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You’re unique: Celebrating the Achievements of ARC 2023



The 38th edition of the Atlantic Rally for Cruisers culminated on Saturday evening with an awards ceremony in Saint Lucia that celebrated all the unique elements that make this rally so popular – great sailing, wildlife, fishing, photography, families, fun and friendship.

Over 500 sailors gathered in Beausejour for a ceremony filled with many smiles, laughter and happy emotion!

  

155 yachts, including a record-breaking 44 multihulls, set sail from Las Palmas de Gran Canaria on 19 November, sailing an average 3,000 nautical miles to Rodney Bay Marina in Saint Lucia. 151 finished in time to join the awards ceremony, with the final boat in the fleet, Graptolite (DEU), arriving into Saint Lucia early on Monday morning. Three boats retired, diverting to other Caribbean islands for non-critical boat ‘breakages’.

Characterised by a light wind start and moderate tradewind conditions, 2023 has been a transat to remember for the 930 crew - from 11 month old Emmet on Sulyna (GBR) to the ARC’s oldest sailor, 89-year-old Joff Hutchinson on Carrick (GBR).

Emmet

Joff



The first boat to finish was Marco Rodolfi’s Swan Berenice Cube (GBR), claiming line honours in the Racing Division in 12 days, 13h 54m 34s, followed seven hours later by Regis Guillemot’s Marsaudon ORC50 Ti Ana (FRA).

ARC: More Than Sailing
The ARC is about more than the fastest boat, and as always, the ceremony recognised individual achievements and contributions to the rally ethos and atmosphere. There were special thanks for the volunteers who ran the SSB radio net at sea, providing both the social glue for the rally and an important safety feature: Ian (Asante) Jeorg (Kinscem), Wolf (Mola) Graeme (Promise 4), Patrick (Ri Ra), Adam (Saltair), Dan (Skyelark 2), Chris (Tahira), as well as those that maned the finish line VHF.


As a family event, the 20 children of ARC 2023 received special medals and certificates of achievement, with the Spiegel family on Hallberg-Rassy Saltair (USA) awarded best family performance on corrected time. The 38 sailors aged over 65 weren’t forgotten, with Ron Burns of NiteOut (USA) who celebrated his 79th birthday on start day, receiving a dinner voucher, and Enrico Calvi of Dufour 34E Duffy (ITA) winning the Nick Thomas trophy for first skipper aged over 65 - finishing in 18 days 8 hours on corrected time. Joff Hutchinson on Carrick (GBR), aged 89, received a huge standing ovation on the night as the oldest participant.

Millie Webb sailing Penny Oyster (GBR) was first female skipper on corrected time in the Cruising Division, and 24-year-old Otto Leteval Forsgren on Faros (HRV) was the youngest skipper.

Millie

Otto


Steve and Teen on Audacious Duo (AUS) were recognised with Kaprys Award for their determination to make the start line following orca damage to their rudders off Portugal on route to Las Palmas. The Philip Hitchcock Award for Safety was presented to the skipper and crew of Rubin (DEU) for their thorough and thoughtful approach to safety, and the crew of catamaran White Lotus (HRV) won a case of beer for landing this year’s biggest fish, a 60kg yellowfin tuna!

Sharing the story of life at sea with family and friends is an important part of ocean sailing, with over 1300 blogs and photos being submitted to the WCC website over the past two months! We’ve had banana bread recipes, huge fish, squalls, swimming, halfway celebrations, a never-ending poem, factual logs and musings on life. Choosing prize winners amongst some fantastic blogs and photos was extremely tough so three winners were selected: Tahira (GBR), Vitamin Sea (DEU) and Wolkenschlößchen (DEU). The crew of catamaran June (CAN) and young Jacques and Gisele from Uno (NZL) won best social media contributors.

Tahira 

Vitamin Sea 

 

Jacques & Gisele

 

Wolkenschlößchen

 

June


Following their successful rescue mission to free two turtles trapped in an abandoned fishing net, the crew of Oyster 825 Champagne Hippy (GBR) were awarded the Eric Jean Trophy for humanity and environment &
the Arch Marez Trophy was awarded to Salamander (GBR) for their continued contribution to shoreside activities.

Sailing Awards
As well as recognising the traditional first, second and third in each class, there were also prizes for the seventh and tenth boats too. Overall line honours (no motoring) was won by Berenice Cube (GBR) and for multihulls by Marsaudon ORC50 Calamity (VGB). Overall winner of the Cruising Division, receiving the Jimmy Cornell Trophy, was Vitorio Morbidelli of Beneteau First 435 Algol (ITA). Winner of the IRC Racing Division was Elan 450 Emily of Cowes (GBR) and overall winner of the Multihull Division was Marsaudon ORC 50 Ti Ana (FRA).

 

Algol

 

Ti Ana



Class winners in Division 1 Cruising were: Class A – Amel 55 Kincsem (USA); Class B – Oyster 565 Larimar (EST); Class C – X-Yachts X4.6 Ipanema (NLD); Class D – Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 52.5 Mizar III (ITA); Class E – Beneteau First 435 Algol (ITA). Class winners in division IV Multihulls were: Class A – Ti Ana (FRA); Class B – Privilege 37 Tanoa (DEU), the smallest multihull in ARC 2023.

A full list of awards is can be found on the ARC results page.

Spirit of the ARC
Voted for by both ARC participants and the World Cruising Club ‘Yellow Shirts’, the 2023 Spirit of the ARC Award was unanimously won by Wolfgang and Petra Hass of yacht Gian (MLT). Having sailed their Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 54DS in two previous ARCs, Wolfgang and Petra knew how to offer advice, encouragement and support to their fellow sailors, and became affectionately known as the ‘Grandparents of the fleet’ for their happy hosting of all the young sailors.

“Wolfgang and Petra are knowledgeable, experienced sailors who are generous with their time and always willing to share their expertise and experiences.”





What next?
In just a few weeks’ time, twelve ARC yachts will be joining the 38-strong World ARC circumnavigation rally, departing Saint Lucia on 13 January on a 16-month adventure. They head south to Panama, via Columbia before transiting the Panama Canal and on into the Pacific Ocean. Another 30 yachts will be sailing back to Europe via Bermuda and the Azores with the ARC Europe rally which departs St Maarten on 6 May 2024.


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