Chủ Nhật, 31 tháng 3, 2013

What’s in a name? In Asia…a lot.

afd9f iStock 000010642224Small Downtown Disney to get three year makeover to become Disney Springs


To western eyes, the cultures of Asia are a weird and wonderful adventure for which an almost endless list of questions can be asked. One of the most common, especially for those newly-arrived, is the topic of naming conventions, which are far more complex than you might think.


In most western countries, our names are easy: First, Middle, Last. John Harold Smith, for instance. From this you can assume that one of John’s ancestors was probably a blacksmith, while the first and middle are usually chosen to honor family or simply because they sound nice. But in Asia, there’s a lot more to consider, so we asked a few of our Asian friends to tell us how names work in their home country.


In Hong Kong, many people often use nicknames that can be based on transliteration of their Chinese name – for instance, pop star Yung o Yi uses Joey Yung. Others are simply given a name their parents like, such a Sharon or Ray. Some parents might even try really hard to give their child a unique name, such as Betsy, Augustine or Maximilian!


In a country like Indonesia – which has over 17,000 islands and many, many unique cultural pockets – naming conventions can vary from one province to the next and are often quite complicated. Sometimes family names are not even used and people simply have one name; when a second name is needed, the first name is repeated or a nickname is chosen based on hobbies, personality, etc. Other times, a child’s second name is taken from the father, from the mother, or simply a phrase that means “son/daughter of father’s name and mother’s name.” Still other times, a name can be chosen based on geography, culture, or even made up of honorifics, such as Kakak for men or Mbak for women.


Malaysian names have a long and multicultural history based on Malay, Khmer, Siamese, Javanese or Sanskrit names, among others. In fact, because Arabic names, such as Mohammad, are so common, people often choose a second name to set them apart. One interesting fact about Malaysia – some names are illegal! For instance, you can’t legally register a child named after a color, animal or natural phenomenon, or anything insulting such as the name Pendek, which means short.


Japanese names, much like the language, are rather staccato, so names are often clipped repeated, or given a ‘cute’ suffix. For instance, the name Tamura might become Tamtam while the name Aya might become Ayaya. If your name is Kimura Takuya, people might call you Kimu Taku while Matsumoto Junpei might become Matsu Jun.


In Thailand, almost every person will be known by their nickname – so much so that friends might not even know your real name! This is often due to the fact that Thai names can get quite long and it would be inconvenient to say the full name all the time. Thai nicknames can be almost anything you can think of – fruit, animals, or random English words like Fluke or Bonus. Sometimes people might name their children based on their job or the hobbies they have – Bowling for a fan of the sport, or Yeast for the child of a baker. Sometimes the oldest child will be named A or neung (1), the second B or sawng (2) and so on. Out of all the countries in Asia Thailand, it seems, has the most fun with their nicknames.


South Korea and Vietnam are the standouts here – in Vietnam people are just called by their real name, while in South Korea, people rarely have a nickname, and if they do it’s usually one that only close friends would know. In rare cases, a nickname is chosen if one’s real name is particularly unique or too hard for foreigners to say.


Did we miss any? Let us know if you’ve heard any strange nicknames in your Asian travels.



What’s in a name? In Asia…a lot.

Family"s acrobatic boat show



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fb969 130322173658 acrobats yacht hori ontal gallery Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An EntourageFrom flying through the air to balancing on beams, working as an acrobat takes enormous skill and strength — particularly when you’re battling against the elements on a lurching 12-meter yacht.


fb969 130322173356 acrobats yacht vertical gallery Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
Such is the life of Delphine Lechifflart, 42, and Franck Rabilier, 44, French acrobats who travel the world performing on their boat.


fb969 130322174033 acrobats boat vertical gallery Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
The distinctive yellow boat isn’t just their stage, it’s also the floating home they share with daughters Loeva, 13, and Ondja, five. “Ondja began sailing when she was one-and-a-half-months-old. The boat is the only home she remembers,” Rabilier said.


fb969 130322172407 acrobats yacht hori ontal gallery Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An EntourageOnlookers at Seattle’s Elliott Bay Marina gather on boats to watch the acrobats in action. It was the most successful show ever held at the marina, with more than 3,000 people turning up each day.


