So we have a slight
lean going on right now.
We're sort of--
I think we're stuck
on the bottom.
Look at how low the tide is.
Yeah, I'm worried we might
lean over a little bit,
but we'll be all right.
What goes down, comes up.
That's what she said.
That's what she said.
Dirty boy.
That was Brady, not me.
[MUSIC - ONETOX, "RAMUKANJI"]
[NON-ENGLISH SINGING]
Onetox represent
Solomon Island people
see, we people styles
originally from my homeland.
Like my old man say,
there's nothing impossible,
so we have to bring this
message to me brother lyrical,
straight from the crew--
Previously on Delos, we
make the 270 nautical
mile sail from the Abrolhos
Islands to Camamu Bay
and spend a couple
days on the open water.
Some locals help us
out with settling in,
and we enjoy our first and only
stop in the beautiful Bahia.
(SINGING) We represent the
cause of the ones fallen.
We resemble true art when we
bust the line with the lyrics
from the heart.
I'm just looking at this
guidebook that we downloaded.
It looks like the river is
pretty deep, 14, 15 meters, 20
meters.
Here it gets a little shallower,
but still 7 meters, 6 meters.
So we're here, we want
to get down here, Maraú.
So we probably could make that
if we leave as soon as we're
off the bottom here.
And then sit on
the bottom there.
It's fine.
We have a nice wide keel.
Mhm.
Tide came up fast, huh?
Yeah, we swung around.
We've got a meter of
water under the keel,
and we're going to go for it.
There we go.
We're off!
OK, [INAUDIBLE].
There's a strong current today.
Yeah.
I think it's going to get
less the further upriver
we go, but it's cool that
we're going in with the tide
just in case we happen
to really get stuck,
then the tide will come
up a little bit more,
and we can work our way off.
Yeah.
But as Brian said, the
downside of that is you're
going with the current.
So if you want to go super
slow, and the currents
going a knot or two, you lose
steerage because the rudder is
no longer moving to the water.
And you got to find the best
of both worlds, you know?
This is not untrue, Brady.
Wise words from a wise man.
[METAL CLANG]
Ow!
Brady!
OK, up the river we go.
I'm excited.
We haven't been up a river
in, I don't know, ages.
It's time to leave.
I'm excited.
[MUSIC - DEL, "SUMMER MOMENTS"]
What was that [INAUDIBLE]?
It's like Brazilian music
from the '80s or something.
This is paradise, huh?
There's nobody here either.
Plenty of coconuts
on that island.
Papaya, coconut.
Plenty of coconuts.
I like coconuts.
This is a Papa Grub
portion right here.
Papa Grub!
Papa Grub!
Oo, look at that.
Nice.
Señor Brady, this
looks delicious.
Lunch time!
Yum!
We're now officially in
uncharted waters of the river,
but it's still pretty
deep, 8 meters under us
right now, so
that's pretty cool.
Lisa's up doing
lookout-slash-some sort
of a pole dance.
I'm not really sure what
she's up to up there.
And Brady and Alexandra3 are
zooming around in a dinghy.
We're standing by on
the pleasure channel.
Pleasure channel over, 6-9 over.
Pleasure channel.
Yes, [NON-ENGLISH] pleasure.
[MUSIC - JUANITOS, "BRASILIAN
 REGGAE"]
[NON-ENGLISH SINGING]
What a couple of nuts.
Speed Racer.
Speed Racer?
Boy racer in the
dinghy over there.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha!
Doing good, doing real good.
Pleasure channel, pleasure
channel check, doing good.
So Brian has put in these
wave points from a guidebook
that we had, and we're
just following them.
Our course is pretty much
straight off the bow,
and then we're going to be
making about a 30-degree turn
to port, over.
All right, I'm just going to
zoom ahead and keep checking,
like every 50 or 100 meters
to make sure there's no banks.
OK, it's straight ahead for
the next mile and a half, over.
About this far from the bank.
OK, sounds good.
