See the Rescue Swimmer nearly get to the boat before seeing the wave. Duck diving deep under the wave.
See the black dot of a man being thrown from the boat.
Not visible is the next stages.
Final aftermath. A successful rescue…
Posts in category Article
Amazing Rescue Swimmer Video!
Winners return for 50th Rolex Fastnet Race
With the Rolex Fastnet Race this year celebrating its 50th edition, many past overall winners and winning boats are returning…
The Ocean Race Leg 2 Day 17
For nearly 4700 nautical miles, the five IMOCA teams competing in leg 2 of The Ocean Race have been dueling south from Cabo Verde towards a finish line just off the V+A Waterfront of Cape Town…
SailGP returns to San Francisco for Grand Final
Tickets for the SailGP Season 3 Grand Final | San Francisco are now on sale, giving fans the opportunity to once again experience the high-adrenaline conclusion to the SailGP Season 3 Championship on San Francisco Bay on May 6 – 7, 2023…
Corpus Christi YC win St. Petersburg YC Trophy
This year’s winner of the St. Petersburg Yacht Club Trophy was Corpus Christi Yacht Club (Corpus Christi, TX) for hosting the 2022 J/24 World Championship…
tidal wave
Holy hell, these are incredible!
Australia SailGP Team winning formula
Tom Slingsby’s Australia Sail GP Team has dominated the league, winning the championship in the first two seasons, and currently leads Season 3. Slingsby reveals his insight into his team’s winning formula:
The origins of the Australia SailGP Team started back in 2011 when Sam Newton, Kyle Langford, Kinley Fowler and myself all joined Oracle Team USA in the America’s Cup within a month or two. At this point in time, the America’s Cup had changed into fast-paced, extreme catamaran sailing and there was a real push for the next generation of talent to come through and sail these boats. All four of us got hired at the same time and went through both the 2013 and 2017 campaigns together.
During the 2017 campaign, we also became good friends with Jason Waterhouse, who was with SoftBank Team Japan. Having the experience of sailing together throughout the America’s Cup meant that when SailGP came along, putting the team together was easy. These are guys I’ve sailed and raced with for years, and some are my best friends, so we’re not going to annoy or frustrate each other off the water.
For sure, there are some great Australian sailors out there, including Jimmy Spithill, Nathan Outteridge, Iain Jensen and Luke Parkinson, but I wanted to go with people I knew, and knew well. When we kicked off racing in SailGP with the addition of Jason Waterhouse, we knew that we had something pretty cool going on. Two and a half seasons later and we’re still at the top of the league and we’re still the ones to catch.
Our communication on board is a sign that we’ve sailed together for a long time – we don’t speak very much. We know what each other are thinking – sometimes I can say something that’s not very clear but my teammates know what I mean. Those are little split seconds where you can gain on your opposition. That’s not something that other teams can shortcut – they can look at all our data and numbers and watch our footage but they haven’t sailed together for ten years like we have. We’re going to try and keep that dynamic going and hopefully that’s something that will make us hard to catch.
We also have the most sought-after substitute athlete in the fleet – Ed Powys is the unsung hero on our team. His grinding is unbelievable and he’s super fast around the boat. At the Great Britain Sail Grand Prix in Season 2, we subbed him into the flight control position and won the event and that was his first ever event doing flight control.
This season, we’ve had Kyle Langford out twice – once for the birth of his second child and once for a back injury – and we’ve chucked Ed onto the wing. We got a fourth and a third in those events so Ed has done an unbelievable job at keeping our consistency high. He absolutely gives us an edge and all the other teams know it…
Cup Spy Feb 8 : Brits test boat catches fire
Cup Spy Feb 8 : Brits test boat catches fire after double capsize…
Balboa YC begins RFI for 56th Governor’s Cup
Balboa Yacht Club has posted all the information necessary for requesting an invitation (“RFI”) to the 56th Governor’s Cup International Youth Match Racing Championship, July 24-29, 2023…
Curmudgeon’s Observation
“To the mathematician who thought of the idea of zero, thanks for nothing.”
