Cape to Rio Yacht Race (January 2003) – Cape Town, South Africa

practical-guide
Updated Aug 7, 2006

Days after being labelled an “intrepid young British adventurer”, Al is given a dose of reality after 24 days at sea crossing the Atlantic. Pride comes before a hurl.

Cape to Rio Yacht Race (January 2003)

Cape Town, South Africa


Strange that South America should begin beneath Cape Town’s Table Mountain.

Yet as I stood on the foredeck of the yacht, watching my waving friends

slowly shrink from sight, it felt less like an ending than the start of a

new chapter. I was aboard Maiden, bound for Rio de Janeiro amidst the

glamour and excitement of the Cape to Rio yacht race. Table Bay was teeming with racing yachts and

well wishers, a dramatic horizon filled spears of masts and curves of white

sail. Jetskis and powerboats, canoes and press boats, gin palaces and

bathtubs filled the few gaps. Helicopters swooped low above the fleet. The

shoreline was lined with people and high on Signal Hill scores of binoculars

flashed.


As the spectator boats gradually turned for home, the racing fleet were left

alone to contemplate 4000 miles of ocean. As my first night at sea

approached and Maiden pushed on through the waves I felt a basic thrill to

be travelling again, to be on the move just for the sheer hell of it. This

is how I used to feel: I’ve got my mojo back! I turned away from the fading

Table Mountain and Africa and looked towards the sunset and South America. Every new

beginning comes from some other new beginning’s end.


To my undisguised glee a newspaper article in Cape Town had labelled me an

“intrepid young British adventurer”. But on that first night at sea I was

brought brutally back down to size as I hung over the side of the boat

retching my guts out. Lasagne (“how on Earth did I manage to fit so much

inside myself?” I marvelled) reappeared with gusto, my eyes streamed and the

damnable prospect of three weeks of this awfulness added to my misery. In my

cycling clothes and shoes I was soaking wet and cold. Pride comes before a hurl.


Once recovered I joined in the steady routine of racing across the Atlantic.

Maiden forged a name for herself when Tracy Edwards skippered her in the

1989-90 Whitbread Round the World Race with the first ever all-female crew.

Today Maiden is run as a business, taking paying crew for ocean races,

Caribbean cruises and so on. I would strongly recommend the experience. She is a 58 foot (17m) aluminium

monohull yacht. At the very front of the boat is the foredeck where all the

juicy action happens during sail changes – flailing ropes, armfuls of

billowing sail and drunken footed rolling and pitching. The deck is

criss-crossed with ropes of every colour running taut to 15 different

winches. There are two huge steering wheels and a panel of glowing green GPS

instruments. At night the two compasses glow orange like shining crystal

balls. Pressure valves allow the adjustment of mysterious sounding things

like the ‘babystay’ and the ‘vang’. Everything started as a foreign language

to me but somebody would always translate: “Pull the bloody red rope, Al!”

Below decks is a tiny toilet (tip: brace your head against the roof when

pulling up your shorts to avoid an embarrassing catapulting out into the

corridor), a kitchen smaller than a broom cupboard, and the navigation station

of charts, screens, switches, weather faxes and radios. All 15 of us squash

into a stinking, sweaty area large enough only for 12 tiny bunks. There is

not enough headroom to stand: comfort is a low priority on racing yachts.

The engine room, water maker and sail locker take up the rest of the space.


The crew was split into two watches for the rotating routine of duties. 0000

(midnight) to 0400 (“the biscuit watch” when a packet of biscuits was

eagerly shared), 0400 to 0800, 0800 to 1400, 1400 to 2000 and 2000 to 2359

was how the days went. When off duty, people try to sleep in the airless,

sweaty bunks. Helming duties rotated and occasional frenzies of activity

were needed when jibbing or changing sails, but generally there was not a lot

to do except admire the view, read, crave beer (and cigarettes… and

salad… and ice cream… and chicas…), talk rubbish and try to hide from

the sun.


