Please select your home edition
Edition
Switch One Design

Mini-Transat La Boulangère - In search of the lost wind

by Mini-Transat La Boulangère on 7 Nov 2017
Mini-Transat La Boulangère 2017 Christophe Breschi
There are now six sailors making a pit-stop to effect repairs at Mindelo with the arrival of Thibault Michelin (Eva Luna), victim of rudder damage a few days earlier. A seventh competitor is set to join them shortly, Ambrogio Beccaria (Alla Grande Ambecco), whose boat has a broken bowsprit. He’s turned back to make for Cape Verde.

It must be a long time since the channel between Santo Antao and Sao Vicente has seen so much traffic. For the past twenty-four hours, there has been a steady stream of Minis creating a bottleneck in this little stretch of water with over fifty boats having now set a course for the West Indies.

Bottleneck

However, before they can sample the delights of the long surf of the Atlantic swell, they have one last obstacle to negotiate: getting past the wind shadow created by the mountains of Santo Antao. Whether it’s a question of character or a more long term strategy, two theories are clashing here. Those keen to take a gamble are gallantly trying their luck by opting to cut in immediately to leeward of Santo Antao, there where the cone-shaped wind shadow is at its narrowest point. The upshot of this is a rather tough section where the skipper has to know how to hunt down the slightest puff of breeze, but where the route northwards is freed up quickly. Some sailors have been revelling in this option, including Jörg Riechers (Lilienthal) on a prototype and Guillaume Combescure (Mini Oiri) on a production boat. The German sailor Lina Rixgens (Mini Doc) has also made this gamble.

For others, this choice has enabled them to benefit from a few hours of light winds to carry out repairs at sea without having to indulge in the compulsory pit-stop option and its subsequent time penalty. In this way, Yann Burkhalter (Kalaona) has been able to fix an issue with play on his rudder bearing, which had been forcing him to sail using the emergency tiller and hence hand steer for the bulk of the time. Similarly, David Allamelou (Boréal) has stopped in the open ocean to laminate his damaged bowsprit. In any case, traversing the zone affected by the wind shadow as perpendicularly as possible is the only solution possible to avoid being stuck fast for hours.

To gain ground to the west, head south

The other solution is to circumnavigate the wind shadow zone by bearing south the moment you exit the channel. Besides the fact that it’s a considerable detour, it comes as no surprise. In this way, Victor Barriquand (La Charente Maritime), Andrea Pendibene (Pegaso Marina Militare) and Luc Giros (Cabinet Rivault Nineuil – Enedis) have been ensnared by a zone of light airs around thirty miles to leeward of the dizzying heights of Santo Antao. Decidedly the road to the West Indies has to be earned this year.

At the head of the race, such problems are a distant memory for the leaders, who are now creaming along at an average speed of over 10 knots. There are no major shake-ups aside from the fact that in the production boats, Erwan Le Draoulec (Emile Henry) has snatched power just three miles ahead of Tanguy Bouroullec (Kerhis – Cerfrance). Behind them, a battle royal is shaping up for fourth place between Pierre Chedeville (Blue Orange Games – Fair Retail), Benoît Sineau (Cachaça 2) and Thomas Dolan ( offshoresailing.fr ). This trio is grouped within a six-mile radius and the daggers are drawn. Of particular note is the performance posted by Nolwen Cazé (Fée Rêvée), who has gradually moved up to the front of the chasing pack of pointy-nosed boats, accompanied by Mathieu Lambert (Presta Service Bat) and Frédéric Moreau (Petit Auguste et Cie). At the finish of the first leg, the young woman didn’t have enough adjectives to describe how happy she was to be at sea and now she has discreetly propelled herself towards the front of the fleet. Enjoyment and performance are indisputably linked.

List of casualties to date:

• Arthur Léopold-Léger (Antal XPO): rudder damage and partially delaminated transom.
• Rémi Aubrun (Alternative Sailing – Constructions du Belon): autopilot issues.
• Julien Héreu (Poema Insurance): broken bowsprit, masthead halyard to be re-moused, generator no longer starting.
• Andreas Deubel ( www.andreasdeubel.de ): mast wand issue.
• Pavel Roubal (Pogo Dancer): fuel cell no longer working and helm issue.
• Ambrogio Beccaria (Alla Grande Ambecco): broken bowsprit. The Italian sailor is turning back and heading for Mindelo.
• Thibault Michelin (Eva Luna): rudder damage.
• Elodie Pédron (Manu Poki et les Biotechs) has repaired her rudder and everything’s now working again so she won’t be making a pit-stop at Mindelo.