For stories from February 7th: https://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/2023/02/07/
Change in intensity for the 18s
In the midst of the lead up to the 73rd JJ Giltinan World 18ft Skiff Championship next month, the Australian 18 Footers League staged a three-race short-course series last Friday evening on Sydney Harbour…
First in best dressed for Airlie Beach Race Week
Entry is open and the Notice of Race online for the 35th edition of Airlie Beach Race Week, but with marina berthing limited, necessitating a cap of 100 yachts/multihulls, organisers at WSC urge all prospective competitors to enter now…
Golden Globe Race – No escaping this beast the size of Brazil
The Golden Globe Race leaders face the biggest low pressure encountered by the fleet so far is crossing their path en route to Cape Horn…
Cup Spy Feb 7 : Serious racing begins
Emirates Team New Zealand took the 2024 America’s Cup tension up a notch, putting on some match race practice for its two AC-40’s, and then having a drag race back to the team base, in downtown Auckland…
The Ocean Race Leg 2 Day 15
The fleet has pushed south into the Roaring 40s and close to record-breaking speed runs…
Iceboating tragedy in Michigan
The iceboating community got a jolt as the Detroit Free Press delivers difficult news from Michigan:
An 81-year-old Independence Township man died after crashing his sleek, 27-foot iceboat on frozen Pontiac Lake.
It appears that Dan Campbell was moving fast across the ice in his one-person craft and may have hit his head with enough force to kill him, despite wearing a protective helmet and face shield.
The sheriff’s office said Campbell was on the easternmost part of the lake in White Lake Township just before noon on February 5 when his iceboat crashed, about 100 yards from shore, and investigators were looking for answers to what might have led to the crash. Other iceboaters were on the lake at the time of the crash.
The sheriff’s office did not identify what kind of iceboat Campbell was in. Campbell was taken to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead. A medical examination on February 6 was expected to determine exactly how Campbell died.
Michigan, which is well-known for its ice sailing because there are so many frozen lakes with unobstructed wind, has several ice yacht clubs, including the Detroit Ice Yacht Club, West Michigan Ice Yacht Club, and Gull Lake Ice Yacht Club.
Golden Globe Race leaders face a big storm
With 20,000 miles and five months at sea, 70% of their voyage is complete. The leading yachts are starting to show little signs of fatigue, requiring constant maintenance, just as they are undertaking the most difficult part of the course…
botched
We’ve known Tom Hirsch for quite a few years, mostly through Flying Tigers. We wish him well.
Tom Hirsh has spent his life on the ocean, competing in sailing races and running Harbor Sailboats out of Shelter Island. But at 68 years old, Hirsh’s days on the open water are over after a February 2022 cataract surgery forced him to abandon ship and left him delegated to a dark window-tinted room, unable to cope with even a minor amount of light.
Hirsh says that during the surgery an infection known as toxic anterior segment syndrome (TASS) likely from dirty instruments or polluted eyewash entered both eyes, permanently preventing him from dilating his pupils to adjust to the light, essentially rendering him blind. More here.
Escoffier: “It could be a tight finish”
It’s been a long, exhausting but also thrilling second leg of The Ocean Race and the pattern is not going to change in the final stages, with the five IMOCA crews bracing themselves for one last push to Cape Town…
Hawkes swoops for victory at The Tiger
The trapeze boats had their moment to shine, but no one could match the consistent performance of Simon Hawkes’s K1 keelboat which dominated the Tiger Trophy to become the latest winner in the Seldén SailJuice Winter Series…
1948 London Olympic sailor Felix Sienra dies at 107
The world’s oldest surviving Olympian, Felix Sienra, died peacefully in his sleep 30 January 2023 at the age of 107…
The Ocean Race Leg 2 Day 14: Hurry up to slow down
The leaders are pushing hard to make miles towards Cape Town, but they are sailing towards a black hole of light winds that may yet have a final say…
Australian Flying Dutchman Championship 2023
In early February, Metung Yacht Club sailor, Mark Henger, and his New Zealand crewman, Matt Bismark, successfully defended their national title in the Australian International Flying Dutchman 2023 championship race series at Geelong…
Brazil sinks ship, pollutes the ocean
Significant attention prior to the Rio 2016 Olympics was brought upon the pollution in Guanabara Bay, the venue for sailing along with, swimming, canoeing, and rowing.
