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74. The 2019-2020 Race Line Up and Starting Stats

Ruth and I are down at St Katherine’s Dock in London today for RACE START to wave off Team UNICEF and the other yachts at the start of the 2019-2020 edition of the Clipper Round The World Yacht Race.

 

 

Here is the starting line-up and the latest stats:

Imagine-your-Korea_Schematic_19-20

 

 

 

 

CV20.   Imagine Your Korea  “Race to Greatness Race to Win.”  61 Crew: 41 Men, 20 Women, 15 nationalities, 9 Round The Worlders. Youngest crew member 20. Oldest Crew 69.

 

 

 

Bermuda_Schematic_19-20 (1)

 

 

 

 

CV21.  GoToBermuda  “Out Here Where You Belong.”  60 Crew: 43 Men, 17 Women, 10 nationalities, 8 Round The Worlders. Youngest Crew member 18, Oldest Crew 72.

 

 

 

Seattle_Schematic_19-20-Small

 

 

 

 

 

CV22.  Seattle  “The Oceans Are Our Future.”  57 Crew: 35 Men, 22 Women, 12 nationalities, 9 Round The Worlders. Youngest Crew member 19, Oldest Crew 70.

 

 

 

WTC-Logistics_Schematic_19-20

 

 

 

 

CV23.  WTC Logistics  “To Dream Is To Do.”  66 Crew: 44 Men, 22 Women, 15 nationalies, 8 Round The Worlders. Youngest Crew member 19, Oldest Crew 67.

 

 

 

 

 

Punta-del-Este_Schematic

 

 

 

 

CV25.  Punta del Este  “Punta Del Este: Land of Encounters.”  69 Crew: 46 Men, 23 Women, 19 nationalities, 8 Round The Worlders. Youngest Crew member 20, Oldest Crew 76.

Ha-Long-Bay,-Viet-Nam---Yacht-Schematic

 

 

 

 

 

 

CV26.  Ha Long Bay, Vietnam  “Race To Greatness, Race To Win.”  68 Crew: 48 Men, 20 Women, 14 nationalities, 8 Round The Worlders. Youngest Crew member 27, Oldest Crew 73.

 

 

 

 

Dare-to-Lead_Schematic_19-201

 

 

 

CV27.  Dare To Lead  “WWW.DARETOLEAD.INFO

58 Crew: 42 Men, 16 Women, 9 nationalities, 9 Round The Worlders. Youngest Crew member 18, Oldest Crew 74.

Zhuhai_Schematic_19-20 (1)

 

 

 

 

CV28.  Zhuhai  “Zhuhai – City of Islands.”  60 Crew: 41 Men, 19 Women, 9 nationalities, 9 Round The Worlders. Youngest Crew member 18, Oldest Crew 66.

 

 

 

 

Sanya_Schematic_19-20-900px (1)

 

 

 

 

CV29.  Visit Sanya, China  “Sanya: China’s Tropical Paradise.”  60 Crew: 41 Men, 19 Women, 16 nationalities, 9 Round The Worlders. Youngest Crew member 27, Oldest Crew 68.

 

 

 

 

Qingdao_Schematic_19-20

 

 

 

 

CV30.  Qingdao  “China’s Sailing City.”  63 Crew: 42 Men, 21 Women, 9 nationalities, 9 Round The Worlders. Youngest Crew member 23, Oldest Crew 72.

 

 

 

 

 

Unicef_Schematic_19-201 (1)

 

 

 

 

CV31.  Unicef  “Help Us Build A Safer World For Every Child.”  63 Crew: 43 Men, 20 Women, 14 nationalities, 9 Round The Worlders. Youngest Crew member 18, Oldest Crew 71.

