Two For One
Posted by Julian on Saturday Nov 15, 2008If you, like me have started to get the winter blues, sailing is off the agenda until spring, and you’ve read and re-read all your sailing magazines. Your well thumbed books on heroic adventures of around the world sailing are on their last legs and have been read to death. Then worry not, because this month sees the start of not one, but two single handed circumnavigations for you to follow.
Last weekend saw the start of the 2008/2009 Vendee Globe. 30 Skippers left dry land and slipped their moorings for last time this year. For the British among us you may be interested to know that their are 7 British skippers among the hopefuls. Although for one of them, Alex Thompson on Hugo Boss, the adventure has ended after only 3 days following a collsion with a fishing vessel just before the race which caused substantial damage, followed by what appears to be another collision during the race of an unknown object below the water line which caused the boat to be holed and take on water. That said, there are still plenty of British contenders to follow, including Mike Golding whom I met at the Southampton Boat show this year. I wish them all the very best of luck.
If that wasn’t enough, today a very young Mike Perham ,aged just 16 years old, cast off from Portsmouth on a voyage which could see him being the youngest yachtsman to sail single handed around the world. The current record is held by an Australian who completed the journey at the age of 18.
So what will the lone skippers face on this journey of approximately 21,600 miles. They leave for an adventure which won’t see then touch dry land again for the next 3 to 4 months, possible more in the case of Mike Perham. First they head off south, down the Atlantic Ocean and through the squalls and calms of the Doldrums at the equator. Once in the South Atlantic they will make for the southern tip of Africa and the Cape of Good Hope. Here they will head east. This marks the entrance to the Southern Oceans and is where the fun really begins. The sea here is uninterrupted by landmass for the entire circumference of the globe. Because of this and the the continuous flow of low pressure systems from the west, waves of up to 60 foot high are common place. With ice cold seas, icebergs and being thousands of miles from land, this is not the place to get things wrong. Next is the formidable and mythical Cape Horn. Here there is a bottle neck as the seas force there way through the narrow gap between the southern most tip of South America and Antarctica. This point is notorious for having probably the most violent seas on the planet. It is estimated that gales occur on around 200 to 250 days a year. Once past Cape Horn, the boats head north into the South Atlantic again and onto the homeward stretch. However, the game is not yet over. The boats and skippers alike are battered and bruised and nothing must be taken for granted. There are no prizes for not finishing so the boats must be nursed home at last.
If you want to follow these events you can vist their websites at Vendee Globe and Sail Mike