Guanabara Bay’s contamination was well known before Rio de Janeiro was awarded the Olympics in 2009, but the local Brazilian government “promised” to clean up 80 percent of the waste and pollution before the games. That never happened.
Once again, the country has gained troubling attention as it sank a decommissioned aircraft carrier in the Atlantic Ocean off its northeast coast despite warnings from environmentalists that the rusting 1960s French-built ship would pollute the sea and the marine food chain.
According to Reuters, the 32,000-tonne carrier had been floating offshore for three months since Turkey refused it entry to be scrapped there because it was an environmental hazard and the ship was towed back to Brazil.
The carrier was scuttled in a “planned and controlled sinking” late on February 3, the Navy said in a statement, that would “avoid logistical, operational, environmental and economic losses to the Brazilian state.”
The hull of the Sao Paulo was sunk in Brazilian jurisdictional waters 217 miles off the coast where the sea is 5,000 meters deep, a location chosen to mitigate the impact on fishing and ecosystems, the Navy said.
Federal public prosecutors and Greenpeace had asked the Brazilian government to stop the sinking, saying it was “toxic” due to dangerous materials, including 9 tons of asbestos used in paneling.
“The sinking of the aircraft carrier Sao Paulo throws tons of asbestos, mercury, lead and other highly toxic substances into the seabed,” Greenpeace said in a statement. It accused Brazil’s Navy of neglecting the protection of the oceans…
Top 10 Best Boats Review: Balance 442
Features include: • Daggerboards for upwind performance • Option for Integrel power generation • Versa-Helm serving upper and protected lower helm
When you do multiple boat tests in a short period of time the experiences can blur, so when a design sticks out, you know it’s notable. And the robust little sister to last year’s Balance 482—the newly launched 442—stands out for a multitude of reasons, not least because sailing her on a breezy autumn Chesapeake Bay day left me fantasizing about taking one to the horizon and back, lacking for nothing, and having a helluva lot of fun.
The smallest sibling in the Balance Catamarans family, this 44-footer is the work of designer Anton du Toit, built in Cape Town, South Africa. The design borrows heavily from her bigger sisters (the 482 and the 526) with features like a sleek cabintop and slightly reversed bows. The hulls, deck, and coachroof are a foam-cored, vacuum-bagged construction with polyester inner and vinylester outer skins. E-Glass and carbon fiber reinforcement are used in high-load and structural areas, and crash boxes are in the bows. The model is available with fixed keels as well as with tapered daggerboards. Most owners spec the boards for better upwind performance…
but weight, there’s more
It might just be a coincidence, but the release last Thursday by the Rating Office of the Royal Ocean Racing Club of its “updated” Measurement Manual for IRC handicaps brought the protracted debate over the rating of Sydney-Hobart winner Celestial immediately to mind.
Maybe that was their intention. The notion that the RORC could now feel the need to bolster its own credentials as a rating agency is difficult to avoid. The wording of the manual is a curious mixture. Some sentences read as self-congratulation; others more like attempts by the RORC to relieve themselves of direct responsibility for the veracity of the ratings they themselves finally determine.
Thus, on the one hand, we have this:
“The IRC Rating Authority takes great care in checking the data supplied, even for standard certificates … The measurer’s responsibility is to achieve a fair and accurate result, rather than the optimum result for the particular owner.”
But, on the other:
“The international IRC rating rule has always been a self-measurement system, and official measurement is not a rule requirement unless the boat needs an Endorsed IRC certificate.”
