Team Malizia have set a new 24 hour monohull distance record, edging past the mark set earlier Friday – 640.91 nm by Team Holcim-PRB…
Cup Spy – May 25-26: Kiwis start Match Racing
Updated story covering all teams activity for May 25-26. Emirates Team New Zealand completed a match race practice session off Takapuna Beach, on Friday. The other teams sailed from Barcelona, Mallorca and Cagliari…
Sailors have a new way to stop killer whale attacks
More than 250 yachts have been damaged, and three sunk, since the attacks in the Strait and off the coast of Spain and Portugal were first reported in 2020.
A female orca named White Gladis…Sailors have a new way to stop killer whale attacks
Guillaume Verdier: 640 miles can be beaten…
It’s hard to believe that a sailing boat can cover a total distance in 24 hours that would equate to travelling from Paris to Alicante in southern Spain, the home of The Ocean Race, but that is what Holcim-PRB has now done…
Records fall in The Ocean Race
(May 26, 2023; Day 6) – Skipper Kevin Escoffier and his Team Holcim-PRB have shattered the existing 24-hour distance records for monohull boats.
First to fall was The Ocean Race 24-hour Speed Record Challenge sponsored by Ulysse Nardin, previously set at 602 nautical miles by Simeon Tienpont’s VO65 Team AkzoNobel in the 2017-18 race.
A few hours later and the outright monohull record, 618 nautical miles set by the 100 footer Comanche in 2015, had been eclipsed. As of 0630 UTC today, Team Holcim-PRB pushed the 24 hour distance further to 640.9 nautical miles.
The previous high speed for the 2023 race was on Leg 3 when 11th Hour Racing Team posted a 544.63 nautical mile run over the 24 hours, which at time improved on the distance for a monohull up to 60-feet over the record set in 2017 of 536.81 nm. All record times must be submitted to the World Sailing Speed Record Council for ratification.
Conditions have been near perfect for making a record run – downwind reaching, in 25-27 knots of wind, with a relatively flat sea state.
“It’s a great boat and I’m really pleased! It’s not every day you break a record like this,” said Escoffier. “I’m really happy for the whole team after what happened on the fourth leg (the team retired after dismasting). We don’t know what’s going to happen next, even if we’re going to do everything we can to win this leg. In any case, I think it’s a great reward for the whole team.”
The run has brought the team within a couple miles of 11th Hour Racing Team who continue to lead the leg…
11th Hour Racing Team has activated Hazard warning
11th Hour Racing Team has activated its Hazard Button to alert Race Control that they had hit something…
Cup Spy – May 24: Robertson joins the Swiss?
Four teams sailed on Wednesday, May 24 from Auckland, Mallorca, and Cagliari. Alinghi Red Bull Racing christened their new AC40-7, and took it for a tow-test off Barcelona. Top Match Racer and SailGP helm, Phil Robertson (NZL) was again present…
Formula Kite Youth European & Masters Worlds day 1
After four races in warm winds of 8 to 16 knots, some clear patterns are already beginning to emerge in the three world-class kitefoiling contests taking place in Torregrande, Sardinia…
Record conditions for The Ocean Race
(May 25, 2023; Day 5) – It’s going to be an interesting 24-hours in The Ocean Race as the leading trio find themselves in record-setting conditions with strong downwind reaching angles and ‘relatively’ flat water.
11th Hour Racing Team, at the head of the fleet, is already posting a run of over 550 miles for the past 24 hours, a number that is currently going up with each hourly position report.
It was on Leg 3 when 11th Hour Racing Team posted a 544.63 nautical mile run over the 24 hours, which improved on the distance for a monohull up to 60-feet over the record set in 2017 of 536.81 nm.
“We’ve got plenty of wind, there’s a bit more pressure than forecast, and it’s still a little bumpy, but we got out across the front earlier than the other guys which seems to be a gain for now,” said 11th Hour Racing Team’s skipper Charlie Enright. “And we just had 31 knots as a 10 minute average, which isn’t nothing!”
Team Holcim-PRB and Team Malizia, in second and third place respectively, are striving to match that pace. This is a flat out drag race, with limited tactical opportunities…
Alinghi Red Bull Racing splash second AC40
Alinghi Red Bull Racing, the Swiss challenger for the 37th America’s Cup has received its second AC40…
Orca attacks continue off Spain
(May 25, 2023) – Killer whales severely damaged a sailing boat off the coast of southern Spain, reports the local maritime rescue service, adding to dozens of orca attacks on vessels recorded so far this year on Spanish and Portuguese coasts.
