Please select your home edition
Edition
Savvy Navvy 2024

L'Occitane Sailing Team set for the Vendée Globe

by L'Occitane Sailing Team 7 Nov 09:09 PST 10 November 2024
Clarisse Crémer, L'Occitane Sailing Team at the Vendée Globe © PKC Media

Four years after completing her first solo circumnavigation of the globe, Clarisse Crémer is preparing to repeat the experience, albeit in a completely new way.

The woman who came back amazed from her voyage, which she almost considered to be an initiation, is in fact setting off this year with completely new objectives in mind. Intimate as well as sporting!

With 40 boats lining up at the start, including 13 new boats and 25 foilers, the field for the 10th edition of the Vendée Globe is so strong that only he or she will be able to predict the winning trio. It's an exceptional fleet, and one in which Clarisse Crémer is hoping to make her mark, as she holds the women's record for the event. So what are her objectives after her first participation, which ended in 12th place, when she returns, stronger and better equipped, at the helm of the boat which crossed the finish line first that same year? Froma sporting point of view, I know that people expect figures, time and place objectives,' she anticipates. In the end, there's not much point in aiming for a race time, as it depends so much on the weather. But for the sake of argument, I'd like to be faster than last time. I've got a boat that can do it, but I don't have any specific goals.

Personal goals: the real quest

The most difficult race in sailing, but also the last of the remaining adventures, the Vendée Globe does not bear the name of Everest of the seas just because it is so physically and athletically demanding. Because to complete a circumnavigation of more than 24,000 miles, using the most extreme maritime routes, like the 113 other skippers (only) who have managed to achieve the feat since 1989, you need something that some people don't have. A certain thirst for exploration, a quest for introspection and self-discovery, which allowed Clarisse to serenely embrace 87 days of solitude. My main objective is above all personal,' she confides. It's to feel good on the water, or at least as good as possible, even in difficult moments. To be able to bounce back quickly if something goes wrong. At nearly 35 years of age, which she will celebrate at sea on 30 December, Clarisse Crémer now knows that she is in a position to weather any storm, without ever losing her love of the sea and sailing. Or of her other sporting objective? I'm dreaming of a Top 10 finish, because when you see the world on the start line, that would be a really great performance!

Clarisse Crémer: "I want to be more confident this time"

Imagine... The day of departure

A visualisation exercise for Clarisse, three days away from casting off and setting off, alone, for the second time, to tackle a round-the-world race at the helm of her new IMOCA Open 60. Close your eyes... Imagine... Travel...

"I don't really like departure days. I'm gradually getting into my 'robot' mode. I go straight ahead and let myself be carried along by the obligations of the organisation. I let myself be guided because that's it, the moment when I say to myself that I just want to be at sea has arrived. I can't enjoy the land any more. I want to be away...I let my emotions overwhelm me a bit when I got to the channel, it was different from last time, there were so many people there. It's beautiful.

Here I am on the water. I'm waiting for the start. This time, in my head, I'm already off. That's it! The start is given. After a completely improbable day, being out of my depth and not really enjoying myself, here I am. Right where I need to be. I can't wait for this day to be over, to be out at sea tomorrow, picking up my pace. I can't wait for the rest!"

Related Articles

Clarisse Crémer in the Vendée Globe week 3
Keeping up the pace to the Cape of Good Hope In the South Atlantic since crossing the equator, Clarisse Crémer has distinguished herself by being part of the "front pack" that managed to catch the tail end of a low-pressure system off Brazil, synonymous with an express descent to the tip of Africa. Posted on 29 Nov
Clarisse Crémer in the Vendée Globe week 2
"Happy to to be where I am" Having entered a particularly active Doldrums on Wednesday, Clarisse Crémer was only stuck there for 24 hours, and has already returned to steadier winds and double-digit speeds on Thursday afternoon. Posted on 21 Nov
Clarisse Crémer in the Vendée Globe week 1
A particularly testing start to her second solo round the world voyage Between the emotions of the start, the first miles of contact and adjustments, the first front and the first damage, the skipper of L'Occitane en Provence has experienced a particularly testing start to her second solo round the world voyage. Posted on 15 Nov
Top start for Clarisse Crémer in the Vendée Globe
An emotional start, full of determination After saying a poignant goodbye to her family and friends and greeting the 350,000 people who had turned out to watch her make her historic ascent of the channel in Les Sables d'Olonne, Clarisse set off, more determined than ever this Sunday. Posted on 10 Nov
Clarisse Crémer set for the Vendée Globe
A decisive last 18 months for the L'Occitane en Provence skipper 18 months from the start of the 10th edition of the Vendée Globe the project has been made possible by unfailing determination and commitment of the team she set up with Alex Thomson. Posted on 2 Nov
Clarisse Crémer selected for the Vendée Globe
After four transatlantic races on the IMOCA L'Occitane en Provence and 14 intense months of racing Today, July 2, 2024, it's finally official. After four transatlantic races on the IMOCA L'Occitane en Provence and 14 intense months of racing, Clarisse Crémer has officially qualified and selected for the Vendée Globe 2024. Posted on 2 Jul
Crémer fulfills requirements for Vendée Globe
After 14 days of intense and sometimes frustrating sailing across the Atlantic Last Thursday evening, after 14 days of intense and sometimes frustrating sailing across the Atlantic, Clarisse Crémer crossed the finish line of the New York Vendée, the final transatlantic race required for her to be in the 'safe zone'. Posted on 19 Jun
Trinidad and Tobago - Sail Service StaySOUTHERN-SPARS-OFFICIAL-SUPPLIER-52-SS728-X-90 BottomLloyd Stevenson - Catalyst Yacht Tender 1456x180px BOTTOM