The Notice of Race for the Sydney-Hobart does require, at 3.3 (a) (i)), that IRC boats may only enter if they have “a current, valid Endorsed IRC Certificate”. That compulsory endorsement is…
MC38 Series – Act 1 Day 2
Three-time running MC38 National Champions Lazy Dog skippered by part-owner Quentin Stewart out of Middle Harbour Yacht Club proved too consistent to be beaten at Act 1 of the MC38 Season over the weekend out of the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia…
Globe40 penultimate leg has started
At 15:00 hours local time today, the GLOBE40 skippers took the start of the 7th and penultimate leg of the event, which will lead the fleet to the island of Grenada in the West Indies…
The Ocean Race Leg 2 – Changing Places
The leading pack of Team Malizia, Team Holcim and 11th Hour Racing are battling for leader bragging rights…
18ft Skiff Club Championship race 13
With just two more championship races to be sailed before the 73rd JJ Giltinan World 18ft Skiff Championship is held, today’s Burrawang Village Hotel-sponsored Australian 18 Footers League Club Championship took on more importance than ever…
Making the turn in The Ocean Race
(February 5, 2023; Day 12) – It was near midnight UTC last night when boats in The Ocean Race fleet started to make their first significant move to the east towards Cape Town. Within an hour, all five teams had gybed to the east and pointed their bows towards Africa.
It’s a very close race now with 11th Hour Racing, Team Holcim-PRB, Biotherm, and Team Malizia within 25 miles of the lead and spread across about 35 miles from north to south. More gybes to the south are expected over the coming hours and days as the teams zig-zag south and east to navigate around a high pressure system with light winds.
“We’re sailing into a high. There’s more rotation in the centre of the high but a bit less pressure,” said 11th Hour Racing Team skipper Charlie Enright as he laid out the options relative to his closest competition, Holcim-PRB and Biotherm. “We want the best of both worlds.”
Watch the decision making process on board 11th Hour Racing Team: click here
The outlier is GUYOT environnement – Team Europe who made their move over 160 miles to the north, once again looking to cut the corner on their rivals. However, that move is living up to the fear as light winds had them gybe south for better pressure, soon sliding to the bottom of the rankings.
The team endured more hardship when their A2 spinnaker ripped while sailing at about 15 knots of speed. “We were surprised because it was not that windy. We don’t know why, but the sail tore almost from top to foot,” explained skipper Robert Stanjek.
“We stopped completely and put the boat upwind, then we caught the pieces of sail that were flying around the foil and the big piece that was floating in the water. There was maybe ten per cent of the sail left at the top.
“We managed to get everything back and not leave anything in the water. We also had to pull the sheets out from under the foil. It took us about 8 or 10 minutes to get everything back on board. A record time. We then set the A3.”
Because the number of sails is limited to 11 for the entire race, and the repair may only be carried out with a maximum replacement of 25 percent of the sail, the team hopes to be able to repair the spinnaker in Cape Town.
All the teams have also been deploying drifter buoys that will gather and transmit data to help the scientific community studying climate impacts on the ocean and aiding with weather forecasting. This is an area of the Atlantic Ocean that isn’t well-serviced by commercial shipping, so this is a meaningful contribution from the race teams.
• Watch Biotherm send out their drifter buoy: click here
• Watch Team Holcim-PRB deploy their drifter buoy: click here
Leg Two Rankings at 1200 UTC
1. 11th Hour Racing Team, distance to finish, 2378.3 miles
2. Team Holcim-PRB, distance to lead, 9.7 miles
3. Biotherm, distance to lead, 15.2 miles
4. Team Malizia, distance to lead, 26.3 miles
5. GUYOT environnement – Team Europe, distance to lead, 82.0 miles
Initially, race management predicted a 14-15-day passage time for Leg 2, with the leading boats expected to arrive in Cape Town on or around February 8 or 9. Now the ETA is February 12.
