The ARC is the Atlantic Rally Cruise, an annual transatlantic race from Las Palmas to St Lucia. I will be taking part on the British yacht Lancelot.
This year is the 25th anniversary of the ARC and I’m very excited about taking part in the race.
This will be the first experience I have had of yachting, taking my nautical adventures onto a different level from the two tallship trips I did over the last couple of years in the South Pacific and Antarctica.
The longest sea passage I did on those trips was six days and I always wondered what a longer trip would be like, so here I am, on the verge of an atlantic crossing….Lancelot in the trade winds...
Saturday November 20 2010 (departing Nov 21)
On the verge of departure, tomorrow at 8am we all get on the boat, well some are already ensconced ,and then after a hearty breakfast (read McDo Sausage Mufins, not quite sure about that one…) we will head out into the bay to get ready for the start, due at some time around 13h00 !
The last couple of days have been taken up with acclimatizing and getting some briefing on the boat and crossing. Most of the briefing was taken up with safety and emergency procedures, lifejackets, ship lines, man overboard procedures, fire etc etc! All essential , but hopefully not to be needed information.

The yacht is quite small (“no kidding” – final realization hits home!!)

We will be “hot bedding” as there are only three cabins (for the 8 of us) and it will be quite a contrast with the tallship experience.
The crew has been split into two groups of four for the watches, with the daylight watches being three sets of four hours and the nighttime four sets of three hours. So it will be pretty much non-stop!
The weather forecast is for some light winds to begin with and a relatively smooth crossing meaning the trip will be longer than two weeks, probably more like 17 days with arrival in St Lucia on December 8! On departing Las Palmas tomorrow we will head south westwards towards the Cap Verde islands to hook up with the trade winds which will take us westwards across to St Lucia. We are due to have some relatively good sailing conditions out of Las Palmas but then will hit some calmer sailing conditions before we pick up the trade winds. “Trade winds”, just the sound of it feels incredible!
I may be able to send some updates through to this blog from the crossing as the boat has email which will be used on a daily basis. At the same time, charging equipment could be a challenge as we only have two hours a day charging time apparently and everyone, like me, has come with multiple bits of equipment!! As a backstop, I went out to buy a notepad to do the blog in a more traditional style today.
Crew mates all seem fine so far: it has been great to see Lia again, ship’s Doc from the Europa and the one who dealt with my broken pelvis! I’m sure is she praying her medical expertise isn’t called upon on this trip. The rest of the crew is balanced in terms of gender, four guys, four girls and expertise, from the fine sailors to the less well equipped (I’ll let you guess which category I fall into!).
Now I should really post this and get to bed as it is nearly midnight and tomorrow will come round very quickly! But I am finalizing accommodation arrangements in St Lucia: with a couple of the crew we have decided to rent out villas near the town we sail into, we have to move half way through the week because of places being booked up but in my view being in a big villa will be most definitely called for after the cramped conditions of the Lancelot!
It feels some way off now though….
In the meantime, let’s hope for an exciting yet safe passage across the Atlantic!





















