Clipper Race - Through the Panama Canal and on to Jamaica

Boating and Sailing News 19 May


Clipper Race Start in Panama

panamaPanama - Race 10 of the Clipper 'Round the World Yacht Race took of today from Panama in fluky winds ranging from 12 to 30 knots. The fleet is now sailing towards Jamaica, where they are expected to arrive in Errol Flynn Marina, Port Antonio, late on Wednesday night or early Thursday morning.

The Jamaica yacht was first off the line, determination to break the ‘home port curse’ and secure their first win of the Clipper series.

The fleet was hit by a sudden squall after the start, causing the winds to shift temporarily to a southerly direction. As the Clipper Race fleet headed north towards the Caribbean island of Jamaica, overall race leaders Hull & Humber had moved into pole position with Durban 2010 and Beyond close on their heels.

The last four yachts to transit the Panama Canal sailed out into the Caribbean last night to join the six who had completed their passage during Friday and Saturday for the Le Mans start at a prearranged rendezvous point. In a Le Mans start the yachts line up with only their mainsails hoisted. On the starting signal they must raise their headsails as quickly as they can to gain as much advantage as possible over their competition.

Race 10 at only 590 miles is one of the shortest of the 14 individual races in Clipper 07-08. This leg is an upwind sprint to the Caribbean island and the finish line before the fleet arrives in Port Antonio, Jamaica.

Round the world crew member on the current leaders Hull & Humber Nigel Rose says, “The race is going to be manic because it’s a sprint so there’s not going to be any weather routing issues or anything. It’s just going to be side by side for four days so it’s going to be tough and demanding. We seem to be able to push the boat harder than most. It’s challenging but we’re very good at it.”

James Douglas is a member of the ONE HULL Tag Team, a group of young people from Hull who are sailing a leg each in the 35,000-mile race around the world. He says, “I reckon this race is going to be a lot more difficult than the last one, definitely. It’s another different experience, beating all the way. We’re confident of getting another first place. We’ve got a good crew on here, so I reckon we can do it again.”

Skipper Danny Watson agrees. “We’ve got very good crew morale at the moment,” he says. “We’ve had two firsts out of the last three races and we all enjoy each other’s company. Everyone’s up for giving it a real good blast for four days up to Jamaica.”

 

The Clipper Race yachts completed the transit of the Panama Canal in just four days from the arrival of the first yachts on May 14th. Clipper 07-08 Race Director, Joff Bailey, says, “Our sincere thanks go to the Panama Canal Authority who ensured we transited with the minimum delay. It means we have managed to make up more of the time we lost in Hawaii last month and are on schedule to start Race 11 from Jamaica as planned next Saturday.”

The yacht Hull & Humber was in the second group of Clipper yachts to transit the Panama Canal. Brendan Decordova, another of the ONE HULL Tag Team, says, “Going through the canal was impressive – the locks are huge. When you see the gates close behind you, you get quite emotional about leaving the Pacific behind. When you get to the Atlantic you do feel like you’ve travelled across a continent.”

 

  • Video 1: Hull & Humber's shares his thoughts on the 'perfect' race as the crew gets to grips with some unwelcome visitors.
  • Video 2: The Hull & Humber yacht leading towards an early finish at the Angel Gate.
  • Video 3: Aboard Hull & Humber yacht in the Clipper 07-08 Round the World Yacht Race as the boat crosses the Gate Angel finish line to Panama in first place - making them first in the race overall.

Your browser is not able to display this multimedia content.





Submitted By YachtPals on 19 May

clipper race, Panama, Panama Canal, boats, boat, clipper 07-08, clipper round the world yacht race, sailing, sailboats, yachts
 

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

panama canal double standards

Sailor (anonymous)'s picture

how come they get to go through the panama canal so fast?

Post new comment

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <small> <address> <sup> <sub> <strike> <cite> <code> <blockquote> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <h2> <h3> <h4> <h5> <h6> <hr> <img> <br> <br /> <p> <span> <b> <i>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Insert Google Map macro.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
18 + 0 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.