84559 130322173520 acrobat boat vertical gallery Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
“In the romantic show, called Between Wing and Island, there’s an orange-pinkish light behind them while they’re doing this beautiful ballet in the rigging,” Elliott Bay Marina manager, Dwight Jones, said.


84559 130322174226 acrobats yacht vertical gallery Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
The daring duo met while university students in Paris. Lachifflart had been studying archeology and Rabilier engineering, when they began to take up acrobatics seriously.


84559 130322173144 acrobats yacht hori ontal gallery Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An EntourageRabilier first took circus classes as a 12-year-old, taking it up again when he met Lechifflart. The pair later set up their own acrobatic company called La Loupite, meaning “small light” in old French.


84559 130322172922 french acrobats yacht vertical gallery Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
As a youngster, Lechifflart had dreams of working as a clown. She now mixes comedy in her slapstick act The Navigators.


84559 130322174751 acrobats yacht vertical gallery Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
The artists don’t charge for shows, instead relying on donations. They travel the globe on just $800 a month, performing for their marina berths and not eating in restaurants.


cea2f 130322173658 acrobats yacht topics Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
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cea2f 130322172407 acrobats yacht topics Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
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cea2f 130322173520 acrobat boat topics Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
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e854e 130322174226 acrobats yacht topics Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
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e854e 130322173144 acrobats yacht topics Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
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e854e 130322172922 french acrobats yacht topics Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
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e854e 130322174751 acrobats yacht topics Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
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Editor’s note: MainSail is CNN’s monthly sailing show, exploring the sport of sailing, luxury travel and the latest in design and technology.


(CNN) — From the top of a 14-meter mast, Delphine Lechifflart expertly rolls down a length of white ribbon, her taut body pirouetting mid-air, before easing into the arms of her lover.


The two French acrobats continue to twirl and swoop, their flying silhouettes growing darker as the sun lowers in the sky behind them.


It’s a sumptuous image that hushes the crowd who stand gathered, not under a circus big top, but on the banks of a jetty.


This, of course is no ordinary acrobatic show, but one performed entirely on a lurching 12-meter yacht in harbors across the world.



68e60 bttn close Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
68e60 130314194550 mainsail paul larsen a 00005729 story body Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An EntourageBreaking sailing boundaries in Namibia



68e60 bttn close Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
68e60 130314172250 mainsail paul larsen b 00010925 story body Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An EntourageControlling a sailing beast



68e60 bttn close Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An Entourage
68e60 130314095746 main sail crash speed paul larsen 00003001 story body Christine Drinan: How To Travel With An EntourageWatch speeding boat fly, crash!


“They use the whole boat like it’s one big gymnastics apparatus,” said Dwight Jones, manager at Seattle’s Elliott Bay Marina, which recently hosted the enchanting La Loupiote show.


“You couldn’t ask for a more dramatic stage — people can watch from the shore or take their own dinghy and see it from the water.”


Read: Graffiti artists turned abandoned luxury liner into giant, psychedelic canvas


A family affair


For acrobat couple Lechifflart, 42, and Franck Rabilier, 44, their distinctive yellow yacht is not simply a stage — it’s also the floating home they share with two daughters; Loeva, 13, and Ondja, five.


“The eldest has done some shows with us, playing a puppet, but the youngest is still too small,” said Rabilier.


“We’re home-schooling them and at the beginning of each year they go back to France to do their exams.”


Read: Hollywood ships and silver submarines — The World’s top five boatels


Since setting sail from Brittany in north west France in 2004, the free-spirited family has traveled from port to port across the globe, performing their remarkable show and surviving on donations alone.


“They just pass a hat around at the end,” Jones explained. “People can’t believe they’re seeing this fantastic performance for free — it really generates a sense of generosity.”


Show time


From rolling down the top of the mast, to balancing on the boom, and tiptoeing along the railing, the agile acrobats leap across every inch of the boat in two very different 20-minute routines.


The first is a slapstick Laurel and Hardy-style comedy, featuring two bumbling sailors racing around the yacht to a lolloping piano soundtrack.


As the sun sets, the couple perform their second, more romantic show, in which two lovers tenderly cavort mid-air to rousing classical music.


