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Jules Verne ‘Race’ Is On

On Sunday at 4:01:58 GMT, the trimaran Spindrift 2 crossed the start line that runs from Créac’h lighthouse (Ushant Island, France) to Lizard Point (Cornwall) for the start of her crewed nonstop circumnavigation. The boat crossed the line in a 10-knot northerly under full main and solent.

© 2015 Eloi Stichelbaut

As a thrilling and dramatic TJV — Transat Jacques Vabre — draws to a close, an entirely new TJV has begun and immediately been kicked into high gear. Enter the Trophy Jules Verne. Created in the late ’80s and first awarded in 1993 to Frenchman Bruno Peyron and his legendary catamaran Commodore Explorer, the award was presented to the first yacht that sailed around the world in less than 80 days, inspired by Jules Verne’s book Around the World in Eighty Days. In the 22 years since Peyron and company won the award with a time of 79 days and 6.25 hours, the reference time has been nearly cut in half, with the current benchmark a remarkable 45 days 13 hours 42 minutes set by Bruno’s younger brother, the legendary Loïck Peyron, and his behemoth trimaran Banque Populaire V in January, 2012.

Créac’h Lighthouse on Ushant (Ouessant). At the top of the lighthouse, the World Speed Sailing Record Council president started a clock to mark the official start of the around-the-world record attempt.

© 2015 Thierry Martinez / Spindrift Racing

Maxi-trimarans IDEC Sport, skippered by Francis Joyon, and Spindrift 2, skippered by Yann Guichard, went on standby in the Breton port of Brest on November 17. When a weather window began to present itself just a few days later, the not-quite-unthinkable-but-surely-unexpected happened: the two teams left within two hours of each other to take a crack at Banque Pop V’s record. With both maxi trimarans virtually racing down the Atlantic and presumably around the world, sailing fans have been logging onto both teams’ sites and trackers to follow the progress in this impromptu race, with more than 13,200 ‘skippers’ registering for Spindrift 2’s Virtual Regatta alone.

Maxi Trimaran IDEC Sport makes her way to the start line prior to their Jules Verne Trophy record attempt in Brest on November 21. Francis Joyon and his five-man crew crossed the start line at 02:02:22 on Sunday.

© 2015 François Van Malleghem / DPPI/IDEC Sport

Bay Area sailors and Latitude 38 readers know IDEC Sport, as the big VPLP tri spent the better part of six weeks ripping up San Francisco Bay this summer as Lending Club 2. The famous yacht took more than 1,000 Lending Club guests, local sailors and VIPs sailing. Skippered by American Ryan Breymaier with Bay Area sailors such as Skip McCormack aboard, the trimaran recorded a ‘hat trick’ this season in which she set three world records: Cowes-Dinard, Newport-Bermuda and Los Angeles-Honolulu. Before being named Lending Club 2 and more recently IDEC Sport, the 105-footer was known as Groupama 3 and Banque Populaire VII, and she’s won the Trophy Jules Verne once and the Route du Rhum twice, among other accomplishments.

Lending Club 2 ripping up San Francisco Bay this summer.

© 2015 Quin Bisset / Lending Club Sailing

Likewise, Spindrift 2 has earned quite a reputation in her former blue and white colors of ‘the sailing bank’, Banque Populaire. As Banque Pop V, the 130-ft VPLP-designed trimaran set both Transatlantic records and the outright 24-hour record (907 miles), and is the current holder of the Trophy Jules Verne record.

The start date and the Trophy Jules Verne record attempts aren’t the only things that these two big trimarans have in common. Both yachts have significantly shorter masts and smaller sails than when they went around last time, hoping to prove once and for all that bigger isn’t always better. With less weight aloft, greatly reduced loads, and a significantly smaller crew in the case of IDEC Sport, the theory is that both skippers can push the boats much harder in the big stuff with less fear of breaking and/or capsizing. Since crossing the starting line between France and England in the wee hours of Sunday morning, both yachts have already sailed well over 1,000 miles, yet are both trailing Banque Pop V’s reference time. While BP V had to jibe several times to get to the equator, in the current scenario it looks as if both boats may benefit from more direct routing on the way to the equator, requiring just one jibe, with both crews looking to jump onto the leading edge of a depression forecast to form off the South American continent and propel them to the depths of the Southern Ocean by the middle of next week.

Stay tuned for more on this thrilling double record attempt.

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