 

 

 

 

If you want to watch Race Start LIVE then check out:

72. Another Day In The Office ….. and meanwhile down in Portsmouth ……

DATO220190820_145133           DATOthR569KRQD

DATO25806444227_a864a2f918_bRegular readers will be aware that shortly after my Level 3 training I was “in the office” at the Harwich Haven Authority onboard the 210,000 ton container ship OOCL Indonesia (see Blog 58: My post-Level-3-training Day at the Office, published 16 April). On Tuesday of this week I was at it again but this time on something hundreds of times smaller, the Harwich Haven Authority’s own survey vessel, the Egret.

 

Accompanying the Harbourmaster, one of our legal advisors and two representatives from the Department for Transport, we passed some of the biggest deep water berths in DATO220190820_150027the Authorities jurisdiction to visit possibly the smallest jetty right at the southern edges of our area, at Great Oakley, which included another of our areas of Special Scientific DATO220190820_145133Interest. As the old adage goes, “there was lots of water, it was just very thinly spread!” and the visit was only possible on or around High Water. At Low water the berth, and much of the approach channel, dries out. It was a beautiful day with plenty of small craft around and even the seals took an interest in our visit.

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Meanwhile, back in Portsmouth ….. on the same day and after an excellent Prep Week (more of that to follow) the Clipper Fleet slipped lines from Gosport to sail round to St Katherine’s Dock, London ahead of a whole series of events in the capital and race start on Sunday 1st September….. MUCH MORE to follow ……..

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There are now 8 Days, 11 Hours, 42 Minutes and 10 Seconds until RACE START …….

71. Descending Dragons……. the latest team and future host port partner

The Countdown clock on the official clipper website tells me that, as I start writing this blog, there are 24 Days, 18 Hours, 23 Minutes and 10 Seconds to go until Race Start, but who’s counting?? Actually I AM. Although I don’t start racing on 1st September I will be there on the day and I still have much to do before starting out for South America in early October.

One of the crocodiles nearest the canoe is Prep Week and I will be joining some fellow UNICEF crew members down in Gosport this coming Saturday for the final Portsmouth based preparations before the Clipper fleet leaves Portsmouth on Tuesday 20th August for St Katherine’s Dock. An even nearer crocodile is that I am still a number of blogs “missing” from the list I produced in Blog 65 (Rather Like London Buses …. nothing for AGES and then more than you know what to do with! published 19 Jul 2019), most notably the UNICEF Team Building Weekend and Level 4 training, in order to get up to date prior to Prep Week and, just when I thought it was safe to start typing, along comes another Clipper announcement.

You will recall that at the end of the blog before last (Blog 69: Clipper yacht branding – almost complete, published 29 Jul 2019)  I mentioned that there were, at the time of writing, two “un-named” yachts in the 2019-2020 edition. Well not anymore. This week has seen the announcement that Quang Ninh Province in northeast Vietnam has signed a two edition deal with the Clipper Race that will see a team entry this year followed by an appearance as a Host Port Partner in 2021-2022. The Quang Ninh Province is home to the UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site Ha Long Bay and this years team entry will be called “Ha Long Bay, Vietnam.”

Ha Long Baygif

Recognised twice as a World Natural Heritage site by UNESCO, Ha Long Bay is a stunning destination and, unsurprisingly, northern Vietnam’s number one tourism hub. The name “Ha Long” means “descending dragons” and local legend has it that after fighting invaders, Mother Dragon and her children decided to stay in the mortal world forever and turned into thousands of islands scattered on the Bay to protect this sacred land. So “team Josh” becomes Team “Ha Long Bay Vietnam.”

 

 

70. Advert time ……. go on, it’s for a great cause.

Lindy Scarborough, one of our growing number of UNICEF crew supporters and wife of fellow team mate Graham Scarborough (Leg 7),  is a professional jeweller and has been busy in her workshop (now known as the Boat Yard) designing and making solid silver stylised designer Clipper necklaces and earrings. Initially Lindy made one for herself to wear at the Crew Allocation Day back in May but they have attracted such widespread interest that, after consultation with UNICEF and Clipper Ventures plc, Lindy has stepped up production.

