Sitting in a boatyard, forgotten by most, was a vessel that had seen better days. Her hull was compromised. Her systems were gone. To most, she was beyond saving — a relic destined for scrap. But someone saw something else. Not what she was, but what she could become.
Over years of careful work, the vessel was stripped back and rebuilt — plank by plank, system by system. Every element was designed with intention: modern marine electronics, sustainable materials where possible, and a layout built for gathering, storytelling, and celebration. What emerged was not a restoration. It was a reinvention.
Loaded onto the deck of a catamaran, Seven Fathoms will make its crossing — over 500 nautical miles of open Caribbean water, from the boatyard to Grand Cayman. It's not a delivery. It's a voyage. One that echoes the seafaring traditions of the islands themselves.
When she arrives, Seven Fathoms will take her place off the coast of Seven Mile Beach — a floating bar, a gathering point, a vessel with a story. Not a theme park attraction. Not a gimmick. A real ship, with a real history, offering something the island has never seen before.
The Caribbean was shaped by pirates — not just as outlaws, but as figures of defiance, ingenuity, and freedom. Seven Fathoms draws from that legacy, not to glorify, but to remember.
The islands have their own deep maritime history — from turtle fishing to trade routes to the stories passed between generations of seafarers. This is part of that thread.
Seven Fathoms is writing its own story — from the rebuild to the crossing to the arrival. Every chapter is real. And the next one hasn't been written yet.
The story is still being written.
Be part of it. Join the crew and follow the voyage.

© 2026 Seven Fathoms — A Cayman ePirate Experience. All rights reserved.