The Southern Ocean is dishing up its usual dose of difficult conditions and they are taking their toll on the 12 strong Around Alone fleet after 8 days of racing from Cape Town, South Africa on their way to Tauranga, NZL. Swiss skipper Bernard Stamm on Bobst Group-Armor Lux and Brad Van Liew on Tommy Hilfiger Freedom America lead their respective classes as they track East towards the Kerguelen Islands in 25 - 30 knots of South Westerly blow.
Christmas may be round the corner but the strong winds and cross seas continue to lash the yachts and have now taken their first casualty. John Dennis, Canadian skipper of Open 50 Bayer Ascensia, announced this morning that he was turning back for Cape Town. "I have diverted and I am now heading to Cape Town as the bearings on the shaft for the alternator and ballast pump have ceased," he wrote in a brief email to Race HQ. "I feel that it is unsafe to proceed if I am not able to charge batteries or pump water ballast. Once I get to port I will decide then what the best course of action might be." Race rules require the yachts to be sailed between each port for the competitor to remain an official entrant.
Early this morning Tim Kent on Everest Horizontal reported in to have lost power from all his batteries and to be unable to start the engine : "That means I will have no electrical power. I will see if solar panels can provide enough power to start engine once daylight arrives." Without any means of charging his batteries Kent would be forced to stop to make repairs. A few long hours passed until a second email came through. "The motor is running and I have electricity again. If I had not installed those solar panels in Brixham it would be another story altogether."
The rest of the fleet are undergoing a formidable baptism by the Southern Ocean rollers as a frontal passage rolls over the fleet and they are hit by a residual wave train from the South West. "It’s rather scary right now," wrote Bruce Schwab on Ocean Planet. "Wind gusts to 45 knots. Speed sometimes steady at 20 knots. Howl of keel is deafening. Consequences of wipeout nerve-wracking." Fortunately the wind is from behind and Bruce feels that these conditions are where Ocean Planet shines. "With the unstayed rig, I have up the main alone, 3rd reefed with the mast rotated and the sheet way out...no shrouds in the way ! I can sail a very low course at high speed and in great control."
Schwab is currently ahead of Italian Simone Bianchetti on Tiscali and 50 miles from 4th placed British skipper Emma Richards on Pindar, averaging a fraction of a knot faster in the last 8 hours. Interestingly he is the furthest North in Class 1 at 42 degrees latitude, happy to stay where the wind blows and his boat is on the best sailing angle, whereas leader Stamm is heading up to the Kerguelens from the bottom forties sailing towards North Westerlies as he goes over the top of the low pressure to the South.
Alan Paris’s report from BTC Velocity was even more to the point. "Two knockdowns to 90 degrees in the past 3 hours as wind dies to 30 knots from 40 yet sea state is way up !! All OK just a little messy." At the same time, this is adrenalin junkie stuff, and Paris managed to surf at a top speed of 22.1 knots on his little 40 footer : "front third of the boat out of the water and two large spumes of water rising 5 feet off either side of the mast. Awesome stuff !"
Several skippers are also learning what happens if you don’t tie down absolutely everything in the cabin : Schwab reported that : "on one spin out about half of my food containers flipped over dumping their contents all over. It took a while to repack all that (this time the lids are locked !)." Japanese skipper Kojiro Shiraishi on Spirit of yukoh described one knockdown : "At three in the morning, suddenly I experienced the terrible blow of a gigantic wave and we turned over. Completely pushed over sideways !!! Causing unfixed kitchen things to fall down on me. The chart table also got wet because of gully water. The Southern Ocean baptized me already !!"
The strong winds are forecast to moderate in the next 24 hours, and the next front is quite far to the west. This should allow the yachts time to regroup and to sort out the mess on board. We will keep you posted on John Dennis’s situation and bring you any important news as it happens.
After leaving Mondello, just north of Palermo, at midday on Tuesday, competition in the Maxi class, part of the 41 boat fleet in the annual Palermo-Montecarlo, was decided on Thursday. The IRC corrected time victory went to a first time winner, while one of the race’s most frequent competitors was again both first home and set a new race (…)
Alexis Loison and Jean-Pierre Kelbert’s JPK 1050 Léon has been crowned overall winner of the Rolex Fastnet Race. No other boat still racing on the 695 nautical mile course can catch the French doublehanded duo for overall honours in this, the 51st edition of the Royal Ocean Racing Club’s offshore classic.
