Vendée Globe

A working holiday for Marc Guillemot

Around the world
A working holiday for Marc Guillemot
© Jean-Marie Liot / DPPI
January 16. 2012

With ten months to go to the start of the next Vendée Globe, on 10th November in Les Sables d'Olonne, the skipper of Safran Marc Guillemot spent the holiday season working on his boat and testing a new mast for the next Vendée Globe. As we draw closer to the start, Marc tells us about his next round the world race and the three months of being alone it will entail.

 

When you think that next Christmas you’ll be a tsea, did you do anything special this time?
No, I’m not someone, who looks ahead from one Christmas to another. I didn’t do anything special. In fact, it was a bit unusual, as we did some work on the boat. Between Christmas and the New Year, we stripped Safran down, and tested mast number three, the one which we’ll be using for the Vendée Globe. So let’s say that the quiet period at the end of the year was more work than rest, but I’m not complaining: the tests went well and the boat has gone in for her refit. Everything is going smoothly.

 

Is it hard to spend three months alone?


Yes, of course, there are highs and lows. We spend so much time in the Southern Ocean in a hostile environment, that there are bound to be times, when we find ourselves alone and cut off from the world. That is particularly true when we spend a month sailing in the Indian and Pacific Oceans covering the south. Down there, apart from the albatrosses and sea mammals, there really is no one. When we round the Horn and start to head back up north, we start to see cargo ships and then a few fishing boats. That’s why that rounding is so symbolic, as it marks a return to civilisation in many ways…

 

What do you wish for in 2012, for yourself, but also for the planet that you’ll be circling next winter?

It’s never easy sorting out your wishes… For me, and this won’t be a surprise to anyone, in 2012 I’d like an ideal preparation for the boat… and then by next December to be up there in the top three in the Vendée Globe. As for the planet, it may be a wish in vain, but I would like to see people show more respect for it and for some of the big ideas to become reality. Because, when you sail around the world, unfortunately we come across signs of pollution, which are even more difficult to stand when you are out on the open seas.

 

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