Race details – Route – Tracker – Teams – Content from the boats – YouTube
IMOCA LEG 2 CREW LIST
11TH HOUR RACING TEAM (USA)
Charlie ENRIGHT (USA) Skipper
Simon FISHER (GBR)
Jack BOUTTELL (AUS/ GBR)
Justine METTRAUX (SUI)
Amory ROSS (USA) – OBR
BIOTHERM (FRA)
Paul MEILHAT (FRA) – Skipper
Anthony MARCHAND (FRA)
Amélie GRASSI (FRA)
Damien SEGUIN (FRA)
Annne BEUGÉ (FRA)
TEAM HOLCIM-PRB (SUI)
Kevin ESCOFFIER (FRA) – Skipper
Sam GOODCHILD (GBR)
Tom LAPERCHE (FRA)
Susann BEUCKE (GER)
Georgia SCHOFIELD (NZL) – OBR
GUYOT ENVIRONNEMENT-TEAM EUROPE (FRA/ GER)
Robert STANJEK (GER) – skipper
Sébastien SIMON (FRA)
Anne-Claire LE BERRE (FRA)
Phillip KASÜSKE (GER)
Charles DRAPEAU (FRA) – OBR
TEAM MALIZIA (GER)
Will HARRIS (GBR) – skipper
Yann ELIES (FRA)
Rosalin KUIPER (NED)
Nicolas LUNVEN (FRA)
Antoine AURIOL (FRA) – OBR
Leg One Results
IMOCA
1. Team Holcim-PRB, winner leg one, finished – 5d 11h 01m 59s
2. 11th Hour Racing Team, finished – 5d 13h 50m 45s
3. Team Malizia, finished – 5d 16h 35m 21s
4. Biotherm, finished – 6d 8h 47m
5. GUYOT environnement-Team Europe, finished – 6d 12h 20m 37s
VO65
1. WindWhisper Racing, finished – 5d 16h 35m 21s
2. Team JAJO, finished – 6d 4h 52m 52s
3. Austrian Ocean Racing-Team Genova, finished – 6d 19h 13m 54s
4. Ambersail 2, finished – 6d 21h 49m 04s
5. Viva Mexico, finished – 8d 13h 50m 25s
6. Mirpuri Foundation Racing Team – Retired from leg
IMOCA: Boat, Design, Skipper, Launch date
• Guyot Environnement – Team Europe (VPLP Verdier); Benjamin Dutreux (FRA)/Robert Stanjek (GER); September 1, 2015
• 11th Hour Racing Team (Guillaume Verdier); Charlie Enright (USA); August 24, 2021
• Holcim-PRB (Guillaume Verdier); Kevin Escoffier (FRA); May 8, 2022
• Team Malizia (VPLP); Boris Herrmann (GER); July 19, 2022
• Biotherm (Guillaume Verdier); Paul Meilhat (FRA); August 31 2022
The Ocean Race 2022-23 Race Schedule:
Alicante, Spain – Leg 1 start: January 15, 2023
Cabo Verde – ETA: January 22; Leg 2 start: January 25
Cape Town, South Africa – ETA: February 9; Leg 3 start: February 26 or 27 (TBC)
Itajaí, Brazil – ETA: April 1; Leg 4 start: April 23
Newport, RI, USA – ETA: May 10; Leg 5 start: May 21
Aarhus, Denmark – ETA: May 30; Leg 6 start: June 8
Kiel, Germany (Fly-By) – June 9
The Hague, The Netherlands – ETA: June 11; Leg 7 start: June 15
Genova, Italy – The Grand Finale – ETA: June 25, 2023; Final In-Port Race: July 1, 2023
The Ocean Race (formerly Volvo Ocean Race and Whitbread Round the World Race) was initially to be raced in two classes of boats: the high-performance, foiling, IMOCA 60 class and the one-design VO65 class which has been used for the last two editions of the race.
However, only the IMOCAs will be racing round the world while the VO65s will race in The Ocean Race VO65 Sprint which competes in Legs 1, 6, and 7 of The Ocean Race course.
Additionally, The Ocean Race also features the In-Port Series with races at seven of the course’s stopover cities around the world which allow local fans to get up close and personal to the teams as they battle it out around a short inshore course.
Although in-port races do not count towards a team’s overall points score, they do play an important part in the overall rankings as the In-Port Race Series standings are used to break any points ties that occur during the race around the world.
The 14th edition of The Ocean Race was originally planned for 2021-22 but was postponed one year due to the pandemic, with the first leg starting on January 15, 2023.
Source: The Ocean Race
Cup Spy Feb 3 : American Magic smashes 50kt mark
Arguably the fastest AC75 yet, American Magic’s Patriot proved the point again today in Pensacola when she consistently broke the 50kt barrier sailing in winds of up to 25kts.
Why is suddenly cruising the world so popular?
