Having long dreamt of taking his own yacht across oceans, in July 2018 Nick Nottingham set off on an Atlantic Circuit which saw him visit 50 islands over a year. He explored Madeira, the Canaries, the northern Cape Verde islands, the Windwards and Leewards, and returned via the BVIs, Bermuda and the Azores. The presentation describes his voyage and includes several videos, including drone footage. Nick’s log won the Lacey Trophy for the best CA member’s website or blog.
John’s talk covers how the Whitbread was established, an overview of the first race in 1974 and his personal view as a participant in the last Whitbread in 1989-90. The race progressed into the Volvo Race, then the Ocean Race and, to come, the 2023 Ocean Globe race that offers the non-professional an opportunity to follow the Whitbread route.
In 2014 Steve Brown and his 60ft Aero Rigged schooner Novara completed an east to west transit of the NWP before going on to complete a 33,000nm circumnavigation of the Americas.
With so many ships visiting London, it is hardly surprising that there have been thousands of shipwrecks in the Thames. This talk tells the story of 12 of those ships, from a Roman cargo ship to a mysterious sinking in the Cold War.
Iain and Penny won the Yachting World Family Cruising Trophy in the CA’s log competition for this account of a cruise to the Netherlands with their grandsons. They set out for a standard trip. It was not to be. They found themselves in Oostende with a broken transmission which they repaired before going on to Holland. But there was more damage than they thought and they were left engineless in Hellevoetsluis. Getting home produced mechanical and navigational challenges. Lessons were learnt!
Dave and Jeanette recount the story of three months of fantastic sailing in what arguably must be the most spectacular and committing sailing on mainland Europe. Leaving their home port of Liverpool, they sailed the west coast of Scotland, continuing to Shetland 100 miles north of mainland Scotland, then crossed the North Sea without autopilot which presented its own challenges.
Mike is one of the few yachtsmen to have raced round the world non-stop in both directions. He will tell the inside story of the rescue of Alex Thomson during the Around Alone Race in 2006, a particularly difficult and dangerous situation which took place in the eye of a major storm, 1,000 miles south of Cape Town.
With regret, we have had to cancel this talk. Our speaker, Steve, lives in France where more restrictive measures against the Covid 19 virus were introduced yesterday. As a result, his flights have been cancelled and he is taking the advice not to travel.
The good news is we have already rebooked him and his talk on the North West Passage will now take place on Wednesday 4 November.
From the author who gave us Barges and Bread, this talk is an enticing story of slow boats and slow food brought to life. It follows a cook as she takes a year’s journey on a barge through the lesser known waterways of northern and central France. As the landscape changes so too does the cuisine and the wine. Bought in the market, dug from a lock-keeper’s garden, even foraged along the towpath beside the waterway, the food is always seasonal and local to the region. The boating life, though rarely sensational, is full of small events and chance encounters.