I don't know whether many of us have been following the Global Solo Challenge race. As a single-handed racer, I have to admit I have been following this race closely, and had become a big fan of Cole Brauer, ever since seeing how she dealt with the Atlantic leg of the race. Since then she has consistently sailed an amazing race; creatively routing her way around challenging weather systems all of the competitors had to deal with all race long. Her routing has been a mix of courageously placing her boat in some very heavy winds and having amazing day's distance run, while not pushing so hard that she blew up the boat.
In the mean time, she set a new record time for the fastest circumnavigation in a Class 40 (or any 40 foot monohull for that matter.) And while its easy to think of the IMOCA 60's as the 'big leagues', in many ways racing a forty-footer solo-around the world is a much harder task because the skipper needs to protect the boat in conditions that a 60 footer would shrug off, and the smaller size makes it harder to carry kinds of gear that the the IMOCAs carry. Also, the Class 40's do not permit the kind of innovative technologies that help make them more manageable. Nor do Class 40's protect the skipper from the elements as well as an IMOCA 60.
To put the impressiveness of her finish in perspective, more than half of the original starters dropped out. She came in more than 8 days ahead of the next Class 40 (a newer and faster design) and she is more than a month ahead of the last place Class 40. And when I say that half the boats dropped out part of that is that one boat was sunk, and another had to be abandoned, in both cases with the crews plucked off the boats.
Here are some interviews with her. Some of the footage is outrageous:
Of course one of the neatest things she did is that her boat is called "First Light". As she approached the finish line, she purposely slowed down so that she could cross the finish line at the first light of the dawn.
My heartfelt congratulations and admiration goes out to this extraordinarily skilled sailor first, but also to her as one tough young woman.
Jeff
In the mean time, she set a new record time for the fastest circumnavigation in a Class 40 (or any 40 foot monohull for that matter.) And while its easy to think of the IMOCA 60's as the 'big leagues', in many ways racing a forty-footer solo-around the world is a much harder task because the skipper needs to protect the boat in conditions that a 60 footer would shrug off, and the smaller size makes it harder to carry kinds of gear that the the IMOCAs carry. Also, the Class 40's do not permit the kind of innovative technologies that help make them more manageable. Nor do Class 40's protect the skipper from the elements as well as an IMOCA 60.
To put the impressiveness of her finish in perspective, more than half of the original starters dropped out. She came in more than 8 days ahead of the next Class 40 (a newer and faster design) and she is more than a month ahead of the last place Class 40. And when I say that half the boats dropped out part of that is that one boat was sunk, and another had to be abandoned, in both cases with the crews plucked off the boats.
Here are some interviews with her. Some of the footage is outrageous:
Of course one of the neatest things she did is that her boat is called "First Light". As she approached the finish line, she purposely slowed down so that she could cross the finish line at the first light of the dawn.
My heartfelt congratulations and admiration goes out to this extraordinarily skilled sailor first, but also to her as one tough young woman.
Jeff