentary conveys. He had to enlist help from the local marina just to cart his materials out. I thought that Patri and his community would provide me with people to help me out, Chicken John says. And then it was just me. When the weekend was over, seemingly through further mismanagement, he was abandoned at Disappointment Slough:

I had one guy helping me out. And Monday morning that guy was gone. He was gone, his houseboat was gone. They just left me with this giant platform. And, honestly, it was scary. What happened if I dropped my cellphone into the water? There was nobody fucking there.

Chicken John also says he fronted all the money for the platforms, and then had to push the Seasteading Institute to reimburse him. It made me violently ill, he says. If I was 20 instead of 40, I would have beat them to an inch of their fucking lives.

Ephemerisle, Today

The chandelier boat

Six years later, Ephemerisle took place from July 20-26, 2015. In total there were an estimated 500 attendants, and the official event lasted seven days. Many participants were out there for ten, building up and taking down islands.

A 130-foot 1930s research vessel attended, as did a barge carrying a two-story RV covered in LEDs, and another with a DJ booth and a 10x2 grid of speakers. Ferries ran between islands throughout the weekend, some of them imaginative art boats. One was a small dance barge, The Artemiid, with a shade-structure that made it look like a giant nudibranch. By day, it shed and collected swimmers, and its fins rippled in the headwind when riders tugged on certain ropes and levers. Another art boat was a small dinghy, with a chandelier that dangled like an angler fishs lantern. Another art boat was a Delorean chassis modified into a hovercraft.

The Delorean (still from Oceanus)

The event has grown in many of the ways predicted -- its larger, grander, and lasts longer.But, even in its 6th year, Ephemerisle did not take place in the open ocean, nor just off the coast, nor in the bay. It still hasnt made it out of the Delta it started in.

I think the ways Ephemerisle has grown are the easy ones, Patri tells us. "Its still too early to tell whether its on the incremental trajectory to seasteading. Like, in some ways, its been really successful. But it also doesnt look like its developing into autonomous independent communities for a week a year.

The Seasteading Institute never sponsored a second Ephemerisle. Having gone uninsured the first year, they officially cancelled the event in 2010 when they couldnt find insurance less expensive than $300 per participant. The community decided to have a party on the planned weekend anyways, under the name Not-Ephemerisle. They moved it a few miles to a cove called Mandeville Tip, where it is still held today. In 2011, the Seasteading Institute officially handed the event over to the community.

Patri left his position as president of the Seasteading Institute in 2011 to pursue a Free Cities project in Honduras. Hes now back in the Bay Area, working at Google again, and chairman of the Seasteading Institutes board. He says the Seasteading Institute has refocused its efforts solely into more top-down, less speculative ventures.

Over time, weve come to the viewpoint that we want to work with countries, he says. You have to be really big in order to actually start your own country.

But even though the Seasteading Institute is no longer officially involved, its not clear that Ephemerisle is far off-track on the route to seasteading. The road might just be exponentially longer, and much murkier than Patri expected.

The Robert Grey at sunset (still from Oceanus)

One example of possible progress towards seasteading was Project Oceanus. They rented out the Robert Grey, a 130-foot, 1930s research vessel, and hosted daytime talks and night-time dance parties. Project Oceanus is in the process of acquiring 300 foot ship to fix up and turn into a live/work space on the San Francisco Bay. Their plan is, ultimately, to pilot it to the Pacific Garbage Patch and 3D-print the plastic into the foundation for a floating city.

Another example of progress is that, year to year, the community has built up nautical expertise. The Ephemerisle github and wiki are both chock-full of documentation: recaps on what worked and what didnt year to year, diagrams on how to anchor a raft-up, or how to build a platform. Organizers say that theyve been prototyping build designs in calmer parts of the San Francisco Bay during the year, and a Bay-based festival might not be far off.

This year, about 65% of the population of the festival stayed on an archipelago called Elysium. In Elysium, long narrow bridges made out of plywood and inner tubes connected small satellite groups of houseboat islands, and one sailboat island, to other floating platforms: a dance floor, a few platforms designated for lounging or meditation. Such a structure wouldnt even have been conceivable in 2009. When Patri and his partner ferried in this year, this is where they stayed.

