Please select your home edition
Edition
Pantaenius 2022 - SAIL & POWER 2 LEADEBOARD AUS

Barcelona World Race - At Cape Horn memories are made. and recalled

by Barcelona World Race on 28 Feb 2015
2014 - 2015 Barcelona World Race Barcelona World Race http://www.barcelonaworldrace.org
Barcelona World Race - Cape Horn beckons for second and third placed Neutrogena and GAES Centros Auditivos. While the two IMOCA 60s are expected to pass at speed with around six hours of separation, in what might be considered favourable conditions for one of the most inhospitable and complicated corners of the Barcelona World Race, amidst the long hours of stress and fatigue, there will surely still be moments for the crews to reflect, individually and together.

Aboard second placed Neutrogena, due to pass between 0200hrs and 0600hrs UTC this Saturday it will be the high point of the race for José Muñoz. Just under five years ago he and his co-skipper, friend and mentor Felipe Cubillos, became the first Chileans to race around Cape Horn in a round the world race when leading the Class 40 Global Ocean Race.

Subsequently Cubillos, a prime mover in Chilean sailing, an entrepreneur and charity activis died in 2011 in a plane crash. He was an inspirational character who, shortly before he and Muñoz rounded the rock for the first time, wrote:

'Everyone can fulfil their dreams if they apply passion and determination. If you can overcome pessimism, self-doubt and triumph over the fear of failure, it is worth it as the prize at the end is immense. For me – and possibly many of you – it is our reason for living. Each of us has a personal Cape Horn: it’s a matter of locating this goal and then heading straight for it.'

As much as he can under the circumstances - weather and in the race situation permitting - Muñoz hopes to share the moment with his countrymen and remember his friend and co-skipper.

Muñoz said today: 'We know that for every single sailor yearns to cross Cape Horn. Obviously, that’s not always possible, due to the extreme weather conditions there at the most southern cape in the world. It will be very emotional and I hope we can pay tribute to my friend [Felipe Cubillos] when we’ll be close to the cape. He was the one who helped me and pushed me to fulfill my dream of putting a Chilean boat in the international races. I hope I can share it with my people. '

Neutrogena's Catalan skipper Guillermo Altadill will cherish the moment just as much as he has done on each of the previous nine passages of the Great Cape, first rounding in 1989:

' It marks different times in the history of sailing. The first time I sailed around the world was in 1989 and it was completely different, we really were just a bunch of friends almost non-professional sailing around the world, for us it was big thing to pass the Horn. Then during the last years each time it feels like sailing gets more and more professional, but the Cape is still the same thing for all the sailors. It does not matter if it is the beginning of your career or when you are more professional, it is always a special moment. It means you are leaving the Southern Ocean, you are leaving days and nights of huge waves, windy, more stress, more worries, round Cape Horn means the beginning of the way to go back home, to approach the finish line, to go towards better temperatures, to better conditions and that's always a good moment. Not many people do it. Not many people do it many times in your life, so it is always a special moment at Cape Horn.'

Chasing just 119 miles behind on GAES Centros Auditivos, the passage of Cape Horn will really highlight just how far Anna Corbella and Gerad Marin have progressed since they both completed the race - on different boats - in 2011. Racing with Dee Caffari, when Corbella became the first Spanish woman to race around the Horn, their GAES Centros Auditivos then rounded 12 days later than they should this time.

Race leaders Cheminées Poujoulat had a reminder last night that the ascent of the South Atlantic can offer conditions as bad, if not worse than anything they saw in the Southern Oceans. Bernard Stamm said that huge, post frontal crossed seas and winds gusting to just under 50kts had forced them to slow right down.

Meantime Nandor Fa and Conrad Colman ended their technical pit stop in Bluff, South Island NZ, docking out at midday today (UTC) resuming racing at 1330hrs UTC.

'We had three really tough days of work, but it was quite easy and tiring. We got everything we needed to do finished and made some other jobs too. It was really tiring but we are ready to go, it was successful and tiring.' Nandor Fa said.

Colman added: 'Nandor and I work well together. We are getting better and better as a team all the time.'

Double race winner Jean-Pierre Dick, speaking from the Atlantic where he is delivering his MOD70 back to Europe, confirmed that he wants the Barcelona World Race to be on his race calendar with his new IMOCA 60 in the future:

'I would return to race without hesitation. I have won twice and it is such a different exercise than solo. The human aspect is so much stronger. And when I see the ages of Jean and Bernard I can see I still have some time on my side. I don't know if that great media article after François Gabart won the Vendée Globe said it's a race 'for young people.' It would be fun to be able to respond: 'Long live the old ...'

Skippers quotes:

Bernard Stamm (SUI) Cheminées Poujoulat:

'It's always a bit like a washing machine, we are in the depression. We will keep the strong wind for a while. Last night in fact we had the strongest winds since the start of the race. We believe that we passed Cape Horn and that's the worst bit, but that's not quite right.