I'll zoom ahead now.
This is my favorite,
going in places
where you're not supposed to
go and that aren't charted.
It's really fun.
So the depth kind of
went from 7 meters
to 21, and then down
to 3, and there's
some weird things going on.
So if this one hits, what, 2?
1.6, I think.
1.6.
Or 1.8.
[INAUDIBLE] I'm
seeing 3.3 right here.
OK, copy that, slowing down.
Take it a little bit easier
on these bends here, huh?
Mhm.
0.2 now.
You're in what?
3.2.
[BLEEP] I thought you said 0.2.
I was like, oh, [BLEEP].
Do we fork off to the right?
Or to left?
Well, the last
point is ahead 3/10
of a mile, which puts
it in front of that,
there should be a
small island up there,
and it's kind of
at the tip of that.
OK yeah, just keep
going straight ahead,
and I think I see the
island you're talking about.
OK, so I'll go straight, right?
Right.
Just go straight, right?
Then you make a left, right?
Right.
OK, I will go straight.
Is that comfy, laying like that?
Yes.
It's a good back stretch.
It's really nice.
You can even lay like this.
You don't have to hold on.
I'm tucked in.
After making our way about
20 miles up the river,
it was time to drop
our anchor and start
hunting for some waterfalls.
So we think it's
that way, maybe.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
[NON-ENGLISH SINGING]
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
OK, we got that one.
Our new friends seem
super keen to take us
on some kind of a tour.
Thanks to our language
barrier, we weren't quite sure
what that tour would
entail, but they
didn't want to take no for an
answer, so we worked out a deal
and followed them up.
You guys ready?
Yeah.
I think we got it
all sorted out.
We've got eight guides.
Eight guides, nice.
We are a little bit confused.
He wants us to hold
[INAUDIBLE] what?
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
He's going to take
you sliding, Kazza.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
[INAUDIBLE]
I don't know what's going on.
We're just getting a little
tour around the different pools
of the waterfall.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
Are you ready to go in together?
OK.
All right, let's go.
Oh, I got a massage!
And this is the massage stop!
[MUSIC PLAYING]
We're in the middle of nowhere.
This is the village that
Rastafarian man took me
to earlier to buy the beer.
It's a pretty
chill place, and he
says we can get the
really big shrimps here.
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
I really liked the trip here.
That was fantastic, going
through mangroves while
under almost full moon.
I always like
exploring new places.
[INAUDIBLE] like this.
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
OK.
What?
Yeah, it feels really good.
It's just like Madagascar,
just a chill village
in the middle of nowhere.
And there's always activity,
like community activity.
People just sitting around,
riding bikes around,
and kids playing, and music.
I don't know, it's
just really cool.
You can feel the energy of
the place is just relaxed,
windows open, doors open.
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
It's going to turn into
a cachaca tasting now.
Oh, a cachaca tasting.
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
Wow, it did taste like acai.
Was it something with cacao?
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
It smells like an Italian pizza.
What?
It does, like oregano.
[INAUDIBLE]
It cuts right to the back.
Yeah.
Strong [INAUDIBLE]
Whew!
Si.
So that one's made with cacao,
this one's made with corn,
and this one's made with acai?
There you go.
[INAUDIBLE]
Did you see the
holographic Jesus?
I did.
So it looks like we've gotten
a plate of [NON-ENGLISH]..
Yeah, it's like breaded
and deep-fried palm heart.
What is this made out of?
[NON-ENGLISH] or--
Tapioca.
Tapioca.
[INAUDIBLE]
This is what Brazil has
done to my life pouch.
I'm not even hungry.
I haven't been hungry
the past three servings.
Hot.
I'm not glistening.
Yeah, you're all
glisten-y over there.
Healthy, happy, free.
[MUSIC - KEVIN MACLEOD, "LAID
 BACK GUITARS"]
I think it's almost
6:00 in the morning,
and the tide is super high.
We have 6 and 1/2 meters
under the keel right now.
