A real homecoming

News

March 14. 2009 at 15:38
© OLIVIER BLANCHET / DPPI / Vendée Globe

If Raphael Dinelli had a sense of déjà vu when he crossed the finish line of the Vendée Globe race this afternoon it would be entirely understandable. Four years ago he completed the race 125 days after leaving his home port. Now, again today, his race round the globe on the same boat has taken him 125 days, 2 hours, 32 minutes and 24 seconds

After arriving back to his local bay this morning Dinelli crossed the finish line at 14 34 24 hrs GMT this afternoon. The early morning mist had long since cleared and he was treated to light winds and pleasant sunshine to finally breach the finish line at the Nouch South mark. Dinelli sailed 28,140 miles at an average of 9.37 knots.  The theoretical distance was covered at 8.23 knots.

As an official and unofficial entrant Dinelli is this race’s most regular skipper. He raced as a ‘pirate’ in 1996 when he took Titouan Lamazou’s boat and memorably was rescued from the upturned hull by Pete Goss after 36 hours lashed by waters of only 3 degrees Celsius. He came back in 2000 when he finished hors course after stopping in Cape Town to make repairs after he hit a whale. The last edition was his first fully successful race when he finished in 12th place in 125 days 4 hours.
His race has again proven his extraordinary durability. He has suffered for much of the course with tendonitis in his elbow, exacerbated by only having drinking minimal water supplies. When he stopped in the Falklands Islands to try and repair a halyards problem he was allowed to take on supplies of painkillers and anti-inflammatories.
In the Pacific he and Norbert Sedlacek ran alongside each other for several days, until the Austrian cruelly missed a weather system and was left wallowing in a high pressure area.
But the key message from Dinelli’s race has been publicising his campaign to run his Fondation Ocean Vital clean, using only naturally generated energy from his wind generator and his bank of solar panels.