The South Atlantic is rarely easy?

'South America does not stop depressions. When you are between 50 and the 40 deg S it is still a southern oceans regime. Here it was difficult. We had 45 knots and the boat surges to over 30kts and just plants itself into the big waves. After the static depressions off the Brazilian coast we get to the lighter winds. This is a long, complicated part of the journey.'

The climb up the Atlantic is long and the the guys are always tired?

'The boats show the strains and wear of two third of the race. Materials and equipment begins to tire. There is the belief that its over, but far from it. For sure we have a flow which lets us advance well, but it is hard to go fast because the seas are really big. Just after the front like we are, it is not possible, we had crossed seas, it was impossible to go fast. But we get there anyway, this system is with us for a while so its pretty good. '

Standings at 1400hrs Friday 27/02/2015

1 Cheminées Poujoulat (B Stamm – J Le Cam) at 6066 miles to finish
2 Neutrogena (G Altadill – J Muñoz) + 1024 miles to leader
3 GAES Centros Auditivos (A Corbella – G Marin) + 1143 miles to leader
4 We Are Water (B Garcia – W Garcia) + 3451 miles to leader
5 One Planet One Ocean & Pharmaton (A Gelabert – D Costa) + 3606 miles to leader
6 Renault Captur (J Riechers – S Audigane) + 4184 miles to leader
7 Spirit of Hungary (N Fa – C Colman) + 5377 miles to leader
ABD : Hugo Boss (A. Thomson - P. Ribes)
Navico AUS Zeus3S FOOTERSydney International Boat Show 2024Boat Books Australia FOOTER

Related Articles

Youth in the limelight at Antigua Sailing Week
Axxess Marine Youth 2 Keel Race Day The breeze was on the up for the second day of Antigua Sailing Week, celebrating youth sailing on Axxess Marine Youth 2 Keel Race Day. The 10-knot easterly breeze piped up during the day, gusting up to 15 knots.
Posted today at 5:34 am
America's Cup: Shoeby on that Splash and Sail
It was nice to tick all that off in one day.” Kevin Shoebridge on ETNZ's Day 1 Splash and Sail We thought, 'We've got a bit of time. We'll pull the mainsail up'. Then we ended up going for a sail [and fitting in three dry foiling tacks]. It was nice to tick all that off in one day.” Kevin Shoebridge on ETNZ's Day 1 Splash and Sail.
Posted today at 5:20 am
100 entries and counting
For Ocean Dynamics and Mount Gay Airlie Beach Race Week Entries for Ocean Dynamics and Mount Gay Airlie Beach Race Week 2024 have already touched 100 and continue to grow as organiser, Whitsunday Sailing Club (WSC), announces a new Regatta Director, Jenni Birdsall.
Posted today at 5:02 am
2024 52 Super Series PalmaVela Sailing Week Day 2
Gladiator open their 2024 account with race 1 victory Tony Langley's Gladiator team took the first race win of the 2024 52 SUPER SERIES season at 52 SUPER SERIES PalmaVela Sailing Week after profiting from a bold call on the first downwind leg.
Posted today at 4:34 am
SailGP's Racing on the Edge latest episode
Big crashes and all of the drama from the ITM New Zealand Sail Grand Prix The latest episode of SailGP's Racing on the Edge docuseries, in partnership with Rolex, unfolds all of the drama and action from the ITM New Zealand Sail Grand Prix in March.
Posted on 29 Apr
Jérémie Beyou on his way to Lorient
Leading Transat CIC contender turns around with forestay damage Jérémie Beyou, one of the top hopes for the Transat CIC solo race from Lorient to New York is returning to Lorient after damage to his J2 forestay.
Posted on 29 Apr
New York Vendée - Les Sables d'Olonne Preview
One month to go until the final race before the Vendée Globe One month from now, 31 skippers will set sail from New York towards the Vendée, for the final qualifying and selection race to qualify for the Vendée Gobe: the most challenging sailing race around the world.
Posted on 29 Apr
470 Europeans at Cannes Preview
The last major international event for the class before the Olympic Games The Yacht Club de Cannes is hosting the last major international event before the Olympic Games.
Posted on 29 Apr
Grantham local skippers crew of non-professionals
Hannah Brewis has led amateur sailors across the world's largest ocean "I didn't think when I was learning to sail on Rutland Water that it would one day eventually lead to me crossing the biggest ocean in the world as a skipper."
Posted on 29 Apr
The Transat CIC Day 2
Dalin and D'Estais in the lead After a sunny, spectacular start, the 48 solo sailors taking part in the Transat CIC had to deal with the first windy and bumpy night at sea, crossing a front with 30 plus knots of wind and a rough sea state.
Posted on 29 Apr