Please select your home edition
Edition
Whangarei Marina 2 (728 x 90px) TOP

The International Association of Cape Horners launch multi-crew circumnavigators register

by Archie Fairley 24 Feb 2022 00:22 NZDT
The current record for the fastest solo non-stop circumnavigation is held by Frenchman François Gabart with a time of 42 days 16h 40' 3` set in 2017 aboard the 30m trimaran Ultim MACIF © Jean-Marie LIOT / ALEA / MACIF

The International Association of Cape Horners (IACH), has published its multi-crew circumnavigation register to compliment a similar register for solo circumnavigations published in 2020.

This latest roll of honour currently lists 1,848 individual circumnavigations during past Whitbread/Volvo Round the World races, the 1975/6 Financial Times Clipper Race, British Steel/BT Global Challenge races, Trophee Jules Verne, The Race, Oryx Quest, Barcelona and Portimão events.

Both circumnavigation registers have multi-search facilities that allow users to interrogate by name, yacht, nationality, event and time.

Britain tops the multi-crew list with 715 circumnavigations followed by France (232), New Zealand (200) Netherlands and USA (75) land-locked Switzerland with 71, Australia and Spain (51), Finland (47), Italy (41) and Sweden (40)

There are 15 yacht crews the compilers have not been able to identify (listed in red within the Register) who have competed in the Trophee Jules Verne, 1997/8 Whitbread, 2000/1 and 2004 BT/Global Challenge events, and 2011/12, 2014/15 and 2017/18 Volvo Ocean Races. We encourage these crews to come forward and register their achievements to make this historic record complete.

Within the Solo lists, 180 have sailed solo non-stop around the globe via the 3 Great Capes and 150 more have done the same with stops. France leads the nationality list with 90 non-stop circumnavigations and 27 with stops. This compares with Britain (28 non-stop and 24 with stops) and USA (6 non-stop and 27 with stops)

Ashley Manton, Chairman of the IACH, who competed on Adventure during the 1977/8 Whitbread race, said today: "The International Association of Cape Horners applaud the continuing interest in sailing around the world, particularly among Corinthian sailors excited by the opportunities that now arise from events like the 2022 Golden Globe Race, the Global Solo Challenge and Ocean Globe Race for fully crewed yachts starting in 2023. These competitors and their professional counterparts taking on the challenge of the 2022 Ocean Race and future Jules Verne record attempts, along with those who choose to cruise around the Globe via Cape Horn, have become the life-blood of our Association, so it is only right that we should honour these achievements with solo and multi-crewed registers."

View the IACH Registers of Solo and Multi-crew Circumnavigators

To be included in the IACH multi-crewed circumnavigation register, crewmembers must have completed all legs or distance of their race, though for those who sailed only on the leg around Cape Horn, the likelihood is that they are eligible to join the Association as a bonafide Cape Horner.

The current record for the fastest multi-crewed circumnavigation is held by Francis Joyon and his French crew with a time of 40 days 23h 30' 30" set in 2017 aboard their 30.5m trimaran IDEC Sport.

The fastest solo non-stop circumnavigation is held by Frenchman François Gabart with a time of 42 days 16h 40' 3" set in 2017 aboard the 30m trimaran Ultim MACIF.

Register your circumnavigation

Latest news on solo circumnavigations

The latest to be confirmed in the IACH Solo non-stop Circumnavigation Register, is British yachtswomen Jeanne Socrates, who at 77, became the oldest woman to complete the feat in 2019, Her voyage aboard the 11.58m monohull Nereida, east-about from Victoria via all five Capes took 340 days - an average speed of 3.15knots.

Australian Mark Sinclair clearly has unfinished business with the 2018 Golden Globe Race. Sinclair, better known perhaps as Capt. Coconut, was forced to pull in to his home port of Adelaide on 5th December 2018 after running out of water aboard his barnacle infested yacht Coconut.

Then, on 5th December 2021, the third anniversary of his stop in Adelaide, Sinclair set out to round Cape Horn and complete the race, as a prelude to entering the 2022 Golden Globe Race.

"I always had it in my mind to finish the 2018 Golden Globe Race, and now that the next GGR has come along, I am four years older, closer to retirement and thought I wouldn't mind doing it again" He says, adding. "Since it is very expensive to ship the boat to Europe, I'm sailing her to the start, and in doing so, will attempt to finish the 2018 race in the Chichester division with only one stop."

After weathering a force 10 storm under bare poles close to Cape Horn, Sinclair successfully rounded in infamous Cape on 12th February 2022.

