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November 8, 2024

Fast and Alone — The Vendée Globe Starts on Sunday

Singlehanded, nonstop and unassisted. Those are the basics of the world’s most challenging offshore yacht race, the Vendée Globe. It happens every four years, and the 10th edition starts this Sunday, November 10. It was founded by French singlehander Philippe Jeantot, who launched the first Vendée Globe in 1989 with 13 sailors starting and seven making the finish line in 1990 after three months of sailing.

The Vendée Globe heads south from France and around Antarctica.
© 2024 Vendee Globe

The race takes competitors from Les Sables-d’Olonne, on the Atlantic coast of France, south around Antarctica in the Southern Ocean and back north to the finish. In the nine previous editions of this “Everest of the Seas” there have been 200 competitors starting this extreme race. Only 114 of them have managed to cross the finish line.

Thomas Ruyant at speed aboard Vulnerable.
© 2024 PolaRYSE

It has been dominated by the French, with the past winners being Titouan Lamazou in 1990, Alain Gautier in 1993, Christophe Auguin in 1997, Vincent Riou in 2005, François Gabart in 2013, Armel Le Cléac’h in 2017 and Yannick Bestaven in 2021. Armel Le Cléac’h remains to this day the record holder for the event, completing it in 74 days. Only one sailor has won it twice: Michel Desjoyeaux, in 2001 and 2009.

This wild machine is Samantha Davies’ Initiatives Coeur.
© 2024 Olivier Blanchett/Alea/VG2024

This year there are 40 skippers, with the majority of them again being French. There are six women, including veterans Sam Davies (with five prior circumnavigations) aboard Initiatives-Coeur and Pip Hare, sponsored by San Francisco company Medallia. There is one American, Conrad Colvin, who was born in Auckland but went to school in Colorado and is returning aboard his boat MS Amlin.

The fleet is all in Les Sables D'Olonne awaiting the start.
The fleet is all in Les Sables-d’Olonne awaiting the start.
© 2024 Fred Olivier/Nefsea/VG2024

The boats are very extreme, foiling IMOCA 60s, which will attempt to get around the world nonstop and undamaged in 70 days. The foils, keels and rudders mean there are lots of appendages going through the water at 20-30 knots around the clock while the skippers attempt to find time to eat, sleep, navigate, trim, change sails and tend to personal care. Getting around the world at top speed and avoiding damage from a UFO (unidentified floating object) is an enormous challenge.

These are wild racing machines. From above, Romain Attanasio on Fortinet.
© 2024 Yann Riou/PolaRYSE

It’s an enormous event for the French, with hundreds of thousands of fans visiting the race village in advance of the start.

You can learn more and follow it on the tracker here.

Have you listened to this week’s Good Jibes podcast with Morgan Larson?

 

Caption Contest(!)

Welcome to November’s Caption Contest(!). It looks as if this sailor took a deep dive into their sport of choice. That’s what we call commitment!

Your caption here.
© 2024 Peter Taylor/@sailpt

You’ll find October’s winner and top 10 in the November issue’s Loose Lips.

Barton Marine — The Bow to Stern in Sailboat Hardware

Made by Sailors for Sailors, Barton Marine has designed and manufactured sailboat hardware in England since 1948. Our range extends over 1800 products providing value and performance for racing and cruising mariners worldwide including from our US base in Virginia. The Barton range includes contemporary marine grade composite blocks, ball bearing performance wooden blocks, and an exclusive Tufnol block selection. The full range of low friction eyes, cam cleats, track and car systems, clutches, winches, Boomstruts, sailing kits and hundreds of accessories sell in over 35 countries globally to owners and boat builders alike. If you have not discovered the Barton range, visit BartonUS.com to explore and find your local dealers. 

Randall Reeves and Harmon Shragge Complete West-to-East Transit of Northwest Passage

Speaking about his recent completion of the Northwest Passage along with “crew” Harmon Shragge, Randall Reeves told us, “It’s the third for me, the first time going the wrong way, west to east, and the fourth time for the boat. I think that’s probably a record, but it’s one of those records that nobody cares about.”

We care, Randall!

