Please select your home edition
Edition
Leaderboard new launch 2023 Spring

Vendée Globe Day 60: Tunnel vision for Pip Hare, dream realised for Cape Horner Tripon

by Vendée Globe 6 Jan 2021 17:34 GMT 6 January 2021
Armel Tripon on L'Occitaine en Provence passes Cape Horn in the Vendée Globe © Armel Tripon / L’Occitaine en Provence #VG2020

With 1300 miles to sail to Cape Horn this next week will be the toughest of British skipper Pip Hare's Vendée Globe. With her autopilot system compromised due to the lack of true wind direction and strength data input, Hare is having to constantly adjust her course manually using the pilot's remote keypad which means she is on high alert all the time, leaving her little time to sleep and eat.

But the 46 year old from Poole in England remains totally resolute, determined to look after her 20 year old IMOCA Medallia in order that the evergreen raceboat which is on its fifth round the world racing circumnavigation in turn looks after her.

Racing behind a South Pacific low pressure system in 35-45 knots of wind and big, crossed seas Hare is focused on a pinprick of light at the end of the long tunnel to her first Cape Horn rounding. Forecasts suggest that there will be no let up in the strong winds between now and the remote Cape.

"It is hard for me just now because the course is very downwind, and so I can't just put the pilot on and have a snooze. If I surf down a big wave or the wind changes direction then there is a crash gybe. And so I have the autopilot control always attached to me, no matter what I do. I am so sensitive to everything. We are going OK. The down side right now is that I don't sleep. I have done ten minutes here and there, dozes but I am hoping in six hours it will die down a bit, I will gybe and return back up a bit, then get south again on a more stable angle and I will get a snooze. We are doing alright. I just have to keep doing what I am doing," said Hare today.

Her race - and her colourful and factual communication of it - has won her legions of fans and followers of all ages and all around the globe, increasingly in France.

"The thing is that I have so many friends who are not sailing and people following us who are not into sailing who have no understanding of what I am doing out here, it is good to be able to share the experience," said Hare today before doing her first Live show in French.

The passage of Cape Horn this morning at 0801hrs UTC was the realisation of a 25 year dream for Armel Tripon on L'Occitaine en Provence. In 13th place he was the first skipper so far on this race to be able to pass so close - a matter of three miles off - that he was able to clearly see the iconic outline of the rock on his misty horizon.

After Romain Attanasio later this evening or early tomorrow, Hare could be next to Cape Horn but has the fast moving Jérémie Beyou on the foiling Charal - who had to restart 9 days after the start - around 400 miles behind. Beyou was less than happy with the Pacific conditions, again. In 2016 he was subjected to a big Pacific storm along with Yann Eliès, Jean Le Cam and Jean-Pierre Dick.

"I don't know who invented the name Pacific, because I've never seen it peaceful in three circumnavigations of the world..." grimaced Beyou today from 18th position.

And for the skippers on the climb up the Atlantic, they are savouring their re-entry from the vast, windswept plains of solitary greyness, returning to the technicolour world and sights and smells of land and humanity. Benjamin Dutreux was thrilled to be overflown by a plane returning to RAF Mount Pleasant in the Falkland Islands. Sixth placed Dutreux had just climbed his mast to get his J2 operational again. Meantime in 10th Maxime Sorel was close enough to the Falklands that he could smell the land. "It is just great to be here," he remarked. "That said while I am enjoying the relative peace and quiet of these sailing conditions, I'm scratching my head quite a bit as I have just drawn down the weather files and the routing offers me three different options."

The ascent of the Atlantic is complicated at least to the latitude of Rio. Increasingly it seems this is an edition of the Vendée Globe which has offered very, very few fast and easy miles.

Maître Coq IV skipper Yannick Bestaven is the only competitor to have broken out of the high pressure system to get into new East-South-East flow of wind which will soon be reinforced by his hooking into a low pressure system.

Bestaven has increased his lead to 245 nautical miles while behind him the going has been slow and very slow. Near the centre of the high Charlie Dalin in second was doing just 2.5kts and was being caught by Damien Seguin who overtook Thomas Ruyant for third place, even if Ruyant and Seguin are 225 miles apart on opposite sides of the anticyclone. But in terms of distance to the next waypoint there are now just 35 miles between second placed Dalin and fourth placed Ruyant.

