Toutes les versions de cet article :
[English][français]
Leg 1 winner at the helm of his his Manuard deisgn, Entreprendre Durablement, has still the race in hands when crossing the Cape Verde Islands. After the Canaria islants and before the doldrums, the 32 years Breton sailor passed the archipelago close to the direct road which goes to Salvador de Bahia. Sailing at 7 knots, he is few milles away from Thomas Ruyant and Henri-Paul Schipman. In the serie division, Charlie Dalin, second of leg 1, has a large lead over Ricardo Apolloni, 22 milles, and Francisco Lobato…
All sailors who have at one time or another known the vicinity of the islands of Cape Verde will tell you, you must be aware in there. At first, you cross Sal, a welcoming island, flat as a hand. You leave it portside and down sail south confident. You overpass Boa Vista, Praia, and there you will see Mount Fogo. You Jibe 90 degrees to avoid the becalmed. And the anxiety begins. How far should I go from it ? Am I far enough ? Then I finally should I go ahead south ? Therefore, most skippers sail away from this trap by going the further west possible. Bertrand Delesne (Entreprendre Durablement) was not afraid. He headed to it frankly as Corentin Douguet did in 2005. Then he turned a little west extending his route very shortly.
The Cape Verde’s funnel ! And in the end, ultimately, Cape Verde just recentered the fleet and the previous options are no longer so decisive as they should be. And the gaps are still much the same : Thomas Ruyant (Faber France) is 20 miles, Henri-Paul Schipman (Maisons de l’Avenir Urbatys) 25 miles, Fabien Despres (Soitec) 39 miles, Nicolas Boidevezi (Défi GDE) 60 miles. But behind those who have also opted for a crossing in the center of the Cape Verde islands have yielded nothing either. They are here, almost edge to edge as Stéphane Le Diraison (Cultisol-Marins sans Frontières), Olivier Avram (Cap Monde 2), Sébastien Picault (Kickers), François Cuinet (Plan Jardin), are. They all prepare themselves to face the biggest piece of the second stage the famous and feared doldrums. On Friday, it was 12° North. 24 hours later it was 10° North. This announces a nice jibes game.
If Charlie Dalin (Cherchesponsor-charliedalin.com) keeps the pressure and heads to the centre of Cape Verde, behind are the Italians Ricardo Apolloni (My Vie pour Mapei) and Luca del Zozzo (Corradi), the Portuguese Francisco Lobato (ROFF TMN) and Xavier Macaire (Masoco Bay) that sail on parallel roads. The endurance race is announced, and perhaps, it will become a sprint race. And in this game, it seems that Lobato has one of the best boats. And Macaire, a former dinghy sailor and excellent helmsman, is the best able to tickle the Portuguese in a edge-to-edge race. That announces ten days of great
and exciting racing.
Protos : – 1. Bertrand Delesne (Entreprendre Durablement) à 1945 milles de l’arrivée
– 2. Thomas Ruyant (Faber France) à 20,29 milles
– 3. HP Schipman (Maison de l’Avenir-Urbatys) à 25,21 milles
– 4. Fabien Desprès (Soitec) à 38,86 milles
– 5. Nicolas Boidevezi (Défi GDE) à 60,73 milles…
Séries : – 1. Charlie Dalin (Cherchesponsor-charliedalin.com) à 2032 milles
– 2. Ricardo Apolloni (Ma Vie pour Mapeï) à 22,53 milles
– 3. Francisco Lobato (ROFF TMN) à 39,54 milles
– 4. Luca Del Zozzo (Corradi) à 46,2 milles
– 5. Xavier Macaire (Masoco Bay) à 48,51 milles
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 (…)
Expected in the middle of Thursday night, the conclusion of the first leg of the 24th edition of La Boulangère Mini Transat (1,350 miles from Les Sables d’Olonne to Santa Cruz de La Palma) for the Proto category ultimately took place after 9 hours, on Thursday morning. The doldrums, with no wind, made their appearance on the final fifteen miles (…)
With late starter Jim Schofield from Ireland arriving safely in Marina Rubicon Lanzarote on the 10th of November, all entrants of this eventful inaugural qualifier are now gathered in Lanzarote (Spain), including Class Globe 5.80 Class founder Don McIntyre.
