Please select your home edition
Edition
X-Yachts X4.3

2015 Transatlantic Race – Bigger is better

by Jan Harley on 2 Jul 2015
Shearwater, Dan and Gretchen Biemesderfer, Guilford, Conn., USA - Start 1 - 2015 Transatlantic Race Daniel Forster / NYYC
Among the first starters of the Transatlantic Race 2015, waterline length is prevailing. The 138’ Mariette of 1915 was first to reach the strong southwesterlies yesterday and is now thundering east, in a rich get richer scenario.

The century-old schooner was this morning midway between the start and the southwestern corner of the ice exclusion zone, aimed at keeping competitors away from the Grand Banks and its hazards of thick fog, fishing boats, and, not least, icebergs drifting south on the Labrador Current. Mariette of 1915 has also put some 160 miles on second placed Scarlet Oyster, the British Oyster Lightwave 48 skippered by Ross Applebey.

The 16 crew on Mariette of 1915 will be enjoying the nearest experience to the famous voyage of the schooner America 110 years ago, when America’s Cup helmsman Charlie Barr drove her to victory in the 1905 Transatlantic Race in a time of 12 days, four hours, one minute and 19 seconds (a record which was to stand for 75 years). Mariette is a tiddler in comparison to Atlantic, which was also a gaff schooner, but had three masts instead of two, and was 227’ long and almost twice the weight of Mariette, displacing 303 tons.

The northerly group that were ahead yesterday, have since been wallowing in light winds, handing the lead to Mariette of 1915 and Scarlet Oyster, now lying first and second both on IRC handicap and on the water.

However, in the process of rolling her old foe Scarlet Oyster is the 48’ Carina, originally the Nye family’s Newport Bermuda Race winner and Admiral’s Cup contender. Recently Carina’s trophy cabinet has expanded substantially through the success of her present owner, New York Yacht Club Commodore Rives Potts. Sadly, this year business commitments have prevented Potts from competing and he has handed the helm over to Rich du Moulin, who surprisingly is Carina’s only returning crew from Transatlantic Race 2011.

She may be jockeying for second place now, but Carina got off to a painful start and was left behind as Mariette, Scarlet Oyster and Dorade all dived southeast 24 hours into the race. As du Moulin recounts: “It became clear that they were heading south into more pressure, so we joined them later on, but they got there first and got the jump on us. Yesterday we finally caught up with Dorade and Scarlet Oyster. We are trucking very nicely now.”

Du Moulin remembers when Carina and Scarlet Oyster match raced around the entire course of the 2011 Rolex Fastnet Race. It seems very likely the two yachts, despite being 18 years apart in age, will repeat this now across the Atlantic.

This morning du Moulin reported that Carina was seeing 20-25 knots from the west-southwest, still with an awkward sea. “This whole race has had a very active sea state with very sloppy conditions making for a lot of wear and tear on the boat. Even with just the jib up the waves are making steering challenging.” The surging and snapping meant they wore through multiple spinnaker halyards. Otherwise the only mission-critical problem was the watermaker breaking on Monday night, although this has since been fixed.

Another yacht that dived south late was the British Shipman 50, Zephyr, belonging to Michael Higgs Beach, Earl St. Aldwyn. 76 miles west-northwest of Carina, this morning Zephyr’s skipper David Sharples expressed relief that they had followed the leaders. They had been playing the eddies and had benefitted from one only to run into a wind hole yesterday. This morning they were seeing 20-knot southwesterlies, under an overcast sky following rain squalls last night.

Apart from a couple of generator issues Zephyr has been holding up well although this morning they had to back down to extricate a large piece of plastic that had wrapped around the keel.

Three days in, the crew has settled in well: “We are still on fresh food and we’ll probably start the freeze dried tomorrow,” recounted Sharples. “It is a cruising boat, but we still have limited room…. We have seen a lot of wildlife - pods of whale and dolphins.”

As to the weather ahead, both Sharples and du Moulin reckon that the southwesteries/westerlies are looking good to hold, with Sharples anticipating 18-30 knots for the next 48 hours. Du Moulin is more optimistic still: “We could keep them the whole way over, apart from intermittent light areas when fronts come through. Right now it looks like trade wind sailing! The remarkable performance is Mariette, which is loving the reaching. She is sailing about two knots faster than us. At that pace, she should finish about 400 miles ahead of us!”