Read: Love boats and sexy submarines — 7 riverside retreats


“In the romantic show, there’s an orange-pinkish light behind them while they’re doing this beautiful ballet in the rigging,” Jones said.


“They perform the whole thing without a safety net. It’s like nothing you’ve ever seen before — people were coming back day-after-day to see them.”


Setting sail


The daring duo began taking circus lessons while university students in Paris, and in 1999 set up their own acrobatic company called La Loupiote — meaning “small light” in old French.


They performed in theaters and on the streets, but had dreams of taking the show on the road — or more accurately, the high seas.


“We both sailed with our parents when we were young,” Lechifflart explained. “That was our dream — to travel the world by boat.”


Read: Dangling on the edge — Life of daredevil photographer


In 2000 they bought a half-built yacht and spent the next four years getting it into seaworthy shape.


Once on the water, the pair spent a year experimenting and refining their unique aquatic-based act.


“The first time we tried it, I had a lot of bruises,” Lechifflart said. “It’s so much more complicated than working on land.”


“You have to work with the weather, the wind, the waves — the boat is constantly moving.”


Circusnavigation


The family’s nomadic lifestyle has taken them across Europe, America, and now New ealand, where they’ll be performing over the next month.


And after that, who knows? The carefree couple tend to sail the high-seas in whichever direction they wish, surviving on around $800 a month.


“They’re not living high on the hog, as they say, but they’re loving what they’re doing,” Jones said.


“Their perspective on life is different from people working nine to five — they don’t know where they’re going the next day and you’ve got to respect that.”


And so, like the circus wagons of old, the family of acrobats will point their “small light” towards the hori on in search of the next high-flying adventure.





Family"s acrobatic boat show

Family"s acrobatic boat show



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c1771 130322173658 acrobats yacht hori ontal gallery Paris’ art world is in full bloomFrom flying through the air to balancing on beams, working as an acrobat takes enormous skill and strength — particularly when you’re battling against the elements on a lurching 12-meter yacht.


c1771 130322173356 acrobats yacht vertical gallery Paris’ art world is in full bloom
Such is the life of Delphine Lechifflart, 42, and Franck Rabilier, 44, French acrobats who travel the world performing on their boat.


27a4d 130322174033 acrobats boat vertical gallery Paris’ art world is in full bloom
The distinctive yellow boat isn’t just their stage, it’s also the floating home they share with daughters Loeva, 13, and Ondja, five. “Ondja began sailing when she was one-and-a-half-months-old. The boat is the only home she remembers,” Rabilier said.


27a4d 130322172407 acrobats yacht hori ontal gallery Paris’ art world is in full bloomOnlookers at Seattle’s Elliott Bay Marina gather on boats to watch the acrobats in action. It was the most successful show ever held at the marina, with more than 3,000 people turning up each day.


27a4d 130322173520 acrobat boat vertical gallery Paris’ art world is in full bloom
“In the romantic show, called Between Wing and Island, there’s an orange-pinkish light behind them while they’re doing this beautiful ballet in the rigging,” Elliott Bay Marina manager, Dwight Jones, said.


27a4d 130322174226 acrobats yacht vertical gallery Paris’ art world is in full bloom
The daring duo met while university students in Paris. Lachifflart had been studying archeology and Rabilier engineering, when they began to take up acrobatics seriously.


27a4d 130322173144 acrobats yacht hori ontal gallery Paris’ art world is in full bloomRabilier first took circus classes as a 12-year-old, taking it up again when he met Lechifflart. The pair later set up their own acrobatic company called La Loupite, meaning “small light” in old French.


d3372 130322172922 french acrobats yacht vertical gallery Paris’ art world is in full bloom
As a youngster, Lechifflart had dreams of working as a clown. She now mixes comedy in her slapstick act The Navigators.


d3372 130322174751 acrobats yacht vertical gallery Paris’ art world is in full bloom
The artists don’t charge for shows, instead relying on donations. They travel the globe on just $800 a month, performing for their marina berths and not eating in restaurants.