I understand the appeal of sailing; it’s one of my earliest memories. In a way, my…
Lineup confirmed for 58th Congressional Cup
The world’s top match racing skippers will return to Long Beach, Calif. April 18 to 22, 2023 for the 58th Congressional Cup regatta – presented by Long Beach Yacht Club, and a founding event on the prestigious World Match Racing Tour…
Cup Spy Feb 1/2 : Five teams in the spotlight
What happened in the Cup – Feb 1/2, 2023. French K-Challenge is launched in Paris. Kiwis start their twin AC-40 testing program. Brits get up to speed in Barcelona, American Magic runs out of breeze. The Swiss have a good session in Barcelona…
Entries open for the 2023 Round the Island Race
The Island Sailing Club (ISC) has announced that entries are now open for the 2023 edition of Britain’s Favourite Yacht Race, the Round the Island Race, which is being held on Saturday 1st July 2023…
Changes to fan-owned SailGP team
The SailGP league’s pursuit of a fan-owned team got off to a slow start that has required extending deadlines for it to be confirmed when the fourth season begins on June 17-18 in Chicago, IL
Announced in November 2022, the timeline initially required 2000 people to invest $2000 US by January 15, 2023. However, finalizing all of the required investor and subscription documents took longer than anticipated, which delayed the opening until January with a new target closing date of the end of March.
Additional changes to becoming a SailGP team owner also increased the required investment for fans. Here’s the latest update from SailGP:
things that make you go hmmm…
It appears that long-time sailing and Vendée Globe sponsor Banque Populaire has dropped its sponsorship of female IMOCA skipper Clarisse Cremer. Having just purchased arguably the best current boat in the fleet for her – Charlie Dalin’s APIVIA – Clarisse looked poised to turn in a better result than in her first Vendée Globe where she finished a somewhat underwhelming 12th place on a non-foiling two-generation old boat.
Now, however, it looks like she won’t get that shot, at least not with Banque Pop. The reason? Motherhood, of all things, at least according to an Instagram post where the new mother shared her anger and frustrations with the world. Having missed the Route du Rhum, and also the Vendée Arctique (in which Nico Lunven replaced her), Clarisse had sacrificed a couple of valuable opportunities to gain qualification miles in the IMOCA Globe Series to start a family.
Despite having nearly two full seasons and a handful of opportunities left to potentially qualify for the next Vendée Globe, the top brass at Banque Populaire have now dropped the popular female skipper due to it being too risky that she may not qualify for the next Vendée Globe; a risk that the company was reportedly unwilling to take.
Whether this is the real reason for Banque Pop dropping Clarisse, or merely just a convenient cop-out with abysmal optics is up for debate. As always, our forums were on it within minutes. What do you think? Nothing to see here, or is misogyny on full display?
America’s Cup: Two boat testing returns
Auckland, NZL (February 2, 2023) – America’s Cup Defender Emirates Team New Zealand became the first campaign for the 2024 Match to commence a two boat testing program with crews today onboard AC40s on Auckland’s Waitemata Harbour.
Team members for the 3.5 hour session was the now familiar crew of Peter Burling and Nathan Outteridge helming with Blair Tuke and Andy Maloney trimming on boat #1. Liv MacKay swapped port side driving duties with Leonard Takahashi while Josh Junior was on the starboard helm on the second AC40 with Sam Meech and Marcus Hansen in the trimming seats.
It didn’t take long for the competitiveness of the sailors to show, engaging in some match-race action. “We were quickly into it,” noted Junior. “Our team was just getting used to the boat and next minute Pete, Nath, Andy and Blair jumped into windward of us and we were straight into a line up which was really exciting and a huge credit to the whole team to be able to get to this point having two boats on the water.”
Coach Ray Davies noted the benefits of the two boats squaring off. “The boats were engaging so well from the outset and as a result you could definitely see some instant gains in communication between the guys and girls onboard, obviously keeping check on the other boat’s performance and moves which is really important as far as match racing goes…
Orient Express now French America’s Cup Challenger
The Accor hotel group has committed to K-Challenge for the 37th America’s Cup naming its Orient Express brand as title partner of the official French challenger, which will be known as Orient Express Team…
Follow Us!