Elysium, from above

Elysium is run by Simone Syed and Scott Norman, managing partners at Velorum Capital (they are also a couple). Although Syed does not identify as a seasteader, she was brought to Ephemerisle in 2012 by friends in the community. Syed was horrified by the unsafe conduct of some of the attendants. (This included a young man who freaked out on acid, stripped naked, and sprinted away from the Coast Guard -- first by swimming, and then, when he reached the shore, on foot. This year, Elysium held a race in his honor.) At first, Syed was so upset she resolved never to attend Ephemerisle again.

But the people who come to Ephemerisle are some of the most brilliant people on the planet, Syed says. It would be a travesty if any of these individuals perished in an accident we could have prevented. So she changed her mind, and decided to run her own island the next year, as a safety-first dictatorship:

My friends and I realized we could create our own island nation state, and our own form of governance. The people we wanted to participate with us would buy into those rules. We ended up being the biggest island, the party island, but we had instilled a sense of personal responsibility in each of our crew members.

Part of Patris original vision for Ephemerisle was that, while Burning Man celebrated artistic expression, Ephemerisle would celebrate political expression. Instead of art, people would build their own toy systems of governance -- maybe one boat would merely permit nudity, for example, and another would require it. People could vote with their feet, in a toy way, and hang out at the boat with the best legal system for their immediate needs.

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Ephemerisle: The First Step in Seasteading or Just a Party?

Seasteading Book Beta | The Seasteading Institute

(Also available in the following formats: .mobi .epub .pdf)

The book you are reading is in draft form (perhaps eternally). We believe in transparency and immediate feedback, so wed rather make something imperfect available right away then wait until it is polished. Also wed rather work on adding ideas and content than on making it look perfect, so it will always be a little rough. If youd prefer a slick presentation, there are lots of failed and inactive projects listed in the Review section which were better at hiding their warts. Some of them still have websites.

The first version of this book was written in 2002-2003, when the primary author (Patri) had neither a job nor a family. It then languished for a number of years while he had both. Then we got a big break: on April 15th, 2008, we received $500,000 of seed funding from PayPal founder Peter Thiel to start a non-profit which we called The Seasteading Institute. Patri became Executive Director, and on July 29th, 2008, left his job at Google to work on seasteading full-time. This means more time available for writing, and a much more rapid evolution of our ideas.

Over the 5+ years since this book was first written, our thinking has evolved based on reflection, discussion, and new information. Some of these changes have made their way into the text, but due to limitations on the time available for writing, many have not. We believe that the text will catch up quite a bit during 2008-2009, but it will always be a bit behind our latest thinking. Fortunately, thanks to modern Print On Demand technology, new printed copies will always reflect the latest text.

Some of the key things wed like to change when we get more time are:

Mark Twain: Buy land. Theyve stopped making it.

Seasteaders: Production Resuming.

In this book, well demonstrate that a combination of technologies has finally given the lie to Mark Twains famous line about the real estate business. Imagine the tremendous possibility of being able to create new acreage on the vast and empty oceans. The environment may be less friendly, but the increased freedom will appeal to a motivated minority who are fed up with terrestrial politics. These aquatic pioneers will settle civilizations next frontier through the unusual merger of green technology and free enterprise. Once there, they will experiment with new social, political, and economic systems, adding much-needed variety and innovation to the stagnant business of government.

As the earths population steadily increases, so does the pressure to open new frontiers. While the oceans have long been used for transportation, this book is an extended thought experiment about how they could support permanent settlements. Considering these issues will be invaluable no matter which way humanity next expands. In particular, the ocean bears some definite similarities to space: the final frontier, which will surely be an important part of our near future.

While were practical-minded and most of this book is dedicated to the how of seasteading, its crucial to also explain why people are interested in small-scale sovereingty. In perhaps the most vital section, well outline the economic theory which suggests that ocean-based societies will actually work better than terrestrial ones. The relative ease of moving around entire buildings on the water means that political units will be dynamic, and so governments must be responsive and efficient or they will lose citizens. This effect will work automatically to improve institutions, regardless of the specific political system chosen. The ocean is not just the last open frontier on Earth it is the perfect setting for a competitive market in governments .

