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Issue 132 - May 2026

Introducing the SEVENSEAS Mentor Network: Help Build the Community You Wish You’d Had

For years, honestly since SEVENSEAS started, readers have asked us versions of the same questions. How do I break into this field? How do I make my next career move? Who’s working on the kind of project I want to be part of? Where do I find someone who’s done what I’m trying to do?

If you’ve ever wished you knew someone working in marine policy, or a researcher in another country doing fieldwork like yours, or a retired expert with decades of perspective, or a peer at the same career stage navigating the same decisions, you know the problem. The path through ocean conservation isn’t obvious at any stage. It’s not always just on a job board. It’s almost always: someone took a chance on someone else, made an introduction, answered a late-night email, said let me put you in touch with…

That’s true for an undergrad trying to find their first internship. It’s also true for a mid-career professional pivoting from research into policy. It’s true for a senior scientist exploring an unfamiliar region or sector. And it’s true for two early-career conservationists in different countries who’d both benefit from comparing notes.

Today we’re launching the SEVENSEAS Mentor Network — a beta version of something this community has been asking for forever. It’s a directory of people in ocean conservation who are willing to be reachable, and a directory of people who are looking for guidance, advice, or just a thoughtful conversation. At any career stage. In any direction.

It’s free. It’s open globally. And it only works if enough of us show up — as mentors, as mentees, and often as both.

 

A note on what we built, and specifically what we didn’t

We are deliberately not trying to reinvent the wheel. We didn’t build a social network. We didn’t build a messaging platform. You just register yourself in the directory and the actual conversations happen on LinkedIn, where your profile and professional identity already exists. We stay out of the way. We kept it short, and once you’re in, you’re done.

That’s the whole design.

So why not just message people on LinkedIn directly?

Because there are millions of people on LinkedIn, and most of them don’t care about ocean conservation, don’t check their messages, or have accounts they haven’t logged into in years. Cold messaging strangers is a bad experience for everyone — both the sender (who gets ignored) and the receiver (who’s overwhelmed).

The SEVENSEAS Mentor Network is different because everyone in it has actively raised their hand. This directory is curated from our community: the roughly 50,000 newsletter subscribers and the thousands more who visit our site every month. People who already care about ocean conservation, are already invested in the field, and have explicitly said yes, I want to be part of this. That’s not a small distinction. It’s the entire point.

Who this is for and what mentoring actually means

We want to expand what mentorship can look like, because the traditional version, “senior expert generously dispenses wisdom to grateful newcomer,”  is only one possibility, and not always the most valuable one.

Mentors can be senior researchers, mid-career professionals, retired experts with decades of perspective, or someone who’s only a year or two ahead of where you are. Sometimes the most useful person to talk to is someone who just navigated what you’re trying to navigate.

Mentees can be undergrads, grad students, career changers — but also senior professionals exploring a new area of conservation work, or people late in their careers wanting to learn from younger voices about tech, media, or doing things differently. There is no age cap, no career stage requirement, and no shame in asking questions at any level.

Peer-to-peer connections are encouraged. Two early-career conservationists in different countries comparing notes can be just as valuable as a one-way mentorship. Two retired marine biologists trading thoughts on policy work could be transformative. We don’t think mentorship has to flow downhill.

And critically: there is no obligation. Sometimes mentoring is a 30-minute Zoom call once. Sometimes it’s a five-minute response to a message about which grad program is realistic. Sometimes it’s reading a cover letter or saying I don’t know, but here’s who might.

You set the terms. You respond when you can. If your inbox is full this month, that’s fine. The whole point is to lower the friction for the kind of small, generous interactions that already happen informally in this field, and make them findable.

 

How it works and we need you to sign up

  1. Browse the directory (Find a Mentor or the Mentee Directory) and see profiles with focus areas, regions, languages, career stages, and a short note about what each person can offer or is hoping to learn. We have a few sample profiles up to get you started.
  2. Click their LinkedIn link and send a brief, specific message.
  3. The conversation happens on LinkedIn  exactly like any other professional connection.

That’s it. No new platform to log into daily. No notifications. No “engagement metrics.”

If you’re working in ocean conservation in any capacity — research, policy, NGO work, fisheries, journalism, art, education, citizen science, communications, diving, restoration, anything — please consider joining as a mentor:

→ Become a Mentor

If you’re looking for guidance, regardless of your career stage:

→ Apply for Mentorship

Both sign-ups take about five minutes. We do a quick admin review (we want to keep this a real, intentional community) and then your profile goes live.

Please share this

If you read this and think I know exactly the person who should be in this directory — please send them this article.