In the early hours today, a group of orcas broke the rudder and pierced the hull after ramming into the Mustique on its way to Gibraltar, prompting its crew of four to contact Spanish authorities for help, a spokesman for the maritime rescue service said.
The service deployed a rapid-response vessel and a helicopter carrying a bilge pump to assist the 66 feet vessel, which was sailing under a British flag, he added. The Mustique was towed to the port of Barbate, in the province of Cadiz, for repairs.
Earlier in May, the sailing yacht Alboran Champagne suffered a similar impact from three orcas half a nautical mile off Barbate. The ship could not be towed as it was completely flooded and was left adrift to sink. – Full report
Cup Spy – May 23: Kiwis hit 57kts
Emirates Team New Zealand had an early start, with a poor forecast which didn’t eventuate. The Kiwis set a new top speed of 57kts – achieved in a bear-away. Alinghi Red Bull Racing broached twice in top end conditions – self recovering each time…
going to heaven
Somehow, Badalona in Spain seems to be the pasture where the former steed assemble and await an unceremonious death. Kialoa (iv) is there with the bungs on the outside and hardware-store-grade plywood epoxied on the transom. I always think someone will be nostalgic enough to rejuvenate these yachts.
The Arctic grade anchor tells the tale of trials and tribulations and aborted ambitions… – anarchist Valentin.
Title inspiration thanks to The Pixies.
World Sailing Show goes behind the scenes
May’s World Sailing Show focuses on Tom Slingsby’s Team Australia in San Francisco as SailGP season three honours are decided…
RORC Vice Admiral’s Cup 2023 concludes
Racing at the Royal Ocean Racing Club Vice Admiral’s Cup concluded on Sunday 21 May after a second superb day of racing in The Solent. The north easterly breeze wicked up to 20 knots at times, but was once again variable in speed…
America’s Cup: Join ETNZ for a dual AC40 training
Join America’s Cup Defender, Emirates Team New Zealand on their Chase Boat as they move away from the AC75 test program and onto two-boat testing with the two AC40’s…
The Ocean Race enters Atlantic Ocean
(May 22, 2023; Day 2) – The Ocean Race commenced yesterday in light winds following stormy weather the day prior which postponed the In-Port Race and had it incorporated into the fifth leg start from Newport, RI. While Team Malizia snatched the In-Port victory from hometown team 11th Hour Racing, it is the later that now leads the fleet across the Atlantic Ocean.
After being squeezed between two Marine Mammal Exclusion Zones for much of last night, the US-flagged team has shown an extra gear as the race course opened up. With the 11th Hour, Malizia, and Holcim-PRB near even at the edge of the zone, American skipper Charlie Enright’s squad has been a couple knots faster with speed over 20 knots on the second day of the double-points leg to Aarhus, Denmark.
Sea conditions could get worse as the boats move into a favorable Gulf Stream current that will be pushing against the northerly winds in the forecast to dramatically disrupt the sea state…
Skipper MACIF wins
Even in the the inky darkness there was no mistaking the exuberant mix of sheer joy, relief and final deliverance for Skipper MACIF duo Charlotte Yven and Loïs Berrehar when they crossed the finish line off Gustavia, Saint Barths…
candid camera
Not a fun day for this Club Swan 50 at the Swan Sardinia Challenge. Thanks to Max Ranchi for the candid shot.
470 Europeans in San Remo, Italy day 5
Anton Dahlberg and Lovisa Karlsson (SWE) didn’t sail as well as they would have liked today, but the Swedes still hold a slender lead at the 470 European Championship in San Remo, Italy…
2018 Baja Ha-Ha Sailors — Where Are They Now?
Ten days ago the 2023 Baja Ha-Ha opened its cabin doors to registrations, and with 64 boats now joining the southbound rally later this year, we’re coming back to our earlier post, “Five Years On: Where are the 2018 Baja Ha-Ha Sailors Now?”
Ha-Ha Poobah Richard Spindler had emailed the 2018 fleet to ask where they are now and what they have been doing since arriving in Mexico all those years ago. Here’s part two of their responses.
Steve Schafer, Shooting Star, Hylas 42, Napa:
“After the Ha-Ha I crossed over to Mazatlán and headed down to La Cruz for New Year’s. I departed the Puerto Vallarta area in March 2019 and headed to La Paz for a month. Then we went up the eastern coast of Baja, finally crossing over to San Carlos, where we left the boat for the summer.