When waking, the other watch (who incidentally did not appreciate being woken

by 1. guitar, 2. shouting, 3. singing or 4. hunting horn. Shame there were

no bagpipes on board…) were handed a cup of tea before climbing

bleary eyed up on deck. We would then jump into their empty bunks for a

welcome four hours sleep.


Mealtimes were the highlight of the day, especially as Joel’s cooking was an

absurd mid-ocean extravaganza. Roast lamb, pan-fried freshly caught dorado,

ceviche and home-made ice cream thousands of miles from land! The ‘Cape to

Rio’ was an arduous endurance race for our highly tuned racing machine crew

spread-eagled around deck and feasting.


24 days is a long time. Think how many people you talk to, miles you drive

and phone calls you make in 24 normal days. Weeks in the office, weekends at

home. Ever changing horizons. Hours of television, reams of newspapers. For

us it was a disc of blue water, 58ft of boat and 14 other people who were

complete strangers on day one. Yet I was not bored (except after week one when I

realised with disappointment that crashing waves and shrieking gales were

not going to feature). Once away from the African coast we were barefoot, in

T-shirts and shorts 24 hours a day. The days blazed beneath a pale blue sky

and above an incredibly clear blue ocean streaked deep down with shafts of

white light.


Sunsets brought relief from the furnace, leaving the world to darkness, us,

and the comforting glow of the GPS and compass. We began the race with a fat

cream moon in a golden halo. Small clouds of black and silver shone as we

cruised down the yellow carpet of moonlight. The helmsman heaves on the

wheel as we surf down the heavy, fast black waves. It is eternal motion,

racing ever onwards towards Rio. As the weeks passed the moon waned, filling

the utterly black sky with so many stars and shooting stars that they spill

over into the ocean, showers of amazing phosphorescent sparks streaming in

our wake, a wake of white water stretching back to Africa and the end of two

thin tyre tracks.


Behind the boat morning catches us, the sea a purple mauve as the sky begins

to turn orange and then blue. Only the strong stars survive. Eventually even

Venus fades. Dawn reinvigorates you after the long night and thoughts turn

towards breakfast, waking the next watch and then bed.


Small events break up the hours and days. A torn sail or Alberto being

winched up the mast to make repairs. John’s 40th birthday party (and the

only bottle of beer on board), Pete being smacked in the head by a passing

flying fish in the dead of night and then exacting his revenge by frying the

14 we had on deck for breakfast.

We fell becalmed for several days. I felt so small, so alone, so utterly at

the mercy of the wind. It was an impressive experience. I realised then just

how vast the Atlantic is. Dorados swam around the boat and refused to

nibble our lines. We covered ourselves in shampoo and leaped overboard, with

6km of water below us and thousands of miles to shore. We tried everything

to regain favour with the wind gods – singing (“every bit of wind’s gonna be

alright”), wind dances, sacrifices to Neptune (toothpaste, a lone sock and a

spoonful of my supper), eating lentils and, bizarrely, scratching the mast.

Eventually one of them must have worked as the wind returned.


Crossing the Greenwich Meridian was a big moment for me – the next time I

cross it I will be back in London! Only 360 degrees still to go. I’m on my

way home at last. The waves thump, sluice and fizz on the hull as I lie in

my bunk. Come on wind, take me homewards!


We crossed the finish line in the dead of night, beneath the outline of

Sugarloaf mountain and the vast Christ the Redeemer statue gleaming white

and appearing to hang in the sky. We had crossed the Atlantic and I have a

new continent to cycle across. I am looking forward to South America.


Poor Cape Town! I loved Cape Town but Rio really puts her in the shade. It

is the most beautiful city setting I have ever seen. Add samba and football,

dental floss bikinis and a permanent party mood and you have Rio. Rio walks

with a bum wiggle, talks football, eats, drinks and never ever sleeps. I

love it!


Of course I had to visit the Maracana – the largest stadium in the world – to

revel in the music, energy, noise and utter craziness of Brazilian

football. I am afraid that Elland Road, Leeds will never seem the same

again… Now, having been brutally parted from 17 months of hair, I can look

forward to 100 hours on the bus to Ushuaia (the Southernmost town in the

world) where, at last, I will get back on the bike again, bound for Alaska.