Forward it to colleagues. Mention it to your students. Send it to the friend who’s been lost between undergrad and a real job in conservation. Pass it along to your alumni networks, your former professors, the diving instructor who introduced you to the ocean in the first place. Share it with schools, university programs, marine labs, NGO listservs, professional associations, anywhere this might land in front of someone who’d benefit.

A directory is only as useful as the people in it. The single most valuable thing you can do today, even if you don’t sign up yourself, is share this with two people.

Read this before signing up

This is beta. We’ve tested it, but you’ll find rough edges. Tell us about them at info@sevenseasmedia.org — we’ll fix and improve as we go.

This is community infrastructure, not a service. Nobody is being paid. Nobody is guaranteed a match. The Mentor Network works to the extent that the people in this community decide to make themselves reachable, and others reach out thoughtfully.

This is a starting point. Group programs, peer cohorts, structured curricula — those may come later. Let us know what you’d want to see.

Whether you’re joining as a mentor, a mentee, or both, please read our Code of Conduct. It covers the basics: respect, honesty, no harassment, no commercial solicitation. We’re 18+ only and we take community standards seriously.

Ready?

Take five minutes today.

→ Become a Mentor → Apply for Mentorship → Browse the Mentor Directory → Browse the Mentee Directory

The ocean conservation sector has a generosity problem in one direction . People genuinely want to help, but the pipeline for that help is informal, opaque, and dependent on whether you happen to know the right people. This is one small attempt to make it less so.

If you’ve ever wished someone had given you five minutes of their time when you were starting out, or if you’d like five minutes of someone else’s time now, sign up, share it, and help us build something useful.

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Issue 132 - May 2026

SEVENSEAS Travel Magazine — No. 132 May 2026

Issue No. 132 of SEVENSEAS Travel Magazine, May 2026. Twelve stories on coral recovery, polystyrene-free marinas, UNESCO biosphere reserves, ocean acoustics, Peace Boat at sea, the Edges of Earth expedition, and a Brazilian campaign asking what a flag looks like without blue or green.

SEVENSEAS Travel Magazine cover for issue No. 132, May 2026, featuring Vanuatu and the lead stories of the issue

Welcome to issue No. 132 of SEVENSEAS Travel Magazine. This month we follow recovery on a Caribbean reef, a marina trial that could end polystyrene in our harbours, and a UNESCO report reframing 2,260 protected places as one planetary network. We sit with the Director of Peace Boat US, return to the Edges of Earth expedition after three years at sea, listen to the ocean through hydrophones, and meet a campaign in São Paulo asking what a Brazilian flag looks like without blue or green.


The SEVENSEAS Mentor Network: Build Your Community

SEVENSEAS Mentor Network, connecting marine professionals across generations

A new initiative connecting marine professionals across generations, pairing emerging conservationists with seasoned mentors to build the kind of community many wished they had at the start of their careers. [Read more]

Three Years on Earth’s Edges, an Expedition Reflects

Andi Cross meets Marie Rite on the shore of Little Bay, an Edges of Earth expedition portrait

After three years circumnavigating the planet’s most remote coastal communities, Andi Cross reflects on what an expedition teaches you about belonging, the people you meet, and the edges where the ocean still feels wild. [Read more]

No Blue, No Green: Droga5 Reframes the Ocean Crisis

No Blue No Green campaign by Droga5 Sao Paulo for SOS Oceano Marinho, the Brazilian flag stripped of blue and green

Droga5 São Paulo and SOS Oceano Marinho launch a campaign that strips the blue and green from the Brazilian flag, making the disappearance of healthy oceans impossible to look away from. [Read more]

Sounds of the Ocean: From Inspiration to a Movement

A swimmer suspended in a halo of bubbles beneath the ocean surface

A yoga teacher’s encounter with sound becomes a project mapping the acoustic life of the ocean, weaving hydrophone recordings, music, and listening practice into a tool for ocean awareness. [Read more]

King of the Seaducks, Enduring Sign of Chesapeake Winter

Biologist Donald Webster watches the crimson-headed canvasback return to the Chesapeake, the largest estuary in the United States, asking each winter whether the king of seaducks will keep its court on the Bay. A field portrait of an iconic wintering species and the seagrass that sustains it. [Read more]

What HungerMap LIVE Reveals About World Fisheries

Boys preparing fishing nets in Butre, Ghana

A close look at the World Food Programme’s real-time hunger dashboard, what fisheries data is missing, why coastal communities slip between the cracks of food security tracking, and what better signal would look like. [Read more]

SeaKeepers Names Dr. Mark Luther Scientist Chairman

Jay Wade and Dr. Mark Luther of The International SeaKeepers Society

The International SeaKeepers Society opens a new chapter in ocean research leadership, with Dr. Mark Luther of the University of South Florida joining as its first Scientist Chairman of the Scientific Advisory Council. [Read more]