“In November 2019 we crossed back over the Sea of Cortez to Agua Verde, then worked our way down to Cabo. From Cabo we motored north to San Diego, passing the 2019 Ha-Ha fleet as it headed south. I was upgrading Shooting Star for the Pacific Puddle Jump when COVID hit, and ended up selling the boat to a young couple. I now live in Prescott, Arizona. But I miss the ocean and Mexico.”
Eddie Harrison, Harizon, Dufour 310, Chicago:
“Both our 2017 and 2018 Ha-Ha’s were great. We continued south after 2018, through the Panama Canal, to Providencia, Roatán, Mexico again, Cuba, into Miami and trucked the boat back to San Francisco. The Ha-Ha was fabulous and set it all up.”
David Hostvedt, Severance, Wauquiez 43, Seattle:
“Although we planned to go farther, we fell in love with the people, the food, the weather, the beaches, the culture, and the community of Mexico. We got as far as Barra de Navidad, Mexico, and decided to make it our home. We moved off the boat in 2021, rented for awhile, then bought a house here on the water in 2022. Barra is our forever home.
“Many thanks to the Ha-Ha for helping us make it down here. We wouldn’t have had the confidence to do it without you.”

Marshall Peabody, Tenacity, Roughwater 33, Seattle:
“I enjoyed the Ha-Ha very much. My boat has remained in Mexico — La Paz or Nuevo Vallarta — ever since. I spent a season doing the mainland coast to Zihua, another doing Baja to Bahia Concepción, and spent the COVID year in Paradise Marina. In the meantime, I have loved exploring Mexico, taken many trips inland, found crewing opportunities that took me to Nicaragua, did the ‘Bash’ on a boat returning to San Diego, and last season ‘Puddle Jumped’ with another Ha-Ha boat, Aldabra, to the Marquesas and Tuamotus.
“The Ha-Ha launched me into the sailing lifestyle that I’d dreamed about for decades! Thanks for helping get me where I’ve always wanted to be!”
Donald and Roz Franks, Ramble on Rose, Caliber 40 LRC, San Francisco:
“We are still cruising. We spent the COVID years in Mexico, then left Chiapas in November this year. We’ve stopped at El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica, and just arrived in Panama. We will most likely go through the Canal next year to begin exploring the Caribbean side.
“My advice to cruisers is to get Starlink, it’s a game-changer. It makes so many things easier, even for those of us who don’t work. Good luck with the Ha-Ha 29.”

Kent and Cathy Powley, Coquette, Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 45, Seattle:
“We continued cruising all the way to Panama, then west to the Galápagos, French Polynesia and Tonga. We’re now in Hawaii and will head to Alaska next.
“Cruising Mexico and Latin America is great. We particularly enjoyed Bahia del Sol in El Salvador. Learn at least a few words of Spanish and use them, as it goes a long way with the locals.”
Derick and Barb Sindell, Stray Cat 2, Lagoon 380, Vancouver, BC:
“We’re still out cruising aboard Stray Cat. After three seasons in Mexico and a year off due to COVID, we decided to head for Panama. We left Puerto Peñasco in October ’22 and we just arrived in Vista Mar Marina in Panama a couple of days ago. We plan to transit the Canal in early May so we’ve got a few weeks to explore the islands and Panama City. We will leave the boat on the hard in Shelter Bay and go home to Vancouver for five months.”
Steven and Karen Kittle, Parrot Head, Beneteau Oceanis 35.1, Point Richmond:
“We had a blast on the Ha-Ha!
“We are now in the process of selling our home and moving out of the Bay Area to San Diego. We plan to sail out of San Diego and explore farther south, and maybe even do another Ha-Ha.
“And, as an aside, our neighbors up the hill took off with the 2021 Ha-Ha fleet. ‘Just a few months,’ they said. They still haven’t come back!”

Sign-ups and all the details can be found here: Baja Ha-Ha XXIX
The post 2018 Baja Ha-Ha Sailors — Where Are They Now? appeared first on Latitude38.
Global Solo Challenge update
American Curt Morlock will be on the starting line of the first edition of the Global Solo Challenge, with the first start scheduled for next August in A Coruña, Spain, followed by a sequence of staggered starts according to boat performance…
Runaway Dinghy!
The Cruising Club of America (CCA) is a collection of 1,400 ocean sailors with extensive offshore seamanship, command experience, and a shared passion for making adventurous use of the seas. Their experiences and expertise make them, collectively, one of the most reliable sources of information on offshore sailing. In partnership with SAIL, the CCA is sharing some of this hard-won know-how in
SAIL e-newsletters.
