Objective 36

Journey

This is the category to categorise all posts that relate to journeys, travels, passages

May’s escape to Britanny – return from navigation

 We had promised to return with more wind to these Morbihan coasts, and this late spring week was not unvain. 4 repeat offenders and 1 young sailor thus faced 4-5B with a western dominance and 2-3m swell during a very beautiful week departing from Port Haliguen.

The mount is once again a recent RM 1180 rented from the excellent Alternative Sailing (twin keel, single rudder, mast and carbon sail). If the boat had proven itself as a great outdoor living space in a heatwave, it demonstrated its formidable performance at all speeds, even upwind. The speedo found an anchor in the 10ths, rarely below 8ths, and offer us some peaks at 12nds.

Saturday May 25: our friendly rental company allowed us to sleep on board before the formal take over, so we woke up having already made our mark. A substantial refueling later, we are already in the bay of Quiberon for a warm-up worthy of the name: the swell is not yet there and the wind is “only” 15 knots, allowing the crew to go over the basic maneuvers and get into the mood quickly. The essential Navily found us what will turn out to be our only anchorage of the week, the canoe beach north of Hoëdic. Warming up also for our Wing-man whose gear seems to be all in place!

Sunday May 26: we got down to business: head to the island of Yeu. The sea is ours, just ours. Too much wind for the spinnaker which will remain in the holds all week. Two large broadsides allowed us to leave the wind turbines on the port side. This was the big revelation for our young sailor: a snowboarder and veteran of bike/motorcycle raids, he discovers that 8 tons of wood and lead at 11 knots in 3m of sea can be very, very funny. The fish will discover with relish that the crew is not yet completely marinated and our brave sailors retreat to Herbaudière at the tip of Noirmoutier for an aperitif in the sun and a dinner of which the Vendée have the secret. 

Monday May 27: this will be the other good surprise of this stay. While the captain fears having eaten his white bread and having to undergo a painful ascent over several days, the wind allows an almost direct route to Pornichet at speed and comfort for everyone. A surprisingly (too?) short leg that allows the wing-man to winger and allow us to spend the night side by side with the great professor’s Wisamo and get our exclusive vroom-vroom club tatoos. As for Pornichet: not the right date, not the right atmosphere, not the good weather, port too far from everything…

Tuesday May 28: a roughly similar stage to head to Le Palais: noticeably open upwind, a well-formed sea but in phase with the wind and no one on the way. But what a different environment upon arrival! This is a real port, where anchorage is not standardized and where the walls exude history. A very succinct VHF welcome and a port captain on her zodiac who has seen others, here we are moored to 4 centuries of Vaubanesque history; too bad the fort cannot be visited. The welcome from the off-season islanders will be exceptional: Lucienne, Léa, Léanne, Laura, … the seasonal workers are taking possession of the place before the first tourists and they are full of benevolent energy (drunken chess anyone?). Too much ! will say the latest nightbird in the wee hours.

Wednesday May 29: it’s a gamble with the weather, if the climb back to Groix looks very feasible, it will then be necessary to return in one go the next day. It will be a very wet stage, with a regular sequence of squalls and instrument navigation: no visual on Groix less than three miles away. But as a bonus for bad weather and the off-season, we will be able to moor with the fishermen in the inner harbor to taste our first pancakes and pay homage to Ti Beudeff.

Thursday, May 30: the day begins for the best with a clever swap with our favorite neighbors (and good culinary advice): two beautiful lobsters at a bargain price and three spiders as a treat. The crossing to Quiberon will then be perfumed with successive vapors from the pressure cooker. The sun is shining, it is blowing at 23 knots, and we trace the route at an average of 11 knots with all sails up: four beautiful legs at 150° and as many gybes as in the books to avoid a full tailwind. We will have to reduce (in true conditions!) to cross the Teignouse and go back towards Port-Haliguen while practicing solo tacks. A final wing session and a bit of tidying up before a shower “we clean everything”, an aperitif “we empty everything”, and a meal “we eat the little whelps”. And a long evening at Barantyno’s, the only bar in Quiberon open after midnight where the special maritime intervention forces will show us their Maori tattoos “guaranteed from over there but we can’t say more”.

Very positive results with a sailor now official helmsman, a more than experienced crew and a progressive mastery of engine maneuvers (even if still stressful) and electronic navigation (it’s great, once everything is well calibrated). We will come back but not necessarily right away. Next stop: Northern Brittany, Croatia, Corsica or Norway?

Hardware notes:

  • Suction cups for floors are annoying.
  • The kitchen drawer in the companionway needs to be reviewed.
  • The helmsman’s toe clips must review their ergonomics.
  • The boat is great.
  • The carbon mast helps, but the adjuster must follow the sheets.
  • The winches are always undersized. 

