Please select your home edition
Edition
Vaikobi 2024 December

Clipper Race Double Act: Family connections

by Clipper Round the World Race 12 Jul 2020 03:38 PDT
Melanie and Jasmine Morris in the Whitsundays © Brooke Miles Photography

The Clipper Race forges incredible bonds between complete strangers from all different walks of life and from all around the world. But sometimes the bond is already there before the race begins.

In the current race edition, thirteen double acts are participating, a growing trend. They represent ten different nations and combinations of parents and children, couples and partners, competing on a single leg, combining several or completing the full circumnavigation. Over eleven months, husbands and wives, fathers and daughters, fathers and sons, and mothers and daughters will share an experience of a lifetime, including Melanie and Jasmine Morris.

There were two main reasons why Melanie and Jasmine from Perthshire, Scotland, decided this was the challenge for them. Firstly, they both liked the idea of celebrating major milestone birthdays at sea - Melanie turned 60 in March, 2020, and Jasmine 30 in February. But most importantly, the pair wanted to celebrate that they could still take on an adventure like the Clipper Race together.

Jasmine explains: "My mum has had breast cancer twice. I was eight years old when she got diagnosed the first time and we almost lost her.

"That she is able to do this, she will be 60 years old, she's a single mum, got through breast cancer both times and fought hard to be here for me and my brother - I'm just so proud of her."

The feeling is mutual, with Jasmine's mother Melanie adding: "I'm so proud of Jasmine as well because it hasn't been easy for her with all the situations that have been going on and I just think it is an amazing thing.

"We always underestimate our capabilities. My experience is that people think they cannot do things but for me, I believe that you can. Even if you have difficulties in life, sometimes I think by setting yourself a challenge, to really do something that your heart desires, everything is possible.

"This is a celebration of being 30 and 60 years old respectively, and surviving breast cancer twice over; it's just saying live your life."

The chance to experience adventure together was also the reason why 52 year old Ian Griffiths, a consultant engineer who lives in Bristol, decided to take on the race with 18 year old daughter Iona.

Ian and Iona, raced for the same team but on different legs. Ian raced first, embarking on Leg 3 from Cape Town to Fremantle. Then the Clipper Race baton was passed to Iona who took part in Leg 5, from the Whitsundays to Sanya.

Ian explains: "I was looking for a way to rack up some nautical miles. I saw the ad on the London tube so I suggested to Iona that we go to an open day in Liverpool to find out more.

"Knowing how capable and 'up-for-it' Iona is (she's very courageous), it seemed like the perfect fit to expand both of our horizons, go outside our comfort zones and create some memories together in the process.

In addition to the thirteen couples on the race, Keith Baker will be completing his family relay. Keith will be racing some 20,000 nautical miles in Legs 1, 2, 3, and 8, taking over from daughter Fran who went from Liverpool to Punta del Este, Uruguay, in the 2017-18 edition of the game.

Keith, a 62 year old Company Director from Essex, UK, says: "Watching Fran have this awesome experience made me reflect so I retired early to do all of those things I always said I'd do and probably wouldn't 'when I retire'. The first thing on the agenda was to follow in my daughters wake and get on the Clipper Race. Every experience I've had relating to the Clipper Race has been an absolute blast."

His daughter Fran, a 30 year old Business and Operations manager, adds: "Being part of the Clipper Race is hands down the best thing I have ever done in my life.

"Fortunately for me, I also get to see my Dad enjoy the amazing Clipper Race experience in his retirement, something I know he will love and excel at as he is extremely driven and hardworking - a 110% kind of guy. I am so proud of the adventurer he is and very grateful that this is a shared experience we will always have."

For more information visit www.clipperroundtheworld.com.

Related Articles

Clipper Race announces line up of First Mates
Each First Mate will assist their Race Skipper in leading their teams of non-professionals The Clipper Race First Mates who will be helping to lead a team in the toughest endurance challenge on the planet have been announced. Posted on 26 Apr
Seattle set to host Clipper Race stopover
Tenth anniversary of first visit, returning with team entry Seattle is set to host the Clipper 2025-26 Race as the global sailing event has announced the city will feature on its race route. Posted on 4 Apr
Clipper Round the World Race to return to Oban
After tourism boosting debut visit last summer The Clipper Round the World Yacht Race will be returning to Oban to "bring global focus on the area as a great place to visit and invest" as the West Coast town is announced as a port on the event's 2025-26 edition. Posted on 31 Mar
Clipper Race announces its new line-up of skippers
“Sailing is a level playing field – with the ocean an equaliser” The next roster of eleven Clipper Race Skippers taking on one of the toughest jobs in sailing has been announced. Each will lead teams of non-professionals, making six ocean crossings on the 40,000 nautical mile, eleven-month race around the globe. Posted on 28 Mar
Clipper Race celebrates 30 years of adventure
One of the secrets to the success and longevity of biennial event is the highly experienced team This month marks 30 years since Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, the first person to sail solo, non-stop, around the world, founded the Clipper Race. Posted on 7 Mar
Clipper Race to return to Portsmouth
On the 25th anniversary of its first departure from the city When its fleet departs from Gunwharf Quays this August, the event will be celebrating two milestones - the 25th anniversary of its first departure from the city and 30 years of training people to cross oceans and sail around the world. Posted on 3 Mar
Clipper Race returns to its roots
To find next batch of ocean adventurers At 58 years old, Plymouth-based Advanced Clinical Practitioner Loveday Fethney is proving that adventure knows no age limit. Posted on 15 Feb
Spotlight on Clipper Race Leg 5
A tactical multi-stage challenge through the tropics Renowned for its challenging conditions and energising close racing, Leg 5 is a multi-stage leg on the Clipper Race circumnavigation. Posted on 1 Feb
Musto partners with three Clipper Ventures brands
This broader partnership with Clipper Ventures will span the next four years Clipper Race crew have worn Musto in training and on their ocean crossings since 2019 and will continue to be kitted out in industry leading technical clothing for the upcoming 2025-26 and 2027-28 editions. Posted on 25 Jan
Switching the Christmas Day barbie for Christmas
The Clipper Race is one of the biggest challenges of the natural world This time next year, everyday people from all over the globe will be taking part in the Australian Coast to Coast leg of the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race. Posted on 24 Dec 2024
MySail 2025Palm Beach Motor YachtsSea Sure 2025