Fleet arrives in London today
20 August 2015
The Clipper 2015-16 Race fleet arrives at St Katharine Docks this afternoon at approximately 1645 local time (1545 UTC), parading up the Thames and entering central London’s only marina in front of the iconic Tower Bridge. Ten days later the teams will depart for the ‘race of their lives’.
The tenth edition of the Clipper Race will take 11 months to cover 40,000 nautical miles in a series of 14 races between six continents: It's the world's longest ocean adventure! Irrespective of the amateur status of the crew, Mother Nature pulls no punches - it's one of the toughest endurance events on the planet.
Race founder and chairman Sir Robin Knox-Johnston said: “They’re going to go through some of the calmest waters in the world and some of the roughest waters in the world. In fact the roughest waters in the world. They’ll meet winds from every single direction – hopefully good ones so they can go fast but they will have to learn to sail with whatever winds are available to them.
“The thing that everyone learns is that sailing is a great lesson in patience, plus the stubborn tenacity needed when you’re beating into a snow blizzard and you know you have to keep that boat going until it’s your turn to be relieved.”
Nearly half of the 700 crew, representing 44 nationalities, from all walks of life, had never sailed before undergoing their extensive pre-race training. The youngest is 18 and the oldest is 74. 35 per-cent are women.
“When you take people who have never sailed before you have to train them, you can’t just put them on a boat and say ‘cross an ocean’ - that’s totally irresponsible. They have to be trained and made safe on a boat. So every one of these crew have had a minimum of four weeks training with us in a carefully planned programme which is constantly developed from what we’ve learned in previous races, to encourage the crew to learn more about what they’re taking on.
“No one should go to sea unaware of the risks and the dangers and how to look after themselves. We hammer that home the whole time. They’re heading out on a 40,000 nautical mile odyssey,” added Sir Robin
It’s certainly a life-changing experience for the crew who are following in the footsteps of more than 3300 people who have taken on some of the world’s toughest oceans in this unique global challenge since its inaugural race in 1996. A full circumnavigation is still a rare achievement: More people have climbed Mount Everest than have sailed around the planet.
A video featuring an interview with Sir Robin, previewing our tenth edition is on You Tube here.
Join The Race