The Mini 6.50 has finally touched the water and is foiling. The boat is currently undergoing testing conducted by the yard Knierim Yachtbau in Kiel, Germany.
If you needed proof about how well you can control and understand your boat, you just had to sit back and watch the last miles of Ian Lipinski’s race this morning between the islet of Cabri and the finish line of the Mini-Transat La Boulangère. After a final gybe, the skipper of Griffon.fr hurtled along under large spinnaker before opting for a (…)
Race after race, the Mini Transat has always maintained its popularity. For this 2017 edition, entrusted to the Collectif Rochelais pour la Mini Transat, the race will host a full contingent as the number of applicants signed up for the adventure already exceeds the 84 places made available by the organiser. Unquestionably, it is this loyalty (…)
La jauge Mini pourrait évoluer dans les prochaines années. En dehors du débat sur l’autorisation des mâts en carbone dans la division Prototypes, s’est aussi posée lors de la dernière assemblée générale la question sur les bout-dehors en Série. Les membres de la classe se sont, là encore, positionné en faveur d’une réflexion plus approfondie. (…)
In the french version of SeaSailSurf.com, you can read Sébastien Magnen, Pierre Rolland, Ollivier Bordeau and Denis Glehen’s answers about the possible change in the prototype division of the mini 650 class rules. This time, it is to Leo Voornevelt to answer to thoses question.
Leo followed the last Transat 650 Charente Maritime Bahia. As (…)
Un deuxième défi français pour la coupe de l’America ! Est-ce vraiment possible alors que le team actuel, Le Défi peine à trouver un budget pour rejoindre Auckland ? C’est en tout cas ce que pensent les Kandler père et fils. Appuyés sur leur société K-Yachting, ils lancent K-Challenge. Un cas à part dans l’histoire de la Coupe en France.
Le jeune Anglais Alex Bennett convoyait le monocoque jaune ex-Aqua Quorum quand il a été contraint d’abandonner son bord après que le système hydraulique qui fait pivoter la quille ait donné de graves signes de faiblesse.
14th December 2001, 29 26 09’ N 26 03 49’ W : At 23.00 GMT Alex Bennett, 25-year-old solo yachtsman, abandoned his Open 50 racing yacht ‘One Dream One Mission’ to the elements.
Like the other skippers of Open 60 monohulls, the American sailor Bruce Schwab has done his inversion test for his new Ocean Planet. An important moment for the skipper :
Après Sébastien Magnen et Pierre Rolland, deux architectes navals, Ollivier Bordeau, un constructeur, voici l’avis d’un spécialistes des calculs de structures. Denis Gléhen est responsable des calculs chez HDS (Hervé Devaux Structures) à Brest. Il a travaillé sur les études de Club Med, de différents trimarans de 60 pieds et dernièrement de (…)
Une bonne prise sur le pont de Sill Plein Fruit. Photo : G. Le Cléac’h
Trois monocoques sont actuellement en convoyage retour vers la France. D’un côté, Sill Plein Fruit, l’Open 60 victorieux de la Transat Jacques Vabre rentre aux mains de Gaël Le Cléac’h et son équipage, accompagné par celui de Dominique Wavre. D’un autre, Adrien, le monocoque ‘no limit’ de 25 mètres de Jean-Luc Van Den Heede, qui poursuit sa (…)
Le patron du chantier naval Latitude 48°24’ répond, à son tour et sur le ton de l’humour, sur l’opportunité d’ouvrir la jauge des 650 prototypes aux tubes en carbone.
Grant Dalton doit maudire la rafale de 45 nœuds qui a couché Amer Sports One la veille de son arrivée à Sydney. Projeté à l’intérieur du bateau dans une chute magistrale, alors qu’il était entrain de cuisiner (fait exceptionnel), Dalton souffre de deux côtes cassées ainsi que de plusieurs fractures aux vertèbres qui pourraient l’empêcher de (…)