Ranking at 17H00 UTC:

PosSail NoSkipper / Boat NameDTF (nm)DTL (nm)
1 FRA 17Yannick Bestaven / Maître Coq IV5906.50
2 FRA 1000Damien Seguin / Groupe APICIL6186.7280.1
3 FRA 79Charlie Dalin / APIVIA6191.2284.7
4 FRA 59Thomas Ruyant / LinkedOut6204.8298.2
5 FRA 18Louis Burton / Bureau Vallée 26298.6392.1
6 FRA 09Benjamin Dutreux / OMIA ‑ Water Family6361.4454.9
7 FRA 01Jean Le Cam / Yes we Cam !6419.3512.8
8 ITA 34Giancarlo Pedote / Prysmian Group6480573.5
9 FRA 27Isabelle Joschke / MACSF6536.8630.3
10 FRA 53Maxime Sorel / V And B Mayenne6548.7642.2
11 MON 10Boris Herrmann / Seaexplorer ‑ Yacht Club De Monaco6570.5664
12 FRA 30Clarisse Cremer / Banque Populaire X6881.6975.1
13 FRA 02Armel Tripon / L'Occitane en Provence6953.61047.1
14 FRA 49Romain Attanasio / Pure ‑ Best Western Hotels and Resorts7177.81271.2
15 GBR 777Pip Hare / Medallia8293.22386.7
16 SUI 7Alan Roura / La Fabrique8437.72531.2
17 FRA 14Arnaud Boissieres / La Mie Câline ‑ Artisans Artipôle8457.32550.8
18 FRA 8Jérémie Beyou / Charal8634.62728.1
19 FRA 92Stéphane Le Diraison / Time For Oceans8882.82976.3
20 ESP 33Didac Costa / One Planet One Ocean8955.13048.5
21 JPN 11Kojiro Shiraishi / DMG MORI Global One9115.83209.2
22 FRA 71Manuel Cousin / Groupe Sétin9426.83520.3
23 FRA 50Miranda Merron / Campagne de France10005.24098.7
24 FRA 83Clément Giraud / Compagnie du lit ‑ Jiliti10066.34159.8
25 FRA 72Alexia Barrier / TSE ‑ 4myplanet11032.85126.3
26 FIN 222Ari Huusela / Stark11299.95393.4
27 FRA 69Sébastien Destremau / Merci12848.76942.2
RET FRA 56Fabrice Amedeo / Newrest ‑ Art et Fenetres  
RET FRA 109Samantha Davies / Initiatives ‑ Coeur  
RET FRA 4Sébastien Simon / ARKEA PAPREC  
RET GBR 99Alex Thomson / HUGO BOSS  
RET FRA 85Kevin Escoffier / PRB  
RET FRA 6Nicolas Troussel / CORUM L'Épargne  

Find out more...

Related Articles

IMOCA Class Sailor Profile: Sam Goodchild
Who is this modest 34-year-old Englishman? In the history of the IMOCA Class there have been few skippers who have completed a debut year to rival that of Sam Goodchild, who achieved five consecutive podium finishes in his first five races and became the 2023 IMOCA Globe Series Champion. Posted on 16 May
The Vendée Globe switches to American time
The New York Vendée Les Sables d'Olonne will set sail in 15 days time The last qualifying and selection race for the solo round the world race, the New York Vendée Les Sables d'Olonne, will set sail in 15 days time, on 29 May, at 20h00 French time. Posted on 14 May
New York Vendée - Les Sables d'Olonne Preview
One month to go until the final race before the Vendée Globe One month from now, 31 skippers will set sail from New York towards the Vendée, for the final qualifying and selection race to qualify for the Vendée Gobe: the most challenging sailing race around the world. Posted on 29 Apr
Vendée Globe Press Release
With reference to Clarisse Crémer's Rule 69.2 Hearing Hearing under Rule 69.2 of the Racing Rules of Sailing on Saturday 2nd March, starting at 11:00. Posted on 4 Mar
Conrad Colman updates on Vendee Globe entry
Conrad Colman's Vendee Globe race yacht will use electricity only - no fossil fuels French/New Zealand sailor Conrad Colman, who will always be remembered for his epic finish to the 2016/17 Vendee Globe, is going again. The latest attempt will again be aimed at sailing using electricity only - no fossil fuels - and an electric engine. Posted on 9 Feb
10 environmental commitments for the Vendée Globe
The approach is part of a long-term perspective, divided into four key pillars In the run-up to the 10th edition of the solo, non-stop, non-assisted round the world race, the Vendée Globe is affirming its environmental commitments. Posted on 7 Feb
New York Vendée - Les Sables d'Olonne preview
A record 31 skippers will be setting off across the Atlantic in May While the IMOCA are in winter refit, the organisers of the Vendée Globe are unveiling the details and line-up of their transatlantic race, the New York Vendée - Les Sables d'Olonne, which will start off the coast of the United States Posted on 24 Jan
D-366, the countdown is on - Vendée Globe 2024
On 10 November 2024, the Vendée Globe skippers will set off on the 10th edition On 10 November 2024, the Vendée Globe skippers will set off on the 10th edition of the non-stop, non-assisted, single-handed round-the-world race. Posted on 10 Nov 2023
Transat Jacques Vabre, what's the stake for the VG
The first Transat Jacques Vabre set off from Le Havre Four years after the very first edition of the Vendée Globe in 1989, the first Transat Jacques Vabre set off from Le Havre. Posted on 23 Oct 2023
44 candidates for the Vendée Globe 2024
The diversity of candidates makes the race so exciting! The Vendée Globe has never been so attractive. For the 10th edition of the non-stop, non-assisted, single-handed round the world race, 44 skippers have applied. A record. Posted on 12 Oct 2023