Each piece is handmade in solid sterling silver. There are two sizes of necklace available. Medium with an 18 inch chain at £89.00 and Large (a statement piece) with a 28 inch chain at £139.00 – both prices are plus special delivery p&p charged at cost. 20% of any sales will be given to the team UNICEF charity fundraising effort.

if you are interested in either the necklaces or the earrings then please e-mail Lindy direct at mel@msj.org.uk (she knows I am posting this) and before you ask, of course I’m placing an order!

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69. Clipper yacht branding – almost complete

Unicefbranding
CV 31 – UNICEF in which I completed Level 4 training and will complete Legs 2, 3, 6 and 8 of the next Race. Ironically I did Level 3 training in the all white, and at the time, unbranded, CV31. See Blog 60: Level 3 Training, Part 2 published 4 May 2019

Zhuhai was the first Clipper 2019-2020 yacht to be branded back in March (See Blog 51: Clipper 2019-2020 First Boat Branding, published 8 March 2019) and now as the Countdown Clock on the official Race website ticks down through 33 Days, 17 Hours, 37 Minutes and 15 Seconds to Race Start, pretty much all the team sponsor and yacht brandings are now complete.

 

 

 

UNICEF, Visit Sanya, WTC Logistics, Dare To Lead, Zhuhai, Punta del Este, Seattle Qingdao and Go Bermuda. Only two more to be announced. Watch this space.

68. It’s Time ….. almost for me but definitely for YOU.

its time NOW, if you haven’t already done so, to sign up as a Clipper 2019-2020 Race Crew Supporter…….

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Some of the team UNICEF Crew Supporters at Crew Allocation day

……. and most importantly this can be done from the comfort of your own armchair, it doesn’t involve strange MUSTO outfits, you might NEVER get cold and wet AND ITS FREE.

You can sign up to join the Race Crew Supporters network to find more about the Race at http://www.clipperroundtheworld.com/racecrewsupporters  Scroll down to the bottom of the page, complete the form, tick the box to receive the Crew Supports Newsletter and its “job done”. Painless. And while you are on the official website check out the UNICEF team page and links to the official Facebook page and Twitter feeds. Failing that you could always ask me to send you a postcard or a message in a bottle 😉

 

67. The Race Schedule and MY Race Schedule

When “we” last “spoke” about the race schedule – post crew allocation (See Blog 62: Crew Allocation Day (1)….. The Bits We’ve All Really Been Waiting For, published 18 May 19) there were, not to put too fine a point on  it, a few missing links. Specifically we were still awaiting announcements on one additional stopover port for Leg 1, an announcement regarding a South East Asia port for Leg 5 and, more significantly for yours truly, ALL of the details for the final leg, Leg 8. What we did know back then was that Race Start (and finish) would be London, and Punta del Este, Cape Town, Freemantle, The Whitsundays, Sanya, Zhuhai, Qingdao and Panama were announced or confirmed as stopover ports. With Seattle announced as a partner/boat sponsor then Seattle as a stopover port was pretty much guaranteed…… or maybe that last bit was the other way around, but you know what I mean.

Since then there have been a plethora of announcements on all-things-Clipper and the final piece of the scheduling jigsaw, the homecoming leg stuff, was finally announced when I was at sea completing my Level 4 training with the UNICEF team onboard CV31, the UNICEF boat. More about Level 4 training in a later blog but first here’s the complete Clipper 2019-2020 Race schedule and, if you will permit me a slightly selfish note, here is what it means for ME!

RaceSchedule

Let me try and bring that to life a little. Leg 1 will start from St Katherine’s Dock, London, St Katherines Dock1440949907ClipperStart_MD0714_(1)on Sunday 1st September 2019. The Departure ceremony will begin at 1350 with the first yacht slipping at 1500. The Parade of Sail down the River Thames should start at around 1600. The Race itself will start off Southend the following morning. Leg 1 (The Atlantic Trade Winds Leg) consists of 2 separate races over a total distance of 7250 nautical miles.Clipper_Round_the_World_Portimao-500 The Yachts are due to arrive in Portimao, Portugal between 8th-10th September. This will be a first stopover for the Clipper Race in Portimao. The Race restarts on Sunday 15th September heading for the Equator and then on to South America. The yachts are due to arrive in Punta del Este, Uruguay between 12th-16th October.