Salone del Mobile 2026 Stakes a Claim on Sustainability

A Matter of Matter installation at Salone del Mobile 2026, Milan

Milan’s design week leans into sustainability with A Matter of Matter, an installation that asks the design industry to take material accountability as seriously as form. [Read more]

After Bleaching, Little Cayman Shows Early Recovery

A butterflyfish swims above living staghorn coral on a Caribbean reef

Two years after the most extreme coral bleaching event on record, CCMI’s 2025 Healthy Reefs Report Card delivers the first quantitative signs that Little Cayman’s reefs may be turning a corner. [Read more]

UNESCO’s New Report Frames Conservation as a Network

Spreewald, a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve in Germany, where visitors travel by punted boat through forested waterways

The first cross-network report from UNESCO treats its 2,260 World Heritage Sites, Biosphere Reserves, and Geoparks as one planetary infrastructure for biodiversity, climate stability, and the communities that depend on them. [Read more]

Falmouth Trials the World’s First Concrete Pontoon

Pontoons and yachts moored at Falmouth Marina, Cornwall

Falmouth Harbour partners with Cornish marine engineers ScaffFloat to test what is believed to be the world’s first all-concrete marina pontoon float, a move to phase out polystyrene microplastics from leisure marinas. [Read more]

A Satellite AI Maps Ocean Currents Like Never Before

GOFLOW satellite-derived temperature gradient map of ocean surface currents

A new satellite-based AI from a University of Rhode Island team led by Dr. Nick Pizzo reveals ocean surface currents in unprecedented detail, sharpening our picture of how heat, nutrients, and plastics travel. [Read more]

Peace Boat US Director Emilie McGlone, In Her Words

MV Pacific World, Peace Boat’s flagship for global voyages and ocean action

On the MV Pacific World, training young leaders at sea, and how a global voyage becomes a platform for ocean conservation and the UN Sustainable Development Goals. [Read more]

[Contact Us Today — SEVENSEAS Media]

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Issue 132 - May 2026

SeaKeepers Welcomes Dr. Mark Luther as First Scientist Chairman, Marking a New Era for Ocean Research

The International SeaKeepers Society marks a historic milestone, appointing Dr. Mark Luther of the University of South Florida as its first scientist Chairman, succeeding Jay Wade and signaling a deeper scientific chapter for the yachting-led conservation organization.

Jay Wade and Dr. Mark Luther of The International SeaKeepers Society
Outgoing Chairman Jay Wade with incoming Scientist Chairman Dr. Mark Luther. Photo: SeaKeepers.

April 10, 2026. The Board of Directors of The International SeaKeepers Society has announced a leadership transition, extending its deepest gratitude to outgoing Chairman Jay Wade and welcoming Dr. Mark Luther as the organization’s first scientist Chairman, a historic milestone for the ocean conservation NGO.

During his tenure, Jay Wade provided steady, thoughtful leadership, guiding the organization through a period of growth while remaining anchored in SeaKeepers’ mission to advance oceanographic research, conservation, and marine education. A passionate advocate for the yachting and boating community, Wade championed a vision of transforming private vessels into platforms for scientific discovery, expanding the organization’s global reach and strengthening its role as a bridge between ocean science and the maritime industry.

A first scientist Chairman for SeaKeepers

Dr. Mark Luther brings decades of expertise in physical oceanography and maritime systems, alongside a lifelong connection to the water. He earned his Ph.D. in Physical Oceanography from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and currently serves as Professor and Director of the Center for Maritime and Port Studies at the University of South Florida’s College of Marine Science.

With over 30 years of experience supporting oceanographic observation systems, including longstanding work with NOAA’s Tampa Bay Physical Oceanographic Real-Time System, Dr. Luther has been at the forefront of integrating science with real-world maritime operations. His leadership extends across key regional and federal committees, where he collaborates closely with the U.S. Coast Guard, port authorities, and maritime stakeholders to address environmental challenges tied to marine transportation.

A dedicated member of the SeaKeepers community, Dr. Luther has served as Chair of the organization’s Scientific Advisory Council, helping to guide and elevate its scientific initiatives. He is also an avid boater and U.S. Coast Guard-licensed captain, having spent more than four decades navigating the waters of Tampa Bay and Florida’s west coast.

“With years of dedicated service to SeaKeepers, Mark brings a deep understanding of our mission to this role. It is exciting to see him step into the position of Chairman and help guide the organization forward.”

