Please select your home edition
Edition
Leaderboard FD July August September 2023

IDEC Sport launching today for Clipper Route Record

by Guy Nowell 17 Jan 2020 19:47 PST
A very slow trip around the harbour (TWS 2.4kts). IDEC Sport, HK-London Clipper Route Record © Guy Nowell

On 18 January 2018 Giovanni Soldini and his crew on board the MOD70 trimaran Maserati set out to break the Tea Route record from Hong Kong to London.

Today, 18 January 2020, Francis Joyon expects to start his own attempt to break the same record on the 31.50m (103 ft) VPLP-designed IDEC SPORT. This is the boat with which Joyon cleaned up the Jules Verne Trophy in 2017 (40d 23h 30m), the North Atlantic record (5d 2h 7m) and the 2018 Route du Rhum (7d 14h 21m). It's a quick boat, and Joyon is equally at home sailing it crewed, double-handed or solo.

To get here (Hong Kong) in the first place, Joyon first took on his own solo record from Port Louis (Lorient, France) to Port Louis (Mauritius). Tick. Then he picked up a crew to establish two new reference times, from Mauritius to Ho Chi Minh City, and then HCMC to Shenzhen. "Asia is becoming more and more interesting for sailors," says Joyon. "It is also interesting to our sponsors, IDEC Group, so there is a good match of interests there."

Today is launch day for the Tea Route, or the Clipper Route, if you prefer. Either way, it is Hong Kong (Shek O Rock) to London (Queen Elizabeth II Bridge) via the South China Sea, the Sunda Strait, and the Cape of Good Hope. Joyon anticipates that the South China Sea will be the trickiest past of the trip. "It is the water with which we are least familiar, and there is always heavy fishing traffic along the route. This is the sea route taken by the big sailing vessels which did their utmost to get back to Europe as quickly as possible, to be the first to sell their cargo of tea in London.

It's a long way - around 13,000nm, with multiple weather systems to deal with along the way. "We aim to be at the Cape of Good Hope in 16 days, before the long climb up the Atlantic and across the Equator heading for London. The time to beat is 36d 2h 7m. In 2018 Giovanni Soldini achieved a remarkable performance, and the bar has been raised high. But the record can be beaten!" IDEC Sport is quicker than Soldini's Maserati in heavy air, but slower in the light stuff.

Fishing boats are one thing. Floating debris such as containers is another hazard. "This boat is capable of 46kts. A container, awash, and in the dark, is invisible. With IDEC Sport, so far so good - but over many years at sea I think I've seen it all."

Joyon is planning to depart Hong Kong later today.

For the record: the greatest Clipper Race of all was between the five ships that all left China on the same tide in January 1866. The Taeping and the Ariel arrived in London just a mile apart after 99 days, with Serica finishing 1h 15m later, followed by Fiery Cross (28 hours back) and the Taitsing one day later.

Related Articles

The Famous Project CIC Jules Verne Trophy Day 6
A long, fast tack in the trade winds We like to repeat it over and over again: to date, no 100% female crew has managed to carve its name on the Jules Verne Trophy. Posted on 5 Dec
Video: All-female crew start their record attempt
The Famous Project CIC aim for the Jules Verne Trophy The all-female crew on The Famous Project CIC have set off on an attempt to capture the Jules Verne Trophy and break the round the world record. Posted on 1 Dec
The Famous Project CIC start Jules Verne Trophy
All-female attempt to break the round-the-world record It was 13.40 UTC on Saturday when the eight women of The Famous Project CIC, aboard the maxi trimaran IDEC SPORT, crossed the starting line of the Jules Verne Trophy, the extreme round-the-world race for crewed multihulls, without stops or assistance. Posted on 29 Nov
The Famous Project CIC
A crew of seven female sailors to circumnavigate the globe Today, Mediterranean sailor Alexia Barrier presented the six female sailors selected to accompany her this fall in an attempt to break the crewed, round the world, unassisted, and non-stop sailing record, the infamous Jules Verne Trophy. Posted on 16 Sep
Joyon and crew complete Tea Route in record time
The new reference time is 31 days, 23 hours, 36 minutes and 46 seconds The IDEC SPORT maxi trimaran sailed by Francis Joyon, Bertrand Delesne, Christophe Houdet, Antoine Blouet and Corentin Joyon, set a new record for the Tea Route between Hong Kong and London this morning. Posted on 19 Feb 2020
Joyon and crew shatter Tea Route record
IDEC SPORT maxi trimaran arrives in London The IDEC SPORT maxi trimaran sailed by Francis Joyon, Bertrand Delesne, Christophe Houdet, Antoine Blouet and Corentin Joyon completed the Tea Route voyage between Hong Kong and London this morning (Wednesday 19th February). Posted on 19 Feb 2020
IDEC Sport ahead of forecast
Joyon heading back up north off the coast of Western Australia On a route that they deliberately prolonged by almost 1500 miles in comparison to the Great Circle Route, the IDEC SPORT maxi trimaran IDEC SPORT has managed to get ahead of what was forecast by taking a long route down towards 37 degrees South. Posted on 25 Nov 2019
IDEC Sport's great adventure
A new experience in waters that are rarely visited by ocean racing boats The IDEC SPORT sailed by Francis Joyon, Antoine Blouet, Bertrand Delesne, Christophe Houdet and Corentin Joyon set off on a new adventure yesterday, a new challenge, a new experience in waters that are rarely visited by modern ocean racing boats. Posted on 22 Nov 2019
IDEC Sport heads for Vietnam
Francis Joyon and crew tackle the second Act of the Asian Tour 4000 miles of sailing lie ahead of the bows of the giant IDEC SPORT, as she heads towards Vietnam and its capital Ho Chi Minh City. Posted on 21 Nov 2019
Joyon to tackle Leg 2 of IDEC Sport Asian Tour
This is another record attempt, Mauritius to Vietnam Twelve days after completing the first act in his IDEC Sport Asian Tour, when he smashed the Mauritius Route record by more than six days, Francis Joyon is about to tackle the second leg of the voyage taking him to Asia. Posted on 19 Nov 2019
Zhik - Made for WaterNorth Sails Loft 57 PodcastABS2026_Sail World_1456x180-5 BOTTOM