So it's a full moon,
and we need to leave now
because the tide will
be high, and then
it's going to
start flooding out,
and low tide is at 10:00 AM.
So we're going to ride the
tide out, down the river.
We're going to pick up our
friend we met yesterday,
Rafael, and we're giving him
a ride to his mom's house
in the next village,
which is Maraú.
We did this one time in Vanuatu.
We did this one time,
and the kid lied to us.
He said, yeah, can you give
me a ride to the next village?
My dad lives there.
And we ended up
taking a couple days
to get to the next
village, and like,
the kid didn't tell his
parents he was leaving.
He just wanted to
go because he knew
a girl in the next village.
He was like, 13 years old, so we
ended up actually taking a kid,
and it was really not funny.
[MUSIC - J'SAN, "FIRST WONDER"]
Yeah, he's waiting down at the
dock with his little backpack
on.
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
We're going to give our
new friend a little gift.
He's logged into his
Facebook on Brady's phone,
so he's kind of shut
away from the world,
but we're going to
try it right now.
OK.
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
Yeah, a good choice.
That's mine, too.
I like that one.
This one?
OK.
OK.
I think that was a good one.
Nice, [INAUDIBLE].
Our small talk with Rafe
so far had been all right
with [INAUDIBLE],, but we
wanted to learn more about him
on a deeper level that we
couldn't really communicate,
so we got our good old
friend, Google Translate,
to help us out.
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
[INAUDIBLE] in that
tower there if you
want me to take what I take, and
you take me to meet my mother.
She is a teacher.
They understand your
language better.
Perfect.
Nice.
It takes a while because
it breaks down the sentence
structure and has to make it
sound like a real sentence.
I have two parents
and two mothers
because I was adopted by
the couple from Salvador
[INAUDIBLE] adopted me can
call me because I did not
have the conditions to create.
There I grew up.
I studied [INAUDIBLE].
Now I live here in Maraú.
We are now entering the town of
Maraú where our friend, Rafael,
lives with his mom, who
apparently, is a teacher.
But we're going to
go in, and we're
going to drop off all of our
rubbish we've been collecting,
and we're going to do a
little bit of provisioning
and maybe meet his
mom and explore,
and we'll see what else
the day holds for us.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
I'm not sure, we may need to get
out the old Google Translate,
but I think the people
who painted this came
from university two years ago.
Mm.
[NON-ENGLISH SINGING]
I think it looks sweet, man.
I love crazy little
places like this.
I was just thinking,
back, of all the cool
little random spots where
we've anchored Delos,
and this is definitely up
on the top of the list.
The natives of the village
were an Indian community called
Mayrahú.
In 1705, the Italian
Capuchins discovered
the village and the tribe.
Why and when the natives
disappeared is unknown.
With the building of the chapel
St. Sebastian Mayrahú in 1718,
the district Maraú was inducted.
[CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKS]
[MUSIC PLAYING]
[NON-ENGLISH SINGING]
For a few years around 1860,
the United Kingdom of England
held a kerosene distillation
plant in the area
and also extracted peat
and exploited oil shale.
No minerals or any other
resources got degraded
afterwards, anymore,
and Maraú is now located
in an
environmental-protected area.
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
[REF WHISTLE]
[MUSIC PLAYING]
[NON-ENGLISH SINGING]
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
Hey, what are you doing?
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
[INAUDIBLE]
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
[INAUDIBLE]
This might be the best part
about this house right here.
[INAUDIBLE]
It's always so amazing
to meet locals.
I mean, Rafe, we just met
him randomly yesterday,
and we gave him a ride today.
Well, and now he
invited us to his house,
and we just met his mom.
Quite simple, like always in
these kind of villages, which I
really, really like.
It's super fascinating.
They probably have as much
space as we do on the boat.
Gave us some coffee, and we
can't really talk that much,
but it's still a really
amazing experience.
I always feel very
humble that people
want to show their
houses and their villages
and go around with us and stuff.