Continue reading here:

Seasteading Book Beta | The Seasteading Institute

Patri’s World

Names You Need To Know In 2011 - Forbes Magazine "...leads a studied life" - SF Chronicle (front-page) "Friedman's vision isn't based in fiction, it's based in reality" - CBS Sunday Morning

To see what I'm up to lately, Follow me on or read one of my many blogs.

My life in San Jose, California is centered around my children Tovar and Iselle, my girlfriend Brit, my job at Google, my venture fund Zarco Investment Group, and my work at The Seasteading Institute, a small non-profit whose mission is "To establish permanent, autonomous ocean communities to enable experimentation and innovation with diverse social, political, and legal systems". Please consider joining TSI and helping us increase competition in government.

Most people come across me via my views on politics, which are described in some of these essays, talks, and papers::

Some material on my other work:

If you need to correspond with me, I can be reached for personal things as patrissimo-at-gmail-dot-com and for work things as patri-at-seasteading-dot-org. Everything addressed to me gets at least a skim within a day or two, and I fully read most of it, but I unfortunately often don't have the time to respond to it quickly, at length, or sometimes at all. If you promise not to take it personally, I'll promise to use my time to do awesome things :). (Here's a good piece on the philosophy behind this.)

Read more:

Patri's World

Pictures: Floating Cities of the Future

The Citadel

Scheduled for completion in 2014, the Citadel could be Europe's first floating apartment building, according to architect Koen Olthuis of Waterstudio.NL. The 60-unit complex is to be built in the Dutch city of Westland, near The Hague, and is meant to protect people from flooding in a country that sits, to a large degree, below sea level.

Holland is home to more than 3,500 inland depressions, which can fill with water when it rains, when tides come in, or as seas rise overall. These so-called polders are often drained by pumps to protect residents.

Floating single-family homes are not uncommon in this soggy country, but the Citadelto be built on a flooded polderwill be the first high-density floating residential development. The complex's floating concrete foundation will be connected to higher ground via a floating road.

Olthuis predicts the Citadeland its five planned neighborswill consume 25 percent less energy over its life span than a conventional building.

(See photos of the effects of sea level rise.)

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Pictures: Floating Cities of the Future

The seasteading movement is getting a reality TV show …

February 20, 2015

Kevin is a senior editor and co-executive producer at Fusion. He may or may not be a bot.

Your email was sent. =]

The seasteading movement has always been one of Silicon Valleys more intriguing pockets. Born at Burning Man, funded in its early days by PayPal billionaire Peter Thiel, stacked with tech workers, and dedicated to its mission of building utopian civilizations on giant floating platforms in the middle of the ocean, the quixotic, libertarian-leaning group has been chugging along for seven years, inspiring magazine profiles and holding conferences while its floating-cities project inches closer to reality.

Now, seasteading is becoming realityTV. The Institute sent the following e-mail to its mailing list today:

Subject: Casting Call: TV Series Seeks Seasteaders

Your dream to leave land behind and experience a new life at sea is now a possibility.

The Seasteading Institute is consulting with a new unscripted television series for a major cable network. The show is seeking a variety of experts and survivalists ready to create a new community on the ocean while building, engineering, and rehabbing residential quarters. If you have what it takes to survive challenging weather and sea conditions, if you have a yearning desire to experiment with ocean-based technologies, if you can bring a skill set that will add to the sea-villages development, then this is an opportunity for you.

If interested, email [redacted] and please CC: [redacted] by March 1, 2015 with:

Break a sea-leg, The Seasteading Institute

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The seasteading movement is getting a reality TV show ...

Floating City Project – The Seasteading Institute …

A fresh start on a floating city could be just a few years away

For five years, The Seasteading Institute has been conducting research into the potential for permanent, innovative communities floating at sea.We are now able to apply this foundation of knowledge and our network towards an actual design, along with additional efforts to determine specific needs and desires of potential customers, and to select a practical location for what could become the worlds first city at sea.