PDE1I am contracted to report to the UNICEF boat, in Punte del Este on 18th October and the Race restarts for Leg 2 on Wednesday 23rd October.  Leg 2 (The South Atlantic Challenge) comprises a single race to South Africa over some 4,200 miles using the South Atlntic trade winds and long rolling South Atlantic swells. Surfing down the fronts of these swells can bring boat speeds of over 20 knots and the leg poses unique mental and physical challenges. I will be due into Cape Town, South Africa during CapeTown3the window 7th-11th November for a well earned break. New joiners must report to their yachts on 12th November . Leg 3, and my second Leg, starts from Cape Town on Sunday 17th November. Leg 3 (The Southern Ocean Leg)  comprises a single race of 5500 nautical miles from Cappe Town to Freemantle, Western Australia. On leaving Cape Town and rounding the Cape of Good Hope, we will tack down towards the 40th parallel and the infamous Roaring Forties. The Southern Ocean provides some of the most extreme and exhilarating sailing in the world. I have been told to expect 80 foot swells, boat speeds of over 30 knots and wind speeds that can reach 70mph+. With winds sometimes coming straight from Antartica it can also be somewhat chilly! The Southern Ocean is probably the most remote Ocean on the planet and, apart from FM1the other Clipper yachts, for miost of the time our nearest companions will be the astronauts in the International Space Startion. Leg 3 is due to finish with arrival info Freemantle during the window 9th-14th December and I must vacate my berth onboard UNICEF on the 17th December. I will return home shortly thereafter.

Leg 4 (The Australian Coast -To-Coast Leg) will start from Freemantle on Sunday 22nd December 2019 and will comprise a single race of 4000 nautical miles around Australia to Airlie Beach and The Whitsundays where, having spent Christmas and the New Year at sea, the yachts will arrive during the window 9th-12th January 2020. Crew changeover, for those joining and leaving will be on 13th January and the Race restarts with Leg 5 on Saturday 18th January. Leg 5 (The Asia-Pacific Challenge) consists of 3 races over 6300 nautical miles. The first race will be from The WhitSundays to the Chinese port of Sanya with an arrival window of 10th-15th February. There will be no crew changeover in Sanya and the race restarts on Friday 21st February. The second race of Leg 5 will be to Subic Bay in the Philippines, another first for the Clipper Race. The arrival window into Subic Bay will be 25th-26th February and once again their will be no crew changeover. The final race of this leg will start from the Philippines on Friday 28th February and will race back to China and the port of Zhuhai. The arrival window into Zhuhai will be 2nd-3rd March.

I will rejoin the UNICEF boat in Zhuhai on 4th March along with the other Leg 6Zhuhai2 leggers and the race will restart on Monday 9th March. Leg 6 (The Mighty Pacific) will comprose 2 races over 8000 nautical miles. The first race will be from Zhuhai up the Chinese coast, inside the Korean Peninsula to the Olympic sailing city of Qingdao. The weather will turn significantly colder and the winds are likely to be from directly ahead, kicking up challenging sea states. One of the coldest parts of the race ends with one of the Qingdaos_partnership_with_the_Clipper-77a13cfadd7b9d5a0991c8959f50969dwarmest welcomes and the arrival window into Qingdao will be 17th-19th March. There will  be no crew changeover and the race restarts on Thursday 26th March. The race rounds the southern tip of Japan before entering the Pacific proper. After crossing the International Date Line and encountering monsterous North Pacific swells, landfall is a further 6000 miles away on the north west coast of the USA and a great entry into Seattle. The arrival window into Seattle will be between 19th-24th April and I will leave the yacht again at crew changeover on 27th April. The Race will leave Seattle for Leg 7 on Saturday 2nd May.Seattle5

Leg 7 (The USA Coast-To-Coast Leg) consists of 2 races over 7200 nautical miles. The first race is down the US Pacific coast from Seattle to Panama with an arrival window into Flamenco Island Marina on the Pacific coast between 27th May and 2nd June. After transitting the Panama canal the second race of Leg 7 will start from the Shelter Bay Marina on the Atlantic end of the Canal on Friday 5th June and will race north to New York. The arrival window into Liberty Landing Marina, New York will be 16th-19th June.

