Light winds forecast for the 53rd La Solitaire du Figaro Leg 1 start on Sunday afternoon
by La Solitaire du Figaro 20 Aug 2022 15:10 UTC
21 August 2022
A new Race Director, Yann Chateau © Alexis Courcoux
The 34 skippers of the 53rd La Solitaire du Figaro and their Figaro Beneteau 3s left Nantes this Saturday august 20th lunch time and to sail down to Saint-Nazaire at the mouth of the Loire.
They will dock there for the night making ready for tomorrow Sunday's start off Saint-Michel-Chef-Chef at 1540hrs local time.
Winds for the start of the 644 miles Stage 1 north to Skokholm island off Wales Pembroke coast look set to be light, the precursor to what looks like a complicated leg with many transitions and several small weather features to negotiate.
A new Race Director, Yann Chateau in charge
Yann Chateau, 43, is the new Race Director of La Solitaire du Figaro taking charge of this edition after the baton was passed from Francis Le Goff with whom he served as Assistant for many years. He is an accomplished offshore, inshore and small boat racer who comes from the Normandy region. Chateau is a past European match racing champion and has 12 podiums under his belt in the French national championships.
He started sailing on the Seine with his older brother Cédric out of Reine. After racing with Cedric he started coaching at his local club and then moved to the training centre at Le Havre where they coached a 14 year old Charlie Dalin. Dalin told Tip & Shaft earlier this summer, " He is one of those who helped me grow as a dinghy. Later, he was also quite present with the Normandy Elite Team project group launched in 2014 by Francis Le Goff to help young sailors progress."
He progressed his technical and race management skills at the Normandie League. At the same time from 2004 he went offshore with the Tour Voile competing five times. As a maths and numbers geek he increasingly gravitated towards navigation and weather. He has been the race navigator on the Paprec TP52 Spirit of Malouen and now on the Wally 105 of the same name.
Having been in the shoreside Assistant role in recent years there is little doubt Yann Chateau is looking forwards to being on the water, making decisions from his position in close proximity to the fleet. As a racing sailor he enjoys and benefits from empathising with the solo racers on the water, living the legs with them.
"I like to be inside their heads and understand exactly what they are living and being able to react accordingly." Says Chateau.
The weather
Yann Chateau says, "The conditions will be quite calm at the starts with a moderate to weak wind flow from west to southwest between 6 and 10 knots. The boats will move west and west of Sein with a first night that is still fairly calm. Then, they will progress a little more quickly towards the Celtic Sea in winds of 10 to 15 knots. For the moment, there is a little uncertainty on the return with a transition phase which is not well modeled "
Alan Roberts (Seacat Services) draws an outline: "The weather is dominated initially by a high pressure ridge which was bringing sunshine Saturday with light winds. There is a little low pressure system out to the west which brings in some occluded fronts, trough lines. It will be complicated when it hits the high pressure ridge. Out of the trough Monday and into Tuesday as they sail north with a bit more pressure. At the start it will be light, sub 10 knots then 15-18 knots from the west as they cross the Channel. Monday morning NNW'ly going W'ly. The next feature is a trough line which mixes with a new high pressure system that makes it tricky."
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