Jay Wade, outgoing Chairman, The International SeaKeepers Society

Dr. Luther’s appointment signals an exciting new chapter for SeaKeepers, one that deepens the organization’s scientific leadership while continuing to engage the global fleet in meaningful ocean research, education, and conservation.


About The International SeaKeepers Society. The International SeaKeepers Society works with the yachting community to take part in research, conservation, and educational efforts that advance the health of the ocean. Learn more at seakeepers.org or @seakeepers on social.

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Issue 132 - May 2026

Falmouth Harbour Trials the World’s First All-Concrete Pontoon Float to Replace EPS in Marinas

Falmouth Harbour is trialling the world’s first all-concrete marina pontoon, designed by Cornwall-based ScaffFloat, as a recyclable alternative to Expanded Polystyrene floats and a step toward cutting marine microplastic pollution.

Falmouth, Cornwall, UK. Falmouth Harbour is trialling the world’s first all-concrete marina pontoon float, designed and built by the team at ScaffFloat in neighbouring Penryn, in a first step to removing all Expanded Polystyrene (EPS) floats from its leisure and commercial operations.

The Harbour has pledged to move away from EPS products in the light of mounting evidence that polystyrene microplastics in the world’s oceans inflict serious damage on the marine environment and life within it. Polystyrene, globally used for its lightness and buoyancy, is made from fossil fuels, is virtually un-decomposable, and when it breaks down into microplastics can be ingested by marine life with devastating consequences.

“The amount of broken-up polystyrene around our creeks and rivers, particularly after this year’s storms, is awful to see and very hard to clean up without damaging the delicate ecology of our shorelines. Expanded Polystyrene fragments in the marine environment pose a serious ecological concern, as seabirds, fish, turtles and other fauna mistake EPS beads for food, which can cause internal injuries or death; entering the food chain poses health risks to humans as well.”

Vicki Spooner, Environment Manager, Falmouth Harbour

Inside the Reef Float: an inert, recyclable alternative to EPS

Penryn marine company ScaffFloat Ltd has tackled the challenge of finding alternatives to traditional pontoons by inventing the “Reef Float.” Their first commercial prototype, made entirely from concrete, has been undergoing trials beneath a Falmouth Harbour pontoon. ScaffFloat developed the new product as part of a business development project that received £284,787 from the UK Government through the UK Shared Prosperity Fund as part of Cornwall’s Good Growth Programme.

The Reef Float’s buoyant core is made using ultra-low-density waterproof concrete, instead of EPS foam, and the core is then cast inside a high-strength engineered concrete skin. In the highly unlikely event that a Reef Float ever failed, the materials would simply sit inertly as stone in the marine environment, whereas a cracked-open EPS float exposes its polystyrene foam core to the marine elements.

“We replaced a failing EPS pontoon float at Falmouth Harbour with a Reef Float, where it survived all that this January’s storms could throw at it. It’s what we would expect, of course, as we’ve designed it to be strong with an ultra-long life. But it’s also completely inert in the marine environment and 100 percent recyclable, so a game-changing alternative to the EPS floats currently used all over the world.”

Toby Budd, Founder and Managing Director, ScaffFloat

Local innovation, global stage

Local MP Jayne Kirkham, checking out the new Reef Float in Falmouth, called it “exactly the kind of innovation we want to see in Cornwall: local businesses developing practical but cutting-edge solutions to global environmental challenges. Cutting polystyrene pollution from our waters while creating skilled jobs is a win for our marine environment and our economy. I’m proud to see government funding helping projects like this lead the way.”

“Falmouth Harbour has made the conscious decision to move away from EPS foam pontoons in all our operations, and it’s fantastic that our neighbours at ScaffFloat are the first company to offer a plastic-free alternative. Reef Floats are easily installed, in situ, on a rolling basis, as and when we need to replace old EPS floats, and they have a zero-cost, 100 percent recyclable end-of-life disposal. It’s another tremendous example of Cornish ingenuity, and we look forward to working with them into the future.”

Miles Carden, CEO, Falmouth Harbour

The Reef Float team has been shortlisted for the Innovation Award at Marina26 in Australia this May, with an invitation to attend and present at the biggest marina conference in the world, demonstrating what a major issue EPS has become for the marina industry and legislative authorities alike.

Australia itself lost more than 1,000 pontoons in the 2022 Queensland floods, where they broke up and created an environmental disaster known as the “White Spill,” with the ocean and beaches covered with EPS balls that were almost impossible to clear up.


Learn more. For more information on Reef Float and parent company ScaffFloat, visit scafffloat.co.uk/reeffloat. For more on Falmouth Harbour, including its wide-ranging environmental initiatives, see falmouthharbour.co.uk.

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