Argia is the brain we'd put inside every Lasai — reading the sky, the sea, the fleet, and you. So every morning, your boat would already know what today wants.
Every morning, every owner asks the same thing. The answer lives, today, in four apps and a guess — sun, swell, AIS, calendar, instinct. Argia would gather it all, add the things you can't easily check — the chiringuito hours, the dolphin sightings, the cove that's about to fill — and tell you, plainly, where today is best spent.
Cabrera, leaving 09:30. Northeast breeze settles by mid-morning, sea half a metre, clear sky through 16:00. You'd be the second boat at anchor. Home with energy to spare for a sunset cocktail — or stay, the moon is full and the wind dies after dusk.
Hour-by-hour solar irradiance. Cloud type. Wind direction and strength. Swell height and period. Tide times. Sunrise, sunset, golden hour. Moon phase. Saharan dust events. UV. Weather that shifts at sixteen hundred, calm that arrives by eleven. Argia sees the day before it arrives — and the next ten beyond it.
Where every other boat is right now. Which anchorages will be quiet at one o'clock and which will be full. Whether the chiringuito at Mondragó opens today. Where the rest of the Lasai fleet has gone — and what they found when they got there. Dolphin pods reported at dawn. Marine reserves and customs windows. The sea is busy. Argia keeps the map.
Your hull's true drag, learned voyage by voyage. Your battery's real curve, not the brochure's. Your panels' actual yield as they age and as they soil. And further in: the coves you return to, the routes you've never repeated, your weekend rhythm, your dinner at six. Three years in, your boat knows things about your weekends that you don't.
The boat speaks. The morning briefing, the range you can trust, the anchor that doesn't drift unwatched. Every voyage is logged, every voyage teaches. The advisor is patient — it takes one season to learn your weekends, two to know your hull's true numbers. By spring of year two, the brain is yours.
By now the boat knows itself better than the brochure does. Energy-optimal autopilot: name the cove and the time, the boat modulates speed continuously against live sun, current, and swell to spend the fewest possible kilowatt-hours getting there. Auto-anchor in the bays you visit most. Auto-return at sunset to the home berth. You do less; the boat does more, and quieter.
Five hundred Lasais on the water. Every one a sensor. The Mallorca weather model is locally corrected by the fleet. The 22GL hull model is the median of two hundred actual hulls. Cove quality emerges from anchor durations across thousands of weekends. Supervised passages: the boat ferries itself to Mahón overnight; you fly Vueling and step on at sunrise. The moat is no longer the boat. It's everything the fleet has learned.
Lasai's 22GL has its real-world range independently verified — 109 nautical miles, certified by Bureau Veritas. That is the foundation. Argia would make it compound: every voyage teaching the boat, every boat teaching the fleet, every Lasai launched making every other Lasai smarter. The opportunity is yours to build.