d3372 130322173658 acrobats yacht topics Paris’ art world is in full bloom
1


d3372 130322173356 acrobats yacht topics Paris’ art world is in full bloom
2


00ef0 130322174033 acrobats boat topics Paris’ art world is in full bloom
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00ef0 130322172407 acrobats yacht topics Paris’ art world is in full bloom
4


00ef0 130322173520 acrobat boat topics Paris’ art world is in full bloom
5


00ef0 130322174226 acrobats yacht topics Paris’ art world is in full bloom
6


00ef0 130322173144 acrobats yacht topics Paris’ art world is in full bloom
7


45e2f 130322172922 french acrobats yacht topics Paris’ art world is in full bloom
8


45e2f 130322174751 acrobats yacht topics Paris’ art world is in full bloom
9




Editor’s note: MainSail is CNN’s monthly sailing show, exploring the sport of sailing, luxury travel and the latest in design and technology.


(CNN) — From the top of a 14-meter mast, Delphine Lechifflart expertly rolls down a length of white ribbon, her taut body pirouetting mid-air, before easing into the arms of her lover.


The two French acrobats continue to twirl and swoop, their flying silhouettes growing darker as the sun lowers in the sky behind them.


It’s a sumptuous image that hushes the crowd who stand gathered, not under a circus big top, but on the banks of a jetty.


This, of course is no ordinary acrobatic show, but one performed entirely on a lurching 12-meter yacht in harbors across the world.



45e2f bttn close Paris’ art world is in full bloom
45e2f 130314194550 mainsail paul larsen a 00005729 story body Paris’ art world is in full bloomBreaking sailing boundaries in Namibia



45e2f bttn close Paris’ art world is in full bloom
f391c 130314172250 mainsail paul larsen b 00010925 story body Paris’ art world is in full bloomControlling a sailing beast



45e2f bttn close Paris’ art world is in full bloom
f391c 130314095746 main sail crash speed paul larsen 00003001 story body Paris’ art world is in full bloomWatch speeding boat fly, crash!


“They use the whole boat like it’s one big gymnastics apparatus,” said Dwight Jones, manager at Seattle’s Elliott Bay Marina, which recently hosted the enchanting La Loupiote show.


“You couldn’t ask for a more dramatic stage — people can watch from the shore or take their own dinghy and see it from the water.”


Read: Graffiti artists turned abandoned luxury liner into giant, psychedelic canvas


A family affair


For acrobat couple Lechifflart, 42, and Franck Rabilier, 44, their distinctive yellow yacht is not simply a stage — it’s also the floating home they share with two daughters; Loeva, 13, and Ondja, five.


“The eldest has done some shows with us, playing a puppet, but the youngest is still too small,” said Rabilier.


“We’re home-schooling them and at the beginning of each year they go back to France to do their exams.”


Read: Hollywood ships and silver submarines — The World’s top five boatels


Since setting sail from Brittany in north west France in 2004, the free-spirited family has traveled from port to port across the globe, performing their remarkable show and surviving on donations alone.


“They just pass a hat around at the end,” Jones explained. “People can’t believe they’re seeing this fantastic performance for free — it really generates a sense of generosity.”


Show time


From rolling down the top of the mast, to balancing on the boom, and tiptoeing along the railing, the agile acrobats leap across every inch of the boat in two very different 20-minute routines.


The first is a slapstick Laurel and Hardy-style comedy, featuring two bumbling sailors racing around the yacht to a lolloping piano soundtrack.


As the sun sets, the couple perform their second, more romantic show, in which two lovers tenderly cavort mid-air to rousing classical music.


Read: Love boats and sexy submarines — 7 riverside retreats


“In the romantic show, there’s an orange-pinkish light behind them while they’re doing this beautiful ballet in the rigging,” Jones said.


“They perform the whole thing without a safety net. It’s like nothing you’ve ever seen before — people were coming back day-after-day to see them.”


Setting sail


The daring duo began taking circus lessons while university students in Paris, and in 1999 set up their own acrobatic company called La Loupiote — meaning “small light” in old French.


They performed in theaters and on the streets, but had dreams of taking the show on the road — or more accurately, the high seas.


“We both sailed with our parents when we were young,” Lechifflart explained. “That was our dream — to travel the world by boat.”