The Floating City Project combines principles of both seasteading and startup cities, by seeking to locate a floating city within the territorial waters of an existing nation. Historically, The Seasteading Institute haslookedto international waters for thefreedom to establish new nations and spurcompetitivegovernance from the outside. However, there are several reasons we are now seeking a host nation: a) It is less expensive to engineer a seastead for relatively calm, shallow waters compared with the open ocean outside of territorial waters; b) it will be easier for residents to travel to and from the seastead, as well as to acquire goods and services from existing supply chains; and c) a host nation will provide a place for a floating city within the existing international legal framework, with the associated protections and responsibilities.

The Floating City Project Report

The first floating city with significant political autonomy may be established by 2020. The key findings of Floating City Project report are:

Go here to see the original:

Floating City Project - The Seasteading Institute ...

The Future is a Beach: 5 Artificial Floating Island Cities …

According to futurists, the likelihood that humans will one day have to move off of the land and into the oceans at some point is high. Population growth, climate change and limited resources could eventually push us into the waters that cover more than 70 percent of the planet. The Seasteading Institute wants to be prepared for that eventuality, so in 2009 they sponsored the Seastead Design Contest. The contest asked for designs that imagined permanent, stationary structures that would allow for long-term ocean living. These five designs came out on top.

The Swimming City is a vibrant seastead design from Andrs Gyrfi that looks like a section of a traditional city that was cut from its surroundings and relocated to the sea. The traditional architecture and familiar city structure give it the type of familiarity that would make it easy to live in for former land-dwellers. Homes, businesses, and public recreation spaces all co-exist happily. The city has a number of helicopter pads for easy access from the air and a central dock for water access. The city is actually the size of a single neighborhood, so imagine a network of these communities, each supported on its own four pillars just above the water, forming a true city of the sea.

The contest judges decided that this design by Anthony Ling had the most personality. The Rendering Freedom design is not only about building a city for today, but about leaving open the possibilities for growth and change in the future. Modular construction on a stationary platform would mean that changing and adding to the existing buildings would be simple. An inventive elevator system would take visitors and residents from the floating docks at sea level to the raised ground level of the city platform. The buildings themselves are even further elevated to help protect them from large waves.

If it were on the land, this design could easily be mistaken for an upscale resort. The designer, Emerson Stepp, wanted to convey a sense of luxury to help ease the adjustment from living on land to life at sea. The Oasis was meant to harmonize with the surroundings without simply fading into the background. The seasteads architecture is designed to withstand the incredibly harsh environment that would plague an ocean colony, but the lush vegetation and organic design would help to make residents feel less like they live on a platform in the middle of a strange environment.

Designed with sea-worthiness in mind, this enclosed city from designer Marko Jrvela uses thermal and functional zoning in its layered interior to keep utility consumption down. Passive solar design principles are also in use to take advantage of the ocean sunshine. Inside the enclosure, extensive vegetation cleans the air, improves the aesthetics of the seastead and provides food for the residents.

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The Future is a Beach: 5 Artificial Floating Island Cities ...

Fixed & Floating Cities: 5 Futuristic Artifical Island …

From army forts turned into pirate radio stations and oil platforms converted into micro-nations, the notion of living full-time on the high seas is nothing new. However, these amazing award-winning designs from the recent Seasteading contest float in front of us five jaw-dropping possibilities for the future of urban life on the sea unlike any artificial islands you have ever seen (including this recycled floating paradise island).

The winning design is a colorful and vibrant work of imaginative urbanism, depicting a world on the water not unlike life on land with winding paths, city squares, mixed uses and traditional architecture. Like a slice lifted from the heart of an old European town this Swimming City concept sits on four pillars with room to pass beneath it and the remnants of its removal showing on all sides.

Almost more a luxury resort hotel than a city on the sea, the winner of the best picture award certainly warrants its prize for the compelling visual cacophony of the above rendering. The image shows off tropical beach-like edges with premium condos jutting out to overlook the water and a dense core of mixed-use functions.

Deemed to have the most personality, this runner-up design is as much about change over time as it is about a fixed work of construction. The idea is a simple, modular mixed-use city-on-a-platform that has the freedom to evolve and expand as needed forever a work of urban design in progress.