Follow his progress here

Multi-crew circumnavigation news

Frenchman Romain Pilliard and his Spanish co-skipper Alex Pella were less fortunate than Mark Sinclair at Cape Horn. The two, who were challenging the record for the fastest non-stop west-about circumnavigation aboard their trimaran Use it Again, rounded Cape Horn on February 3, but then ran aground while sheltering from the same Force 10 storm that forced Capt. Coconut to batten down the hatches on his 36ft monohull Coconut, some miles South of the Cape.

The Franco/Spanish team were unhurt, but their multihull, which was washed up on the rocks in Cook Bay, was left badly damaged. Use it Again was later refloated with the help of a Chilean Navy tug and escorted under motor power to Ushuaia where repairs have commenced.

Prior to rounding Cape Horn, Pilliard and Pella had been 990 miles ahead of the record pace set by French solo sailor Jean-Luc Van Den Heede back in 2004, whose 122 day 14 hour 3 minute 49 secs west-about record aboard the 18.29 monohull Adrien they were trying to beat.

www.useitagain.earth

Apply to join the Int. Assoc. of Cape Horners: www.capehorners.org

Download membership flyer pdf

Related Articles

Doyle Sails: Stratis 600 affordable cruising sails
Doyle Sails have a range of options to suit all aspects of cruising that are durable, easy to handle Designed as the ultimate cruising solution. Stratis 600 now delivers affordable sails with increased durability and features to yachts from 15 to 200 feet. Doyle's promise to the cruising sailor has been to make sailing easier and more enjoyable Posted on 22 Apr
Mackay Boats acquire designer rights on VX range
Mackay Boats' goal is to continue supporting the exciting VX range of boats including VX Two Mackay Boats have announced they acquired the IP [Intellectual Property] rights to the VX range of boats from Bennett Yachting, in March 2024. Both companies have worked closely over the last decade along with Ovington Boats on the VX ONE and VX EVO Posted on 28 Mar
Industry faces challenges at Auckland Boat Show
Expanded Auckland Boat Show shows 180 trailer boats and RIBS with a further 130 large boats The Auckland Boat Show has wrapped up for 2024 and, in an industry facing challenges, New Zealand companies have risen to the challenge and kept selling boats while Mayor Wayne Brown, himself a boat-owner, added his support. Posted on 19 Mar
Auckland Boat Show bounces back
A fine day drew a pre-COVID sized crowd to the Auckland Boat Show's marinas and exhibition halls Despite a backdrop of economic uncertainty, boating fans poured into the Auckland Boat Show on a fine warm, sunny late-Summer day - keen to decide on where to spend their spare dollars if not now, then when the economic recovery kicks in. Posted on 16 Mar
Auckland Boat Show sets records
The Auckland Boat Show started Thursday with a record number of yachts on their New Zealand debut The 2024 Auckland Boat Show has displayed a record number of boats newly released in the New Zealand market. Filling Auckland's Jellicoe Harbour and Viaduct Events Centre as it started today, the show has over 250 boats on display. Posted on 14 Mar
Live Ocean responds to Caulerpa invasion
Live Ocean seeks financial support for an underwater pilot project for early Caulerpa detection Live Ocean Foundation is getting behind an underwater ROV (Remote Operated Vehicle) pilot project for early detection and surveillance to exotic Caulerpa - an invasive species of weed fast taking over the sea bed in the Hauraki Gulf and Bay of Islands. Posted on 12 Mar
Seven Sharp visits Whangarei Marina
A TVNZ reporter gave the new Okara Marina being built in Northland, some great nationwide exposure A TVNZ reporter gave the new Okara Marina being built in Northland, some great nationwide exposure on Waitangi Day. Seven Sharp sent a news team along to talk with overseas sailors at nearby Whangarei Town Basin marina. Posted on 12 Feb
Auckland Wooden Boat Festival program
Auckland Wooden Boat Festival has announced a stunning maritime Festival of Film and Speaker program The Auckland Wooden Boat Festival has announced a stunning maritime Festival of Film and Speaker program will be part of its inaugural event this March Posted on 7 Feb
New Mk2 RS Feva arrives in New Zealand
The MK2 RS Fevas have arrived in New Zealand and are now available for you to go sailing The long-awaited MK2 RS Fevas have arrived in New Zealand and are now available for you to go sailing. Posted on 7 Feb
PredictWind - GO! exec 728x90 BOTTOMRick Dodson - 5 140623Whangarei Marina 2 (728 x 90px) BOTTOM