Late season in Brittany – return from navigation

It should have been the end of summer and the beginning of the autumn depressions, it ended being a week under the Morbihan/Finistère tropics. Daytime temperatures in the 30°C and calm winds not exceeding 2B, varied direction with an easterly trend.

The boat is new, an RM 1180 from 2023; the crew of 6 brave souls.

Saturday September 2: Shopping and then a small outing to get started, from Trinité-sur-Mer to anchor in Houat / Tréach Salus. Sail and engine testing. The anchorage is crowded, the crew is exhausted from their previous trip and will not go ashore. First shooting stars. A nice night sky will keep us well in line with the beach.

Sunday September 3: departure before sunrise (how beautiful it is) for a long upwind stretch to the outer harbor of Port-Tudy before the calm sets in. Great walk to the Pointe du Grognon, Pen Men being too far for our thirsty throats. Aperitif, fanfare mini-concert, very nice restaurant, then meetings at Ti Beudeff, the real thing: Manu, the music teacher; and Pascal his baritone teammate.

Monday September 4: departure at dawn upset, it will be our sticky morning. First, our dinghy decided to visit the outer harbor on its own: our own lifeguard first, then the dinghy Marie and her handsome boyfriend saved the day. Then one of our large chests on board, on strike for mistreatment, refuses to open. Finally, it is a furler, whose halyard is groaning at having been dropped, which refuses to comply. The rest will be more pleasant with a long beam leg under gennaker up to Glénan and our highest speeds of the week, i.e. ~8nd which will attract our first dolphins. A little kite demo from the most adventurous on board. Finally, La Boucane will maintain its reputation: Ludovic and his troupe, the blue Bavaria and his trainees, then Joséphine and her English aristocrats will become our best ephemeral friends.

Tuesday September 5: water is starting to run out. After hesitating to visit Concarneau, we’ll head towards Lorient-Kernevel. First a long upwind leg, then square tacks in front of Ile Verte side; a route that attracts many dolphins, some of which will stay with us for a while and forever on the GoPro. A first conclusive drone test and our first real showers will whet our appetite for a tartiflette at 27° before Maelys, life coach, takes us on the Route du Rhum.

Wednesday September 6. Go out with the sunrise to enjoy the wind. Gennaker and aerial ballet of combat planes between Groix and Belle-Ile which make noise and take us away from the straight line towards the beautiful and peaceful Sauzon. The drone decides that underwater is cool too: rest in peace, young brother! Still calm and therefore another walk to Les Poulains and the home of Sarah Bernhard. The crew dons equipment worthy of the name. Tip-top lighthouse restaurant and Patoche, its chef, will challenge us to song games. Nocturnal cravings and omelette under the stars.Magic.

Thursday September 7. Lazy wake up. The time to get closer has arrived: direction Port-Haliguen (still not sure of the exact pronunciation). The Teignouse is bathed in oil and we chase away the slightest whisper of wind. Shower, start of tidying up, Bara Gwinn, Pourlette creperie and stroll in Quiberon: it’s chic!

Friday September 8. It’s time to go home. Total calm used to brick everything. A week without the skittles touching anything and a deposit fully recovered despite some cold sweats.

More than positive results: a top crew, an unstoppable chef, stories stories stories, and one more chapter in our long friendship.

We’ll come back, with a little more wind!

Norbert Sedlacek, Roland Jourdain and eco-sailing

Two interesting bits of eco-sailing that I came across recently.

First, the interview of Roland Jourdain by Pierre-Yves Lautrou (Into the Wind / Tip & Shaft) where he notably discusses the change of paradigm brought by eco-sourced materials in the production of sailing boats, starting with racing ones.

Second: today marks the departure of Norbert Sedlacek on board Ant Artic Lab for what appears to be something quite harder than the Vendée Globe in terms of journey. I am very eager to follow the adventure and look forward to reading the outcome of it. Interview here.

I would like to understand how the two initiatives compare, in terms of approach, expectations and results. And I am eager to hear about the many other ideas out there at making sailing more sustainable.


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Sailing programme – A first sketch

So, one has to start somewhere, and setting a sailing programme seems like a sensible place to do so.

Inspired by Cornell’s family bibles, by the Grand Large Yachting World Odyssey 500 and, unconsciously, by many other elements, I came up with the following very draft sketch.

A few comments.

So far, it is an itinerary, not really a programme as the time element is missing (this is my next step). Yet, it follows a rough East-to-West direction.

Timing wise, the idea is to not rush it, but rather to sail when possible and spend the time onshore when not, even if for several months. As well, the idea is to spend ample time visiting the inland: I don’t see myself passing by Peru and not visiting the Machu Pichu, or by Australia and missing Mount Uluru.

All combined, I don’t see this lasting less than 5 years, probably more.