Read: Dangling on the edge — Life of daredevil photographer


In 2000 they bought a half-built yacht and spent the next four years getting it into seaworthy shape.


Once on the water, the pair spent a year experimenting and refining their unique aquatic-based act.


“The first time we tried it, I had a lot of bruises,” Lechifflart said. “It’s so much more complicated than working on land.”


“You have to work with the weather, the wind, the waves — the boat is constantly moving.”


Circusnavigation


The family’s nomadic lifestyle has taken them across Europe, America, and now New ealand, where they’ll be performing over the next month.


And after that, who knows? The carefree couple tend to sail the high-seas in whichever direction they wish, surviving on around $800 a month.


“They’re not living high on the hog, as they say, but they’re loving what they’re doing,” Jones said.


“Their perspective on life is different from people working nine to five — they don’t know where they’re going the next day and you’ve got to respect that.”


And so, like the circus wagons of old, the family of acrobats will point their “small light” towards the hori on in search of the next high-flying adventure.





Family"s acrobatic boat show

Family"s acrobatic boat show



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fd72f 130322173658 acrobats yacht hori ontal gallery In Transit Blog: On the Ground on TimeFrom flying through the air to balancing on beams, working as an acrobat takes enormous skill and strength — particularly when you’re battling against the elements on a lurching 12-meter yacht.


0cf25 130322173356 acrobats yacht vertical gallery In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
Such is the life of Delphine Lechifflart, 42, and Franck Rabilier, 44, French acrobats who travel the world performing on their boat.


ea095 130322174033 acrobats boat vertical gallery In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
The distinctive yellow boat isn’t just their stage, it’s also the floating home they share with daughters Loeva, 13, and Ondja, five. “Ondja began sailing when she was one-and-a-half-months-old. The boat is the only home she remembers,” Rabilier said.


3ab01 130322172407 acrobats yacht hori ontal gallery In Transit Blog: On the Ground on TimeOnlookers at Seattle’s Elliott Bay Marina gather on boats to watch the acrobats in action. It was the most successful show ever held at the marina, with more than 3,000 people turning up each day.


3ab01 130322173520 acrobat boat vertical gallery In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
“In the romantic show, called Between Wing and Island, there’s an orange-pinkish light behind them while they’re doing this beautiful ballet in the rigging,” Elliott Bay Marina manager, Dwight Jones, said.


3ab01 130322174226 acrobats yacht vertical gallery In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
The daring duo met while university students in Paris. Lachifflart had been studying archeology and Rabilier engineering, when they began to take up acrobatics seriously.


e4d37 130322173144 acrobats yacht hori ontal gallery In Transit Blog: On the Ground on TimeRabilier first took circus classes as a 12-year-old, taking it up again when he met Lechifflart. The pair later set up their own acrobatic company called La Loupite, meaning “small light” in old French.


e4d37 130322172922 french acrobats yacht vertical gallery In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
As a youngster, Lechifflart had dreams of working as a clown. She now mixes comedy in her slapstick act The Navigators.


9ab43 130322174751 acrobats yacht vertical gallery In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
The artists don’t charge for shows, instead relying on donations. They travel the globe on just $800 a month, performing for their marina berths and not eating in restaurants.


9ab43 130322173658 acrobats yacht topics In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
1


9ab43 130322173356 acrobats yacht topics In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
2


b8723 130322174033 acrobats boat topics In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
3


b8723 130322172407 acrobats yacht topics In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
4


b8723 130322173520 acrobat boat topics In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
5


36d1e 130322174226 acrobats yacht topics In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
6


36d1e 130322173144 acrobats yacht topics In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
7


36d1e 130322172922 french acrobats yacht topics In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
8


f2a3b 130322174751 acrobats yacht topics In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
9




Editor’s note: MainSail is CNN’s monthly sailing show, exploring the sport of sailing, luxury travel and the latest in design and technology.


(CNN) — From the top of a 14-meter mast, Delphine Lechifflart expertly rolls down a length of white ribbon, her taut body pirouetting mid-air, before easing into the arms of her lover.