This story was shared with CCA member Brian Guck by a friend in Pulpit Harbor, Maine. The author, an experienced sailor and mountaineer, had just returned from a successful trip to the summit of Mt. Everest. He wished to remain anonymous but still pass along what he learned from this incident.

I hopped into our motor dinghy and headed out to the boat to do some routine chores. Once completed, I got back in the dinghy and headed back to the dock.
It was low tide. I needed to navigate shallow water to get to my usual tie up spot. I did what I frequently do in this situation, turning around to lift the idling motor into the shallow water setting. The new motor we bought this year doesn’t raise and lower quite as easily as our old one did, so I had to jiggle the motor to get it to lock into position. As I did this, the motor tiller brushed the side of the dinghy and jerked into full throttle. The dinghy surged forward, then swerved violently to starboard. I was thrown from the dinghy into the shallow water.
Outboard motors are sold with emergency cutoff switches, commonly called kill switches. These are stretchy rubber lanyards intended to be worn around the operator’s wrist, with the other end connected to a switch on the motor. If the operator is inadvertently thrown into the water, the lanyard pulls the switch and immediately shuts off the motor.
Finn Europeans Day 4 – Nemeth closes on first Finn European title
Domonkos Nemeth of Hungary took three more race wins on day 4 of the Finn Europeans in Csopak, Hungary…
AC teams pack up for the move to Spain
The 37th America’s Cup is taking a significant step toward its 2024 competition as teams pack up from their remote training sites for the move to Barcelona, Spain. Challenger NYYC American Magic. Both teams are shipping their AC75 and AC40 boats, with the USA team looking to resume training in the Mediterranean by the third week in June…
2022 recreational boating statistics
During the National Boating Safety Advisory Committee meeting on May 11, 2023 (NBSAC), the U.S. Coast Guard released a summary of statistics on calendar year 2022 recreational boating incidents, revealing that there were 636 boating fatalities nationwide in 2022, a 3.3 percent decrease from the 658 deaths in 2021.
From 2021 to 2022, the total number of accidents decreased 9 percent (4,439 to 4,040), and the number of non-fatal injured victims decreased 15.9 percent (2,641 to 2,222).
Alcohol continued to be the leading known contributing factor in fatal boating accidents in 2022, accounting for 88 deaths, or 16 percent of total fatalities.
The data also shows that in 2022:
• The fatality rate was 5.4 deaths per 100,000 registered recreational vessels. This rate represents a 1.8 percent decrease from last year’s fatality rate of 5.5 deaths per 100,000 registered recreational vessels. (In 1971, when the Safe Boating Act was first passed, the fatality rate was 20.6 deaths per 100,000 registered recreational vessels.)
• Property damage totaled $63 million.
• Operator inattention, operator inexperience, improper lookout, excessive speed, and machinery failure ranked as the top five primary contributing factors in accidents.
Where the cause of death was known, 75 percent of fatal boating incident victims drowned. Of those drowning victims with reported life jacket usage, 85 percent were not wearing a life jacket.
“Most incidents occur in benign conditions—calm waters, light wind, and good visibility—under which you may least expect to end up in the water, which is why it is critical to wear a life jacket and engine cut-off switch at all times as they are designed to save your life,” stated Captain Troy Glendye, Chief of the Coast Guard’s Office of Auxiliary and Boating Safety. The Coast Guard reminds boaters to ensure life jackets are serviceable, properly sized, correctly fastened, and suitable for your activity…
Racing Recap: The Ocean Race Leg 4
The Ocean Race‘s 5,550-nautical-mile sprint from Itajai, Brazil, to Newport, Rhode Island, concluded last week, complete with Gulf Stream storms, the intense equatorial heat of the doldrums, and a double dismasting. Managing Editor Lydia Mullan breaks down the highs and lows of Leg 4 in the latest episode of Racing Recap…
470 European Championship – Day 2 Wacky Races
Day 2 of the 470 European Championship delivered some wacky races but ultimately no new results on the scoreboard in San Remo, Italy…
Finn Europeans Day 3 – Nemeth takes back the lead
Domonkos Nemeth from Hungary, takes back the lead of the Open and U23 Finn Europeans at the halfway stage…
Skippers set for 2023-24 Clipper Race
Following a selection process, the eleven skippers for the 2023-24 Clipper Round the World Yacht Race are set to lead teams of non professional sailors from all walks of life around the globe.
With nationalities from the UK, Uruguay, Portugal, South Africa, and the Netherlands, the skippers appointed to lead their teams around the world have collectively sailed over a million nautical miles and bring a vast range of experience and expertise.