In the realm of aesthetics this design was elected the winner, perhaps in part for the way it shows off its green design strategies in the look of the structure itself. Shaped to channel wind, bring in solar energy and passively cool (as well as feed) the residential population within, this enclosed city structure is eco-friendly in appearance as well as in practice.

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Fixed & Floating Cities: 5 Futuristic Artifical Island ...

SeaSteading -for personal freedom – PIRASS-SEASTEAD.NET

Theres another mob out there who want to try SeaSteading. They want to build a city, entire, full of hard working, innovative entrepreneurial types; the real cream of the crop (One of the very early suggestions, as I recall, was siting this Nirvana close to a third world country, to take advantage of cheap labour).

They call themselves Libertarians.

As I understand it, the Libertarian idea of Liberty is having the right -for aggressive, overbearing individuals- to exploit their fellow humans to whatever degree they want or can, without any restrictions.

If thats Liberty, Ill talk about Freedom. For me, freedom is the right not to be exploited. Not to be taken advantage of, discriminated against, or beaten, robbed, raped or stabbed Or being told what to do, and how to live.

But thats just me. I could be wrong.

Thats the great advantage of diversity, not having to rely on Ideology. I dream not of building a city, but just a house. A modular, floating house which could be expanded to any size you like. The owner would have the option of joining with as many houses as he or she likes, if they look like being compatible neighbours, or splitting off again if theyre not.

Communities could aggregate -or divide-, according to interests, philosophies or religions (for me, diversity means an infinite number of communities, all doing their own thing. Not one community, trying to be all things to all people).

And they could join or leave communities on a whim; not tied down by financial commitment or residential ties, because they could just take their house with them. Dont get along with your neighbours? Just detach and move along. The very best protest against repressive governments or societies is simply leaving -as millions of refugees world wide have tried to do. But what a difference it would make if all those refugees could take their homes with them, and start their own communities, beholden to no-one.

Thats Freedom.

To be completely free of course, each house unit would need to be substantially self-sufficient; not only able to produce or collect its own power and water (both easily achievable with existing technologies) but also basic food staples -also largely achievable, with small scale hydroponics.

See the article here:

SeaSteading -for personal freedom - PIRASS-SEASTEAD.NET

Amazon

18 of 18 people found the following review helpful

The...

Published on September 3, 2007 by Steven Roberts

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful

Published on February 23, 2010 by Brian

18 of 18 people found the following review helpful

5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant, September 3, 2007

This review is from: Sea-Steading: A Life of Hope and Freedom on the Last Viable Frontier (Paperback)

The long out-of-print "Sailing the Farm" is another good reference for aquatic self-sufficiency, but Sea-Steading is more focused on developing competent sailing skills. There is a wealth of good knowledge here, and the writing is full of gems (even though, as he readily admits, it could have used a bit of copy-editing). I've already quoted the author twice and referred back to a passage once, and it has only been two days since I spent a very satisfying Saturday immersed in the book.

I highly recommended this for those who understand its intent. Jerome truly knows his stuff, and makes a very good case for casting off from the consumer lifestyle... not just adding a yacht to one's stable of toys. And even if you don't care about the broader philosophical context, the knowledge herein might keep you off a lee shore some dark and stormy night.

See the original post here:

Amazon

Top 10 hotels, B&Bs and hostels in Scotland for walkers

Whisky and the Way Culdearn House has an impressive scotch collection, all the better to celebrate your hike along the nearby Speyside Way

This small, efficient hotel in an elegant Victorian villa feels more like a luxury guesthouse; one to wallow in if youre tackling the Speyside Way, which runs through the town. Great beds, open fires and a 60-strong whisky selection are a hit with footsore guests; as are the evening meals. Scrub up in your room then sit at a linen-draped table to fill up on pistachio- and lemon-stuffed guinea fowl and raspberry and passion-fruit pavlova. The owners will dry clothes, make up packed lunches and transport luggage to the next stop on the Way. Doubles from 120 B&B, 01479 872106, culdearn.com