Oh, and this assumes by and large staying within trade winds, but I have another quite different idea in mind as well (which will be for a later post).

Any thoughts or hints at this stage? I am particularly eager in online tools/resources to help make this more efficient.

LocationCountry
LorientFrance
SantanderSpain
GijonSpain
A CorunaSpain
VigoSpain
CascaisPortugal
CasablancaMorocco
Canary IslandsSpain
DakarSenegal
Cape VerdeCape Verde
MartiniqueFrance
St LuciaSt Lucia
St Vincent and the GrenadinesSt Vincent and the Grenadines
GrenadaGrenada
RoqueVenezuela
CuraçaoThe Netherlands
ArubaThe Netherlands
CartagenaColombia
Panama StraitPanama
GalapagosEcuador
SalinasEcuador
Callao (Lima)Peru
Easter IslandChili
PitcairnUK
Gambier (Polynesia)France
Marquesas (Polynesia)France
Tuamoutus (Polynesia)France
Tahiti (Polynesia)France
Bora Bora (Polynesia)France
SuwarrowCook Islands
SamoaSamoa
Vava’uTonga
WallisFrance
FijiFiji
VanuatuVanuatu
New CaledoniaFrance
New ZealandNew Zealand
SydneyAustralia
BrisbaneAustralia
Cairns (Great Coral Reef)Australia
Torres StraitAustralia
DarwinAustralia
BaliIndonesia
SingaporeSingapore
PhuketThailand
Sri LankaSri Lanka
MaldivesMaldives
ChagosUK
MauritiusMauritius
RéunionFrance
MadagascarMadagascar
SeychellesFrance
TanzaniaTanzania
MozambiqueMozambique
DurbanSouth Africa
Cape of Good HopeSouth Africa
NamibiaNamibia
Saint HelenaUK
SalvadorBrazil
French GuainaFrance
Trinidad and TobagoTrinidad and Tobago
GrenadaGrenada
Saint VincentSaint Vincent
Saint LuciaSaint Lucia
MartiniqueFrance
GuadeloupeFrance
AntiguaAntigua and Barbuda
St Kitts & NevisSt Kitts & Nevis
Puerto RicoUSA
Dominican RepublicDominical Republic
CubaCuba
BahamasThe Bahamas
FloridaUSA
GeorgiaUSA
South CarolinaUSA
North CarolinaUSA
VirginiaUSA
New JerseyUSA
New YorkUSA
BostonUSA
LorientFrance

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Histoire de Partir – A review

2006 Albatros-award winner, Histoire de Partir is a multifaceted book around a one-year sabbatical by the Nieutrin, a French family of five, with three kids aged 7, 5, 2.

Read from start to finish, it tells their journey in the Caribbean in the early 2000’s on board 12m-long TomNeal, a second hand Nautitech 395 (I went for such linear reading, and how I would advise to do).

But a smart index system allows the reader to swap from a linear reading to an theme-based reading: speedier to look for specific topics or skipping parts of less interest to the reader.

The book interestingly manages to avoid the many usual pitfalls of such tales. It is not technical (and includes quite a few explanations of the unavoidable sailing terminology for the non-sailors), it is not a boring day-by-day journal (but you will still get a real sense of their journey), and it is not (only) about their own story.

I particularly liked the book.

It’s structure is so that every mini-chapter is hardly longer than a single page, making it a natural page turner. It gives a great rythme to the story and allows for reading two pages at night or diving into it for hours.

The underlying substructure is great: rather than blending everything at once, each chapter is about a technical aspect, the economics of a sabbatical, the discovery of a new Island, or the portrait of a new encounter, etc. Read 15 years after it was written!, the book has aged very well and the reader might even find nostalgia in the now-outdated sections explaining what WiFi is or how to carry movies along. Most will find there a sense of how quickly technology is (still) evolving.

But more importantly, it is well written. Though Marie and Hervé are not professional writers and hardly professional sailors, they truly are great observers which they transcribe perfectly into a compelling journey. It is straightforward, fun and altogether captivating. It is not the story of an innocent dream, nor of lengthy account of their trip.

The book is definitely touching. The story is modest by all accounts, it is full of humility and the crew makes no mystery of their own weaknesses and fears. They manage to bring the reader on board and one only feels like sharing the next Ti Punch with them.

A few regrets, but no criticism.

Many will probably feel that the trip and book are too short. One would have liked to see them go further geographically, cross Panama, meet more extraordinary people, and carry on. One would have loved to see the kids becoming teenagers and the sailors extend their journey on and on. But the latest edition of the book will give a hint of what the family has become.

Finally, there’s to my knowledge, no translation of the book in English. May be the occasion to swap that Assimil for a true book?

It was my first Albatros-winner book but if the successors to Histoire de Partir are on par quality-wise, I know what my winter readings will be about 🙂


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