NY3I will rejoin in New York on the final crew changeover day, 22nd June 2020. Leg 8, the final leg ((The Atlantic Homecoming Leg) will comprise 3 races over some 4400 nautical miles. The first race will start from New York on Saturday 27th June and will race to the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club, Bermuda, a first appearance in Clipper for the island of Bermuda. Our arrival window into Bermuda will be 1st-2nd July Bermuda2and there will be no crew changeover. We restart the race from Bermuda on Thursday 9th July heading for Derry-Londonderry and the famous Foyle Marime Festival, a stopover which has featured regularly now in the Clipper schedule. The arrival window into Derry-Londonderry will be 23rd-27th July and again there will be no crew changeover. The final race of Leg 8 and the final race of Derry-Londonderry1Clipper 2019-2020 will start from Derry-Londonderry on Sunday 2nd August. The podium places on the overall race have been decided on the last race of Leg 8 on the last three editions of the Race so there might still be all to play for. The race is due to finish  in the Thames estuary probably on Saturday 7th August and the final Parade of Sail will return up the River Thames to St Katherines Dock, and my Clipper 2019-2020 Race will finish, on Sunday 8th August 2020.StKatheruinesDock

66. Another post about booze!

I’ve written before about booze ….. gin to be precise (See Blog 49: Manannan Mac Lir, published 23 Feb 2019). Time to go a little bit more upmarket …… champagne.

One of the reasons for a paucity of June blogs was something of “champagne run ashore” to the champagne houses of Philbert, Grongnet and Philipponnat all located south of Eperney in France. It also proved an interesting exercise in packing/loading!

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On my safe return I celebrated by opening a bottle of, appropriately enough, COMMODORE Champagne. Here’s what was written in the tasting notes …..

“From what one knows of the life of men in ancient times, there were always some who were destined to rule over their peers. These were the heads of families, heads of clans, tribal chiefs, spiritual leaders….. With the development of civilisation, the qualities of courage, willpower, perseverance and perceptiveness became the main features of these often charismatic men or women who were the leaders of the day. It was towards the end of the 18th century that one first saw a new title in the English Navy to characterise a supreme commander: “Commodore”.  Castellane has paid homage to all those who possess these qualities. Jewel of the house of de Castellane, since 1961, the Cuvee Commodore, presented in an original and unique bottle, is a champagne of superb character, made from the house’s finest grapes, each time is an exceptional year.”

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Don’t blame me, I didn’t write this stuff but I rather like the courage, willpower, perseverance and perceptiveness bit. I feel it may come in handy 😉.

65 Rather Like London Buses……… nothing for AGES and then more than you know what to do with!

Its been quite a while since I last wrote a Blog. In fact, having managed 5 or 6 a month for a year I only published one last month. It’s NOT that nothing has been happening……….. actually LOTS and LOTS has been going on AND, post Crew Allocation in May Clipper has been getting very VERY REAL. June was somewhat domestically pre-occupied …………….

Wedding1

…… and more about that (maybe) in a subsequent blog.  But the last few days and weeks have been extremely hectic and therefore, rather like waiting for a London bus, you wait for what seems like AGES and then along come more than you know what to do with so …….

 

 

Level 4 training,

More Musto Kit,

Prep Week,

How the Race is scored,

The (Addictive) Race Viewer, and

Race Start

……………. not necessarily in that order!

There are now 44 days until race start and 91 days until I report onboard the UNICEF yacht in Punta del Este, Uruguay.