When word got out about the Golden Fleece quest, every Greek hero wanted to go. Sure, it would be
dangerous, but this was the all-star event of a generation. It was like the World Cup, the Olympics,
the Super Bowl and an all-you-can-eat tour of Dylan’s Candy Bar rolled into one.
To make the trip to Colchis, Jason needed the fastest, most cutting-edge trireme ever built. It would
have to withstand pirates, enemy navies, hurricanes and sea monsters, and its onboard soft-serve ice-
cream dispenser could not break down.
The best boat maker in Greece, a guy named Argus, volunteered to build the ship. Athena herself
drew up the blueprints. The ship had fifty oars, which was more than any other Greek ship at the time.
Its keel was designed to handle the shallowest water without running aground and to sail the open
ocean without capsizing. The interior had all the bells and whistles: leather seats, extra legroom,
handcrafted catapults that hurled only the finest boulders. The ship even had a voice-recognition
interface thanks to its magical prow, which Athena personally carved from a sacred oak tree from the
grove of Dodona – the second-most important oracle in Greece.
Apparently the priests of Dodona spent their time dancing around the forest, looking for omens in
the shadows and the leaves, waiting for the magical trees to speak to them. Sounds a little fishy to me,
but as soon as the Argo’s figurehead was installed the ship acquired its own voice. The magic prow
didn’t always feel like talking, but sometimes it gave the sailors advice, or issued prophecies from
the gods, or told Jason where the nearest Chinese restaurants were. Jason wanted to call the
figurehead Siri, but there were trademark issues.
Once the ship was finished, Argus decided to name it the Argo, after himself, because he was
humble that way.
Now all Jason needed were some Argonauts, aka Folks Brave and/or Stupid Enough to Sail on the
Argo. He had no problem getting volunteers. Even Hercules showed up, and everybody was like,
‘Whoa! He should totally be the captain!’
But Hercules was like, ‘Guys, come on. This is Jason’s party. I just had a hundred pages of stuff
about me.’
And the others agreed that it would be overkill.
Hercules brought along a new sidekick named Hylas, who was his Boy Wonder in training. Argus
the shipbuilder signed up, since he knew the Argo better than anybody. Orpheus the musician joined
the crew, because it was going to be a long voyage and they would need a good playlist. The great
huntress Atalanta joined, too, being pretty much the only woman who could hang out with forty-nine
smelly sailors without getting accosted or throwing up.
The strangest recruits were probably the Boreads – Calais and Zetes, two sons of Boreas, the god
of the north wind. The brothers looked human, but they had giant feathery purple wings, so you really
didn’t want to sit behind them on the rowing benches. The fact they could fly was very helpful,
though. They could dart off to the nearest convenience store if any of the Argonauts forgot a
toothbrush or deodorant.
Who else? I’m not going to name the whole crew, but most of them were demigods. There were
two sons of Zeus, three sons of Ares, two sons of Hermes and one son each of Dionysus, Helios,
Poseidon, Hephaestus, and a partridge in a pear tree.