Position report on 6 November at 15:00 UTC

Prototypes

1 Ian Lipinski (Griffon.fr) 1,729.6 miles from the finish
2 Simon Koster (Eight Cube Sersa) 73 miles behind the leader
3 Jorg Riechers (Lilienthal) 85.7 miles behind the leader
4 Andrea Fornaro (Sideral) 128.5 miles behind the leader
5 Charlotte Méry (Optigestion – Femmes de Bretagne) 129.6 miles behind the leader

Production boats

1 Erwan Le Draoulec (Emile Henry) 1,886.2 miles from the finish
2 Tanguy Bouroullec (Kerhis – Cerfrance) 3 miles behind the leader
3 Clarisse Crémer (TBS) 11.6 miles behind the leader
4 Pierre Chedeville (Blue Orange Games – Faire Retails) 63.3 miles behind the leader
5 Benoît Sineau (Cachaça 2) 69.4 miles behind the leader
Selden 2020 - FOOTERSea Sure 2025Cyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTER

Related Articles

Transat Café L'Or ULTIM course shortened
Ascension Island is out! The ULTIMs have received an amendment from the Race Committee concerning a course modification. To ensure grouped arrivals in Fort-de-France, the ULTIM course will be shortened. Ascension Island is therefore out!
Posted today at 10:47 am
Argo & Zoulou prepare for RORC Transatlantic Race
The MOD70 trimarans are capable of sustaining speeds of more than 35 knots When the start gun fires in Lanzarote for the 2026 RORC Transatlantic Race on January 11, two of the most extraordinary offshore racing machines will once again go head-to-head across the Atlantic.
Posted today at 10:41 am
Transat Cafe L'Or - The Dramatic First Week
Video update with the Class40 Leg 2 start, tracking the fleets, Ocean50 rescue and 11th Hour Racing What has become the second leg for the Class 40 fleet started at 1300 hours local time on Saturday. The teams had taken an enforced break from racing in Spain after the organisers decided the conditions were set to be too rough for the smaller boats.
Posted today at 9:33 am
18ft Skiff SIXT Spring Championship Race 4
A history-making day for the Australian 18 Footers League on Sydney Harbour It was a history-making day for the Australian 18 Footers League on Sydney Harbour today when Tash Bryant became the first female skipper in the club's 90-year history to skipper the winner of a Club Championship race.
Posted today at 9:26 am
McIntyre Mini Globe Race 2025 Update
Tough test, Serious Challenges, Struggling to Cape Town! Man Overboard, Serious Storms, Crazy Currents and a Grueling Sprint to Durban, before a struggle in the Agulhas current and Southern Ocean depressions.
Posted today at 8:55 am
Hong Kong to Vietnam Race 2025 overall
Alive takes both Line Honours and IRC Overall win Australian entry, Phillip Turner and Duncan Hine's Reichel/Pugh 66 Alive crossed the finish line in Nha Trang on Friday at 17:11:10 HKT, claiming Line Honours in the 2025 Hong Kong to Vietnam Rally.
Posted today at 6:21 am
2025 J/70 World Championship overall
History made at J/70 World Championship After ten races over five days, shifting tides and reshuffled leaderboards, the 2025 J/70 World Championship came to a dramatic close at Yacht Club Argentino.
Posted today at 5:40 am
Optimist Asian & Oceanian Championship overall
Thailand crowned champion as Singapore dominates podium The 2025 Optimist Asian & Oceanian Championship concluded yesterday (Friday) following a week of exciting and closely contested racing.
Posted on 1 Nov
D2 of the 2025 Classic Cup on Port Phillip
More breeze than Day One provided for some 'classic' racing conditions for the Classics The second day of the 2025 Cup Regatta held on Port Phillip is complete, and what a great day we enjoyed.
Posted on 1 Nov
Globe40 Leg 2 Finish
Belgium Ocean Racing - Curium wins the record-breaking stage 9 minutes between the top 3 after 29 days and 22 hours of racing: who could have imagined this breathtaking finish on October 2nd at the start in Cape Verde? Yet that's precisely what happened today in St. Paul Bay, Reunion Island.
Posted on 1 Nov