Horie left Ecuador in March, traveled past the Galapagos Islands, Hawaii, and Japan's Ogasawara Islands before reaching Tokyo five months later. His solar-powered challenge had some tense moments: The boat's propeller got tangled in fishing nets, his electric water distiller broke down, and there were real dangers of the boat being struck by lightning.
Horie says that he decided to make the solar-powered journey when he realized how much a solar boat has in common with yachts. The solar boat uses the gifts of nature like the sun and the wind to propel itself, just as yachts do, and it does not pollute the water or the air.
The trans-Pacific challenge was Horie's tenth. He was the first Japanese to make a successful solo crossing, reaching America's shores in August 1962 after leaving Japan in a small yacht 94 days earlier.
Photos: Horie waves as he sails into Tokyo in his solar boat. (KYODO)
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