Thomas Peterson may have majored in marine biology, but he ended up working in insurance. It has done well for him. “It’s insurance that’s funded all the fun for all these years,” he says. The fun, in this case, is yachting. But Peterson, who owns a 75-foot motor yacht called the Valkyrie, understands his hobby also necessitates “an interest in the protection of the ocean.” That’s why he’s been keen to use Valkyrie to host researchers who are studying great white shark juveniles or trying to tag whales.
He’s part of a growing group of yacht owners and captains who are donating time aboard their vessels (and in some cases, the entire vessel itself) to scientists engaged in marine research, with organizations like the International SeaKeepers Society and Yachts for Science playing matchmaker. “Yachting is obviously a luxury and sometimes wasteful industry,” says one captain. “It’s rare to meet an owner who isn’t aware of that public image, and that consequently it’s good to be part of something bigger than that.”
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