The two French acrobats continue to twirl and swoop, their flying silhouettes growing darker as the sun lowers in the sky behind them.


It’s a sumptuous image that hushes the crowd who stand gathered, not under a circus big top, but on the banks of a jetty.


This, of course is no ordinary acrobatic show, but one performed entirely on a lurching 12-meter yacht in harbors across the world.



f2a3b bttn close In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
f2a3b 130314194550 mainsail paul larsen a 00005729 story body In Transit Blog: On the Ground on TimeBreaking sailing boundaries in Namibia



f2a3b bttn close In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
f6510 130314172250 mainsail paul larsen b 00010925 story body In Transit Blog: On the Ground on TimeControlling a sailing beast



f2a3b bttn close In Transit Blog: On the Ground on Time
f6510 130314095746 main sail crash speed paul larsen 00003001 story body In Transit Blog: On the Ground on TimeWatch speeding boat fly, crash!


“They use the whole boat like it’s one big gymnastics apparatus,” said Dwight Jones, manager at Seattle’s Elliott Bay Marina, which recently hosted the enchanting La Loupiote show.


“You couldn’t ask for a more dramatic stage — people can watch from the shore or take their own dinghy and see it from the water.”


Read: Graffiti artists turned abandoned luxury liner into giant, psychedelic canvas


A family affair


For acrobat couple Lechifflart, 42, and Franck Rabilier, 44, their distinctive yellow yacht is not simply a stage — it’s also the floating home they share with two daughters; Loeva, 13, and Ondja, five.


“The eldest has done some shows with us, playing a puppet, but the youngest is still too small,” said Rabilier.


“We’re home-schooling them and at the beginning of each year they go back to France to do their exams.”


Read: Hollywood ships and silver submarines — The World’s top five boatels


Since setting sail from Brittany in north west France in 2004, the free-spirited family has traveled from port to port across the globe, performing their remarkable show and surviving on donations alone.


“They just pass a hat around at the end,” Jones explained. “People can’t believe they’re seeing this fantastic performance for free — it really generates a sense of generosity.”


Show time


From rolling down the top of the mast, to balancing on the boom, and tiptoeing along the railing, the agile acrobats leap across every inch of the boat in two very different 20-minute routines.


The first is a slapstick Laurel and Hardy-style comedy, featuring two bumbling sailors racing around the yacht to a lolloping piano soundtrack.


As the sun sets, the couple perform their second, more romantic show, in which two lovers tenderly cavort mid-air to rousing classical music.


Read: Love boats and sexy submarines — 7 riverside retreats


“In the romantic show, there’s an orange-pinkish light behind them while they’re doing this beautiful ballet in the rigging,” Jones said.


“They perform the whole thing without a safety net. It’s like nothing you’ve ever seen before — people were coming back day-after-day to see them.”


Setting sail


The daring duo began taking circus lessons while university students in Paris, and in 1999 set up their own acrobatic company called La Loupiote — meaning “small light” in old French.


They performed in theaters and on the streets, but had dreams of taking the show on the road — or more accurately, the high seas.


“We both sailed with our parents when we were young,” Lechifflart explained. “That was our dream — to travel the world by boat.”


Read: Dangling on the edge — Life of daredevil photographer


In 2000 they bought a half-built yacht and spent the next four years getting it into seaworthy shape.


Once on the water, the pair spent a year experimenting and refining their unique aquatic-based act.


“The first time we tried it, I had a lot of bruises,” Lechifflart said. “It’s so much more complicated than working on land.”


“You have to work with the weather, the wind, the waves — the boat is constantly moving.”


Circusnavigation


The family’s nomadic lifestyle has taken them across Europe, America, and now New ealand, where they’ll be performing over the next month.


And after that, who knows? The carefree couple tend to sail the high-seas in whichever direction they wish, surviving on around $800 a month.


“They’re not living high on the hog, as they say, but they’re loving what they’re doing,” Jones said.


“Their perspective on life is different from people working nine to five — they don’t know where they’re going the next day and you’ve got to respect that.”


And so, like the circus wagons of old, the family of acrobats will point their “small light” towards the hori on in search of the next high-flying adventure.





Family"s acrobatic boat show