This summer, the aforementioned record-setting 41-ft Moli and her aforementioned doublehanded crew of Randall and Harmon sailed from Kodiak, Alaska, to St. John’s, Newfoundland, weaving their way through the famed ice-filled sea lane connecting the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The Northwest Passage was leg two of the duo’s Around the Americas Voyage, which will eventually bring them back to San Francisco via Cape Horn — but not before some thorough exploration of remote islands and far-flung countries.

Harmon Shragge, top, and Randall Reeves bring us a close-up look at the otherworldliness of the Northwest Passage.
© 2024 Around the Americas

“It was really hard,” Randall told Latitude 38. “They’re never easy, but this one was hard. We had a lot of wind and sailed a ton — over 30% of the time we sailed, another 30% of the time we motorsailed.” Doing the Passage the so-called “wrong way,” or approaching from the west, allows a boat to ease into the transit. “Coming from the east, from Lancaster Sound on is ice,” Randall said of his 2019 Passage, when he was in the advanced stages of his Figure 8 Voyage. “You’re barely three days in, and there’s ice. You spend a week or two having to bop around, and you’re stuck in that first 10% of the route. And once you’re through that big slug of the ice, you still have 60% of the course to do.”

Harmon Shragge, who had visited parts of the Arctic years ago, thought of the Northwest Passage in more existential terms. “We think of [the Passage] as something so out there and so big and so exciting. I really wanted to do it, but you quickly realize that you can’t do it all — there was much more to it than I had expected. That was both exciting and frustrating.” A veteran of Clipper Round the World legs and Fasnet races, Harmon said that the westerly approach gave him, Randall and Moli “the opportunity to stop and explore” over the course of two months. “Then, once we got through, we still had time — we could go to Greenland.”

Bald eagles and puffins offer a glimpse of the exotic, high-latitude wildlife in the Arctic.
© 2024 Around the Americas

Harmon said there were four different “trips,” or areas of focus and exploration, that sailors could take through the Passage: “There’s the nautical sailing way through, from point A to point B, but as you’re going through, you realize there’s so much more than just sailing, especially when you have the privilege of going with someone like Randall. It opens up your eyes to what’s going on with the Arctic. There’s the whole, let’s call it ‘zoological’ aspect of following animals. And then there’s the geographic way [following islands, glaciers and mountains]. Each of these you could design a trip around, but you can’t do all of them, which I was trying to do.”

“In the end, the wildlife is more up to chance and timing if you’re going to be able to see whales, walrus, fur seals, birds, etc. We were able to do a little bit of that,” said Harmon Shragge.
© 2024 Around the Americas

Finally, Harmon said, there was also the human aspect of a trip, visiting towns accessible only by airplane and boat. “You sail in as a local. People like to look at the boat and hear your story. They invite you into their home. You develop a relationship, whether they give you a tour or a home-cooked meal, or let you do laundry or take a shower. It felt really good to spend time with locals. And the farther north you go, you experience more traditional life and culture — and more interesting wildlife.” Many people in the Arctic live off seal meat and legally trade in ivory.

The “human aspect” of Harmon and Randall’s Northwest Passage, and the legal ivory trade that makes up part of the Arctic economy.
© 2024 Around the Americas

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Do You Want To Meet Some Great People?

Our tour of the San Diego waterfront, following the start of the 30th Annual Baja Ha-Ha, reminded us once again how awesome the San Diego sailing community is. Actually, the whole sailing community. We stopped in to see many of our customers and the great businesses that put our magazines on display to be picked up by our readers and their customers. There are many more, but we did grab a few photos from the places we stopped.