2015 Transatlantic Race Roster of Entries Starting on June 28
Aphrodite, Christopher Otorowski, Seattle, Wash./Newport, R.I., USA
Arrowhead, Steve Berlack, Franconia, N.H., USA
Carina, Rich du Moulin, Larchmont, N.Y., USA
Charisma, Constantin Claviez, Hamburg, GER
Dizzy, Paul Anstey/Craig Rastello, Melbourne, Fla., USA
Dorade, Matt Brooks, San Francisco, Calif., USA
Jaqueline IV, Robert Forman, Bay Shore, N.Y., USA
Kiva, Mark Stevens, New Castle, N.H., USA
Mariette of 1915, Charlie Wroe, Falmouth, GBR
Scarlet Oyster, Ross Applebey, GBR
Shearwater, Dan and Gretchen Biemesderfer, Guilford, Conn., USA
Solution, Carter Bacon, Hyannis Port, Mass., USA
Zephyr, Micky St. Aldwyn, Lymington, GBR
Vaikobi 2024 FOOTERSelden 2020 - FOOTERRS Sailing 2021 - FOOTER

Related Articles

PlanetSail Episode 31: New Cup boats
With records and drama down under It's been a big month for the America's Cup as four of the six teams unveiled their brand new AC75s. Years of development work and close to 100,000 hours of build time, there is plenty riding on each of these new launches.
Posted today at 4:33 pm
Transat CIC day 4
Charlie Dalin and Yoann Richomme continue to lead in the Atlantic On The Transat CIC solo race across the North Atlantic from Lorient to New York, there are close duels at the top of both the IMOCAs and Class40s.
Posted today at 4:25 pm
Henri-Lloyd New Arrival: Dri Fast Polo
Designed to perform for long days in the sun, on or off shore Created by Henri-Lloyd 30 years ago, the DRI FAST Polo has become an industry staple. Clean and smart, the DRI FAST Polo is an extremely comfortable, quick drying polo, with added UV protection.
Posted today at 9:34 am
Cup Spy May 1: Kiwis call it quits
Emirates Team NZ have confirmed that they have finished sailing in NZ and are headed for Barcelona Emirates Team New Zealand has concluded their first sailing bloc, on May Day in Auckland. The America's Cup champions got away to an early start, in the face of a forecast of a freshening breeze, and finished sailing just after midday.
Posted today at 8:07 am
XR 41 hull plug in the making!
Get an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the making of the XR 41 Get an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the making of the XR 41, as the hull plug is being CNC machined with high precision and expertise at Nedcam in Holland.
Posted today at 6:04 am
Heating up at Antigua Sailing Week
Citizenship by Investment Unit Race Day 3 Tuesday, April 30: Racing at Antigua Sailing Week goes past the halfway mark on Day 3 for Citizenship By Investment Unit Race Day.
Posted today at 2:34 am
2024 52 Super Series PalmaVela Sailing Week Day 3
1,2,3... the new Alegre tops the leaderboard After three good races today on the Bay of Palma - each with a different winner - Andy Soriano's brand new Alegre leads the 52 SUPER SERIES PalmaVela Sailing Week, but only on tie break ahead of Doug DeVos's Quantum Racing powered by American Magic.
Posted on 30 Apr
New Vaikobi lifestyle apparel collection
Your go to for everything off the water The NEW Vaikobi lifestyle apparel collection will be your go to for everything off the water.
Posted on 30 Apr
Grabbing chances with both hands
Can bad weather actually lead to more sailing? There's been no getting away from the fact that it's been a pretty miserable start to 2024 weather-wise in the UK. February saw record rainfall (yes, I know we're famed for our rain over here), it's been seriously windy and generally chilly.
Posted on 30 Apr
IMOCA skippers in The Transat CIC
Sam Goodchild: This Transatlantic's going to be far from normal The IMOCA skippers in The Transat CIC from Lorient to New York could get away without much upwind sailing over the next few days, as they head west across the Atlantic, according to Sam Goodchild, the Vulnerable skipper who is sitting out this race.
Posted on 30 Apr