With varied skills among the crew, teams are faced with Mother Nature’s best and worst conditions as they race across the world’s oceans. Therefore, the skippers leading the teams need to be of the highest caliber to ensure a safe and successful race…
More Florida funding for American Magic
Pensacola is on its way to having a permanent home for America’s Cup challenger New York Yacht Club American Magic after Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed off on a $3.9 million grant from the Florida Job Growth Grant Fund on May 15, 2023.
That grant will go toward the first phase of the scaled-back $53-million Triumph Gulf Coast project request the city submitted last year, which consisted of seeking funds to build a $15 million Center for Maritime Excellence at the Port of Pensacola…
Hang Ten crowned J/70 Spring Med Cup Champion
Last weekend ended the third and final event of the J/70 Spring Mediterranean Cup in the waters of Palma de Mallorca, hosted by the Real Club Nautico de Palma…
Nemeth dominates tough opening day at Finn Europeans
Hungary’s Domonkos Nemeth won both races on the opening day of the 2023 Open and U23 Finn Europeans at Csopak on Lake Balaton…
North Sails’ innovation leads The Ocean Race 22-23
Global leader in sailmaking and performance clothing, North Sails, is proud to again be the Official Sail Supplier at the Ocean Race 2022-23…
yes i can…
A good read from the NY Times…
Shortly after dawn on Sept. 30, 2021, Richard Jenkins watched a Category 4 hurricane overrun his life’s work.The North Atlantic storm was a behemoth — 50,000 feet tall and 260 miles wide.
Wind circled the eye wall at 143 miles per hour; waves the size of nine-story apartment buildings tumbled through a confused sea.
Transat Paprec Day 15
As the leading trio sail south west this Sunday afternoon, two weeks exactly since the Concarneau start of the Transat Paprec mixed tow handed race to Saint Barth’s, they are crossing in front of fourth placed Guillaume Pirouelle and Sophie Faguet…
69F Youth Foiling Gold Cup Act 2, overall
The Antiguan crew, Rum Runners, snatched the overall victory in La Grande Motte on the very last double points race against the Dutch from DutchSail JAJO…
Mark Foy, More than just the father of 18 footers
Mark Foy fathered the sport of 18 footer racing when he staged a regatta, featuring his spectator-driven concept, on Sydney Harbour in January 1892, but Foy was far more than a ‘one-trick pony’…
Podium complete for Golden Globe Race
Les Sables d’Olonne, France (May 12, 2023) – Michael Guggenberger (AUT) started the 2022-23 Golden Globe Race with a few impediments compared to other entrants in the GGR.
First, he is coming from land-locked Austria when most of the other entrants grew up on the seaside. Second, he started sailing only 12 years ago when most other GGR competitors started sailing at an early age from dinghies, going into keelboats later, some raking up significant mileage on the way.
He did, however, compensate for his relative inexperience with inextinguishable passion and dedication to make it to the GGR start line, and complete his race on his Biscay 36 Nuri in 249 days. He was welcomed at the finish by winner Kirsten Neuschäfer (ZAF), second place Abhilash Tomy (IND), and Chichester Class winner Simon Curwen (GBR) (GBR) as well as hundreds of enthusiasts on the channel and the stage.
Originally planning to enter the 2018 GGR on an Endurance 35, he later switched rides and bought a ketch-rigged Biscay 36 from Antoine Cousot (FRA), who raced later rebuilding and preparing it with his Team Manager Stefan Weigel, turning the graceful cruiser into a bullet-proof yacht that could weather the worst conditions…
Close Call in the Sea of Cortez

“I’m gonna lose you! Don’t let go…. Don’t let go!” Those were the words that I kept pleading to my husband as he clung to the Lifesling while I used all my adrenaline and grit to pull him back onboard. How we ended up there is a cautionary tale.
Like most days in the Sea of Cortez, the sea state was stable, the winds were mild, and the sky was bright blue with no foul weather forecast for days. It was a perfect day to make the quick 20-nautical-mile hop from Isla Coronado to Bahia San Juanico on La Vida Gypsea, our Catana 471 catamaran.
So, we lifted the anchor, hoisted the sails, and began doing our regular daily tasks. First, my husband, Kurt, started cleaning the lines and taking out the fishing rods, carefully choosing the proper lures, as we were running low on protein in the freezer. I began charging up our camera gear to get ready to film the daily events. By trade, we are content creators with a growing YouTube channel, and the day’s task for me was to complete a Q&A episode for our subscribers…
Follow Us!