If memory serves, he arrived on Ogygia with Calypso.
The laestygons ateOdysseus crew and destroyed his whole fleet except for his ship.
The laestygons ateOdysseus crew and destroyed his whole fleet except for his ship.
After Zeus destroys Odysseus' ship, Odysseus drifts on a raft for ten days until he arrives on Calypso's island. The rest of his crew drown. After Odysseus sets sail on a raft from Calypso's island, he drifts for twenty days until he reaches Scheria, the land of the Phaecians, and is forced to swim to shore, drifting for three days towards the island before he reaches it.
on Calypso's island.
Odysseus survived the destruction of his ship and the loss of his men by clinging to a piece of driftwood and drifting to shore after his crew was killed by the vengeful sea god Poseidon. After reaching land, he encountered the goddess Athena, who aided him in his journey home. His resourcefulness and resilience, along with divine assistance, enabled him to navigate the challenges he faced on his long journey back to Ithaca.
Odysseus and his escaped crew go first back to the rest of the ships. After sacrificing the large ram, and feasting on the meat, they set sail and arrive at Aeoli, home of Aeolus.
Odysseus' crew did. They believed Odysseus was hiding treasure from the rest of the crew.
The last of Odysseus' crew drown after Zeus splinters the boat with lightning.
In the Odyssey, Charybdis is a dangerous whirlpool that threatens to swallow ships. She impacts Odysseus and his crew by forcing them to navigate carefully to avoid being sucked in and destroyed. Her presence adds to the challenges and dangers they face on their journey home.
Odysseus does not take part in the killing of the cattle of the sun, only his crew members do. Therefore, while his ship is destroyed and his crew killed, as prophecised he survives by hanging on to a tree branch to avoid the whirlpool.
he made his crew put wax earplugs in their ears. he himself wanted to hear the sirens beautiful music, so he asked his crew to tie him to the mast, the foundation of a sail. Odysseus's crew ties Odysseus very tightly to the mast, and disarmed him. When the were going past the sirens, Odysseus was screaming and yelling at his crew to let him go to the sirens. The crew obviously did not hear him because they had the wax ear plugs. That is how Odysseus saved his crew from the sirens.
Charybdis is a dangerous sea monster in the Odyssey that creates a whirlpool, threatening to swallow ships whole. Odysseus and his crew must navigate carefully to avoid being pulled in and destroyed. Charybdis's presence adds to the challenges and dangers that Odysseus faces on his journey home, testing his leadership and strategic skills.