Just outside Drymen, in Loch Lomond and the Trossachs national park, this dedicated walkers B&B is a good stopping-off point along the West Highland Way. Or it can be a jumping-off point for the Rob Roy Way, as well as for tackling nearby hills and Munros and the flatter walking around the shore of Loch Lomond. The owners provide a free pick-up and drop-off service from the village of Drymen for guests arriving on foot, and single and triple rooms are available along with doubles or twins. Doubles from 78 B&B, 01360 660289, bedandbreakfastlochlomond.net

At nearly 900 sq km, Mull has enough decent walking to warrant more than a passing visit. Base yourself at this homely B&B in Fionnphort and you can take advantage of the owners collection of walking guides and maps, and extensive local knowledge, to explore walks along beaches, through deserted villages and across hills. Order cream cheese and Tobermory smoked trout sandwiches and homemade flapjacks to take with you on your hike, or book a guided wildlife walk with local company Mull Magic. Doubles from 66 B&B, 01681 700677, staffahouse.co.uk

This guesthouse, near the entrance to the magnificent glen, is the perfect place to shelter after a day of serious hill walking or a stroll around the neighbouring lochan. Theres a drying room for boots and clothes, and a washing and drying service if you stay longer than one night. If youre keen to stride out on the wide range of local trails, the owners will lend maps, give route suggestions, make packed lunches and fill flasks. Or book a guided walk with Go Glencoe. Doubles from 60 B&B, 01855 811354, scorrybreacglencoe.com

You can never please everyone but this small, independent hotel in the Angus Glens comes close if youre in a mixed-budget group, with standard en suite hotel bedrooms and a climbers (and walkers) bunkhouse, plus self-catering lodges for longer stays. Maps of local walking routes are available to borrow and the hotel has a decent bar for a post-hike drink, as well as a restaurant; reward yourself with a homemade pizza or a Josper grilled rib-eye, heather-fed lamb or Clova venison. Doubles from 90 B&B, bunks from 20pp, 01575 550350, clova.com

For visitors arriving on foot at this independent hostel in South Laggan its the location that sells it: the 11 bedrooms, three bathrooms and self-catering kitchen here are minutes from the Great Glen Way. A laundry room, drying room and on-site grocery store are other advantages. And, if you want to stay longer there are Munros aplenty to climb, two popular local loop walks and lots of other activities if you want to do more than hike. Twin rooms from 40, bunks from 17, 01809 501430, greatglenhostel.com

For a walking weekend within easy striking distance of Glasgow or Edinburgh this friendly site, outside Crieff, fits the bill. Choose from kata tents, camping or a bed in one of two hostels (go for the colourful Steading bunkhouse) and enjoy basic comforts with a homely edge. There are plenty of walks nearby: those from the door include a nature trail around the 231-acre site and a hike up Ben Chonzie, a Munro. In all but deepest winter months theres also a cafe on the site and the Steading hostel has dedicated laundry and drying rooms. Doubles from 56, beds from 19pp, 01764 670140, comriecroft.com

With its painted breeze-block walls, moss-green sofas, flowery curtains and scratchy carpets theres no mistaking this dog-friendly hostel for a design hotel. But thats what the regulars like. What you see is what you get; and that includes friendly staff, clean dorm beds, a large kitchen, a drying room and access to some of the finest walking in the country. With the local mountain rescue team based at the hostel, its little surprise that guests can book add-on skills courses, from winter walking to navigation for walkers. More casual activities, from guided walking to sea kayaking, can be arranged through Torridon Activities. Dorm beds from 12, twin rooms from 42, 01445 791284, syha.org.uk

A farmhouse B&B in Castle Kennedy, right on the Southern Upland Way, this is the ideal place to end up if youve walked the notoriously tough route from north-east to south-west. Theres little in the way of modern bling but lashings of old-fashioned hospitality, not least hot baths, open fires, home cooked meals (choose from a simple supper or a four-course dinner) and welcoming owners. One to do in the summer months stay on for a few nights to explore four famous local gardens: Dunskey Estate, Castle Kennedy Gardens, Glenwhan Gardens and the Logan Botanic Gardens in Port Logan near Stranraer, then have dinner by candlelight in the garden. Doubles 90 B&B, 01776 705316, chlenryfarmhouse.com

Continued here:

Top 10 hotels, B&Bs and hostels in Scotland for walkers