We interrupted South Coast Yachts owner Barrett Canfield, in the middle of a meeting, to grab this quick shot at his office at Safe Harbor Sunroad Marina.
© 2024 Latitude 38 Media LLC / John
If you stop by to see Stephen Driscoll at Driscoll Shipyard on Shelter Island you'll also be able to pick up the current issue of Latitude 38. He took 2nd the PC National Champions last weekend aboard Skylark and he and Chuck took first overall in this year's Yachting Cup aboard their J/105 'Juiced.'
If you stop by to see Stephen Driscoll at Driscoll Boatworks on Shelter Island, you’ll also be able to pick up the current issue of Latitude 38. He took second in the PC National Champions last weekend aboard Skylark, and he and his dad Chuck took first overall in this year’s Yachting Cup aboard their J/105 Juiced.
© 2024 Latitude 38 Media LLC / John
We walked in on Captain Len Bucko as he was reading the latest issue, which he’d just placed on the rack outside the offices at California Yacht Sales, at Harbor Island West Marina. He’s a captain and sailing instructor, and has some good stories to tell.
© 2024 Latitude 38 Media LLC / John
Dante greeted us at the door of the Satellite Phone Store on Shelter Island Drive. They had their magazines displayed in their showroom along with lots of great equipment that will help you stay in touch while your sailing across the ocean.
Dante greeted us at the door of the Satellite Phone Store on Shelter Island Drive. They had their magazines displayed in their showroom along with lots of great equipment that will help you stay in touch while you’re sailing across the ocean.
© 2024 Latitude 38 Media LLC / John
Kim Dumas sells boats for Dennison Yachts and was one of our hosts aboard West Coast Multihull's Bali 40 that was the committee boat for the Baja Ha-Ha start. She's showing us their ad for the new Seawind 1600 they now have in stock.
Kim Dumas sells boats for Denison Yachts and was one of our hosts aboard West Coast Multihulls‘ Bali 40, the committee boat for the Baja Ha-Ha start. Kim’s showing us their ad for the new Seawind 1600 catamaran they now have in stock at their docks on Shelter Island.
© 2024 Latitude 38 Media LLC / John
The November issue had just been dropped on the counter at Marina Cortez on Harbor Island and xxx was opening them up to put them on display. Thanks so much!
The November issue that had been dropped onto the counter at Marina Cortez on Harbor Island where Cindy was putting them out for display just as we arrived. Thanks so much!
© 2024 Latitude 38 Media LLC / John
Shelter Island Marina harbormaster Phillip Dias and associate Danielle White put the magazines out every month. They didn’t need to point out the spars of the 150-ft Pendennis-built ketch Christopher that were towering overhead.
© 2024 Latitude 38 Media LLC / John
Ron Gullan of Yachtfinders on Shelter Island also always has the current issue on hand for you. He also had is 2024 sponsor flag plus three more rows of Ha-Ha flags dating back to the first flag in 1995.
Ron Gullan of Yachtfinders on Shelter Island also always has the current issue on hand for you. He was proudly displaying his 2024 Baja Ha-Ha sponsor flag, plus three more rows of Ha-Ha flags dating back to his first flag from 1995.
© 2024 Latitude 38 Media LLC / John
Sean Davies joined Ray Pope at Rigworks on Carleton St. has been serving up Latitude 38s plus top-notch rigging services ever since.
Sean Davies joined Ray Pope at Rigworks on Carleton Street and has been serving up Latitude 38s plus top-notch rigging services and Gottfried Maffioli line ever since.
© 2024 Latitude 38 Media LLC / John
We were greeted by Susan at Harbor Island West Marina who's also put out the magazines they'd just received.
We were greeted by Susan Hunt at Harbor Island West Marina, who had put out all the magazines they’d just received. She mentioned how much she liked the story in the current issue of Randall Reeves and Harmon Shragge’s sail through the Northwest Passage.
© 2024 Latitude 38 Media LLC / John

As we said, if you want to meet some nice people, just head down to the waterfront to see any of these folks here, or anyone on our distribution map in San Diego. The closer you get to the water, the closer you get to Latitude 38, great people and more sailing.

You can find the current issue in all these locations in San Diego.
© 2024 Latitude 38 Media LLC / Latitude 38

Join us Every Day at 11 a.m. as We Go Live on ‘Profligate’ with the Baja Ha-Ha

Latitude Nation! Join us every day at 11 a.m. as we go live with the crew of the Baja Ha-Ha mothership Profligate. Host Nicki Bennett gets you up close and personal with the historic 30th Ha-Ha as the fleet makes their way south to Cabo San Lucas.

Click here to go to our Facebook page — www.facebook.com/Latitude38

Overcoming Obstacles to Sailing
When I found myself on land in Southern California last year, I decided to try sailing with Challenged Sailors. The people and organization I found on the dock delighted me and keep me coming back as a volunteer.