I think soon we're going to
go and buy some groceries
and get some fuel, and
then start getting ready
for the passage.
And now we're on our our way
to the [NON-ENGLISH],, I think.
After a quick grocery
mission, the only thing
we needed to do before leaving
was to stock up with fuel,
and this meant a
lovely dinghy ride up
the mangroves to get as close
to the fuel station as possible.
Man, it's so much better than
walking through the city.
[NON-ENGLISH].
[MUSIC - BROCK BERRIGAN, "POINT
 PLEASANT"]
[NON-ENGLISH SINGING]
If you only carry one,
it's not that bad.
Yeah, right.
30 kilos.
Now, we're going to leave
the GoPro in the mangroves
and try and do a time-lapse.
We're on our way
back into the river,
and the tide looks
like it's come up
at least 2 meters, so I think
the camera might be underwater.
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]
He'll know where it is.
Ah, there it is!
Ha ha ha!
It's not underwater yet.
Straight in there.
GoPro, turn off!
How was your time-lapse
Welcome home.
This is a really cool
spot [INAUDIBLE]..
This was all dry earlier.
And then it was time to say
goodbye to our little friend
and the helper of the day.
Bye!
It's always incredible
meeting cool locals
that want to hang out with us
even though we're a bit weird.
It always surprises
me for some reason.
OK, now we go south.
What?
No, go south.
[INTERPOSING VOICES]
North.
And now we go north.
Next up on Delos, we bash 500
miles upwind and up the coast
to Recife, say a very sad
goodbye to our little Leesir,
and welcome aboard
Karin's brother, Ragnar,
and his girlfriend, Maria.
[MUSIC - DANIEL MARRON,
 "POSITIVE VIBRATION"]
[INAUDIBLE] reggae
[INAUDIBLE] Bob Marley.
Thank the Lord.
Whoa!
Just a little bit easier, wo-oh!
Say you just can't
live that negative way
if you know what I mean.
Like it?
I like it a lot.
(SINGING) --for a positive day
because it's a news, news day.
New time, new time, new
feelings, new feelings,
said it's a new, new sign.
Oh, what a new day!
Picking up, are
you picking up now?
Picking up.
Hehe.
Heh.
Someone left the
garage door open.
Oh!
I almost got hit
by a banana, Jesus.
It's a funny story.
You know, I was talking to him
over there to get beer, right?
So I gave him the money,
and I was like, OK
$50 for the swimming pool, and
then I have the rest for beer,
so let's go buy beer.
And he says, well, the
beer at the village
is half the price of the
beer at this restaurant.
And it's like, how far is it?
And he says, oh, you
know, 10 minutes, walking,
or two minutes by boat.
And so we just take off and
start playing, and like,
everybody's having a good
time, and then he looks at me,
he's like, well, where
the fuck are you going?
We're like, way past
Delos, like 100 meters out.
Are you serious?
And then I was like, well, we're
going to buy [NON-ENGLISH]..
They're like, yeah, that
was like, like right here!
I don't know what
the problem is.
He likes my shorts.
He wants my shorts.
Me and my buddy.
Look at my buddy.
[INAUDIBLE]
Now our local tour guide
switched his cap to backwards,
like Mr. Brady.
I love it.
It's awesome.
Yeah, when we first saw him,
he had his cap on properly,
and now he's like Señor Brady.
Look at that.
That's as natural as
it gets right there.
It's like Dr. Seuss.
Yeah.
[INAUDIBLE]
What is going on?
We've hit a real shallow patch.
Delos is right there.
It looks like there's a dry
patch between us and Delos,
isn't it?
I know.
Can you walk?
Hey, only one person
needs to do this.
Well, you can walk.
You guys might have
to get out and walk.
OK.
Sorry there, princesses.
It's OK.
OK, everybody start pulling.
Oh, gosh.
Oh, I see little critters.
Little shrimps.
[INAUDIBLE]