The Royal Ocean Racing Club (RORC) is delighted to announce the Yacht Club de Monaco (YCM) as the winner of the 2025 Admiral’s Cup. After an intense battle during the RORC Channel Race, six inshore races in the Solent and the prestigious finale, the Rolex Fastnet Race, the Yacht Club de Monaco team is victorious. Runner-up for the Admiral’s Cup (…)
Volvo 70 Tschüss 2 (USA), owned by Christian Zugel and co-skippered by Johnny Mordaunt, has taken Line Honours in the West to East Transatlantic Race 2025 in an elapsed time of 07 Day 15 Hrs 29 Mins and 10 Secs. Tschüss 2 Crew : Christian Zugel, Johnny Mordaunt, Al Fraser, Andrew McLean, Campbell Field, Christopher Welch, Edward Myers, Fredric (…)
It has been a long time coming after spending much of the 2024 season finishing second and even continuing this in the recent IMA Maxi European Championship, but finally Guido Paolo Gamucci’s Cippa Lippa X has won a race. On Saturday morning at 1012 off Marina di Punta Ala, the white-hulled canting keel Mylius 60 crossed the finish line of the (…)
The inaugural McIntyre Mini Globe Race (MGR) has officially set sail, and what a start it’s been ! The first leg from Antigua to Panama has already delivered drama, camaraderie, and a masterclass in offshore sailing in these Mighty Mini’s. With 15 ALMA Class Globe 580s battling it out over 1,200 nautical miles, the MGR is proving to be (…)
Corentin Douguet ou Peter Laureyssens ? Difficile de dire lequel des deux hommes s’est le mieux illustré en octobre 2005. Alors avantage à Corentin pour sa victoire au scratch, son nouveau record et sa première place en proto. Corentin Douguet, le vainqueur de la Transat 650 est donc le SeaSailSurfer d’octobre 2005.
Champion wakeboarder, Dan Nott achieved a world first today by becoming the fastest wakeboarder to be towed by a Volvo 70 racing yacht. Dan achieved speeds up to 20 knots as he was towed by ABN AMRO ONE, one of ABN AMRO’s two boats entering the Volvo Ocean Race.
C’est vendredi 28 octobre à 13h, 44 min et 30 sec que le belge Peter Laureyssens a passé la ligne d’arrivée devant le centre nautique de Salvador de Bahia au Brésil.
Il en a terminé avec la deuxième et dernière étape de cette Transat 650, qu’il remporte haut la main avec un temps cumulé de 27 jours, 4 heures, 2 minutes et 20 secondes.
A peine (…)
Alors que la flotte des meilleurs multicoques et monocoques de course au large de 50 et 60 pieds est rassemblée dans le bassin Paul Vatine du Havre et s’apprête à s’élancer vers Bahia (les 5 et 6 novembre prochains), le décompte de la Route du Rhum est déjà lancé. C’est précisément dans un an (le 29 octobre 2006) que le départ de la mythique (…)
Il remporte la Transat 650 quatre ans après sa 17e place
Vainqueur la nuit dernière au Brésil et nouveau recordman de la Transat 6.50 Charente Maritime Bahia en 24 jours et 21 heures (record battu de 4 jours et 16 heures), Corentin Douguet - après une nuit très courte - enchaîne avec son team les interviews entre Bahia et la France. Télévisions, radios et presse écrite donnent un retentissement (…)
Arrivée à Bahia dans la nuit du 26 au 27 octobre pour le vainqueur de la course
C’est à 0h22 heure de Paris jeudi 27 octobre 2005 que Corentin Douguet a coupé en vainqueur la ligne d’arrivée de la Transat 6.50 à Salvador de Bahia (Brésil). Sur son bateau de 6,50 mètres de long, E.Leclerc-Bouygues Telecom, il pulvérise le record de l’épreuve de plus de 4 jours et abaisse le nouveau temps-référence à 24 jours et 21 heures. (…)
A partir d’aujourd’hui et jusqu’au 20 décembre 2005, les maîtres de la vitesse en planche à voile, détenteurs du record du Monde de vitesse absolu à la voile sur 500 mètres, avec un run enregistré à 48,71 nœuds soit 91 km/h effectué au printemps sur les 500 mètres du Canal des Saintes-Maries de la Mer, passent à la vitesse supérieure. Björn (…)
Le dernier 650 d’Etienne Bertrand s’était fait remarquer lors de la Chrono 650 2004. Inkzone avait établi le meilleurs temps de référence. Mais ce prototype s’est rarement frotté à la concurrence. Ce sera par contre différent avec le futur 650 dessiné par Etienne qui devrait participer à la prochaine Transat 650 en 2007.
A new King has been crowned on the waters of Hamilton harbor. Australian James Spithill won the Investors Guaranty presentation of The King Edward VII Gold Cup match race championship, Sunday, beating the defending champion Russell Coutts in a thrilling decider 3:2.
Another "rowing girl" want to sail around the world solo and in the wrong way. She will start in 2006 and challenge the french rower Maud Fontenoy who will sail past Jean-Luc Van den Heed big aluminium monohull and current holder of the best time on this course in 122 days...