I won't be the only sailor leaving the northern hemisphere on a round the world trip through the Southern Ocean this fall. Every four years, the Vendee Globe yacht race sailors zoom around the world in a few months aboard the fastest monohulls in the racing world. The vessel of choice for the Vendee Globe is the Open 60, a long, wide, flat boat with a huge sail area and a tiny keel, designed exclusively for speed. Unfortunately, the characteristics that make Open 60's so fast also make them less seaworthy, and there are disasters of some kind every year. Nevertheless, the Vendee Globe is an exciting adrenaline rush for both the sailors and those following it ashore. The website for the race said:
In theory, the Vendée Globe is an utterly simple affair. Its fundamental principles come down to a few sentences, compared to which even the roughest logbook would seem sophisticated. A sailing race around the world, for singlehanders, without any stopover. That’s it. In theory at least, because beyond these words start great stories.
Official supplier of legends since 1989, this race has impressed the maritime world and the public in general, to the point where even the strongest superlatives seem unable to define it. The sea also has its mythical summit, created 15 years ago by a sailor, two times winner around the world (BOC Challenge, with stopovers), who refused to rest on his laurels. Philippe Jeantot wished to go further, to give a new dimension to the world of maritime adventure…
“Time, he wrote, is a necessary factor to attain perfect harmony with one’s sailboat. We had to forget about stopping. A round-the-world race, without stopovers or assistance, such were the conditions to reach the desired communion. For the first edition, we set off towards the unknown. None of the 13 sailors who crossed the starting line in 1989 had the experience of a solo journey exceeding 100 days”
On November 9th 2008, 20 navigators will set sails aboard their monohulls, heading towards the three great capes, marking the southern tips of the African continent, Australia and America. The Vendée Globe will start, for the 6th time, from the harbor of Les Sables d’Olonne, where it was born. And as far as the rest of the story is concerned… well, it’s up to the sailors themselves now.
My voyagewill be similar to the Vendee globe in many ways, but I will be at sea much longer in a considerably smaller boat. My voyage is one of length, not speed. Not to mention, a typical campaign for a round the world race costs millions of dollars, while my budget will not exceed $100,000.I want to show that anyone with some perseverance, and a great dream, not millions of dollars, can do amazing things.
Yours for the Oceans,
Ryan