Environment: Upcycling, Recycling and Repurposing Sails

The need to be more environmentally aware of our affect on the planet is becoming more critical and cruising sailors are not immune to having to think about recycling and upcycling as they travel the oceans and seas of the world.

Published 2 years ago

Artist Kate Scardifield has used second hand spinnakers in her artwork (c) Sail Exchange.

With the majority of old sails ending up in landfill, there is now a growing interest in upcycling, recycling and re-purposing old sails all around the globe. Here we look at a number of organisations and companies that are giving life to old sails, whether it’s re-purposed and donated to fishing communities, up cycled into a fashionable “must-have” accessory or used in artwork.

Helping commmunities

Sails Ocean Sails Sails (SOS)
is a self-funded program that was started in 2005 by Australian Peter
Gately and since then has helped island fishermen in the Pacific and
Indian Oceans, Timor Sea and in Africa with donated sails.

“Despite COVID-19, the response has been outstanding to our requests for used sails” Peter told Noonsite. “The main issue we face is the mode of delivering the sails and equipment to countries in need,” he said. “Our latest trip to Tonga was put on hold two years ago when COVID struck and then our carrier aircraft country went into liquidation dishonouring all airfares.

“However, S.O.S. has received a multitude of offers worldwide with people offering to drop-off sails, and our response usually is to ask them to see where the most urgent need is closest to them and try and arrange delivery of sails and other boating equipment.  Currently we have a request to have further sails delivered to Samoa, as well as to Tonga and other Pacific Island nations”.

Peter said the need for supplying recycled sails to people who fish for their living has never been greater than at present, particularly with the price of petrol for the outboard motors constantly rising and the need for food in fishing community forcing them to venture further afield than they would normally as fish stocks become depleted nearer to their islands and normal fishing grounds.

“Boats can be made locally and masts made from Bamboo, but the good quality sails provided give both young and older people a chance to provide food for themselves, their families and communities.”

Peter Gately with donated sails (c) Sails Ocean Sails

Sails into Something Else

Another way to deal with used, torn or unusable sails is to turn them into something else and this is what an Australian company is doing.

Sail Exchange, based in Sydney, Australia has repurposed hundreds of sails in the last few years and are currently in the process of expanding their sail recycling program.

“We are very passionate about recycling sails,” company spokesperson Bettina Crafoord told Noonsite. “Our newly appointed Environmental Scientist John Crockett will be researching and sourcing a machine that will be able to shred second hand sails that are beyond hoisting and not sailable or sellable.

“This shredded material will then be repurposed and John is investigating this. Currently 90% of our used sails are re-sellable and we have customers worldwide that purchase from our extensive stock on our website. The remaining 10% of sails that are not sellable go on our donation pile. Artists and creative individuals repurpose the sail cloth into amazing artwork or products such as crew gear bags.”

Also in Australia, but based in southern Tasmania, Recolab (repurposed, eco-friendly, collaborative laboratory) is a small business making bags from repurposed materials, primarily sails but also billboard skins, abandoned festival tents, pond liner off-cuts and anything else they can get their hands on that they can turn into a bag!

Raw material (c) Recolab

“We have been in business in one form or another for the past ten years, so quite a few folks in the Tasmanian sailing community know of us, said Lyn Hellewell. “We receive sails by donation and, in return, the donor gets one of our Sou’Wester Utility Bags as a thank you gift.  We are happy for donors to drop off their sails on their way past or we collect them from around the Greater Hobart area.

“Recently, we received a shipment of sails from a salvage company in New South Wales. They paid the freight and we provided two of our Roaring 40s Gear Bags in return as a thank you gift. We are happy to provide this service for any mainland or overseas donors and also happy to make their bags from their own sail.”

Lyn said they can use almost all types of sail fabric, including Kevlar. “Our only limitations are mouldy material or delaminated material which is too far gone to resuscitate!”

The finished product – sails turned into fashion accessories (c) Recolab.

Eco Circle – Sailed, Saved, Sewn

Another company that also encourages trading in old sails for a bag are Devon, UK based company Sails and Canvas. For every usable sail donated they will trade a bag: for small sails – a bottle bag; for larger sails – a storage bucket; and if you don’t want a bag they will make a donation to the RNLI on your behalf. Their motto is “every sail we recycle means less sailcloth ends its life in landfill and that has to be a good thing for everyone.”

Another company that will trade sails for bags is Sea Bags based on the east coast of the USA in Maine.  Since starting their Sail/Trade programme, they have taken in nearly 7,100 sails that would have otherwise gone to a landfill.

One sail at a time

Turning sails into satchels (c) Kite Kete

And then there are individuals such as New Zealand kite-boarder, wing-foiler and ocean adventurer Valerie Lubrick who bought a sewing machine and began her business – Kite Kete – where kitesurfing gear is repurposed into upcycled bags and pouches that are strong yet super light, artistic and functional.

“Buying and using an item made from a re-purposed sail – whether it’s a ripped spinnaker from a yacht or torn kite surfing sail, is a step toward a more sustainable way of living,” said Valerie.

“I am a keen ocean adventurer and kayak guide and biologist in Antarctica and the High Arctic and my love for polar regions and wild spaces all over the world drives me to also protect these places.  I love to play in the ocean – surfing, kite-surfing or wing-foiling – but I struggle when I see how much environmental waste is created by our activities. I teach about conservation and sustainability and I encourage teachers and students to rethink about waste.  So that’s what I did with obsolete kites that are headed for landfill – I give them a second life.”

DIY

A search on ideas search engine PinInterest shows many individuals who are re-purposing sails themselves, so why not try it yourself?

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Some of the companies using old sails to avoid landfill are:

Australia:

Sails Ocean Sails

Sail Exchange

Recolab

Canary Islands:

Sail Doctor

New Zealand:

Yotti

Kite Kete

Spain:

GoodSwell

USA:

Resails

Seabags.com

Greece/Mediterranean:

Sails Bags

Sail Doctor

Germany:

Windsack

Sail Recycling Artists:

Sail Exchange

If you know a company that should be included here, please send details to noonsite@noonsite.com or post a comment at the bottom of this report.

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  1. August 1, 2022 at 4:13 PM
    ingeatsvya says:

    Thank you for this great article! I love my bag made out of an old sail, painted with children’s wishes for the future by Sailafuture (http://www.sailafuture.org). In Spain we organized an activity with Sailafuture. Talens supplied the paint; one of our fellow-sailors donated a sail, local artists supervised and the children did a marvelous job in painting the sail. Theme: ‘Rio Guadiana: el paraiso natural’. The sail will now serve to provide shade for the children playing and remember them (and their parents) of their dreams of a clean and healthy river. There’s so much you can do with used sails!