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Passepartout
Owner Doug Cuming
Design Allures 40
Length Overall 12 m 46 cm
sailingpassepartout.wordpress.com
Flag Australia
Sail Number None

Doug Cuming and Jan Heffernan have been cruising on Passepartout around Atlantic Europe and the Mediterranean for the last 4 years and now heading over to the Americas for the next two years before heading home to Australia via the Panama Canal and the Pacific.

Passepartout is a French aluminium bluewater centreboarder equally happy crossing oceans or sitting on the mud up a tidal estuary.

Doug is an experienced skipper, having sailed over 30,000 ocean and coastal miles racing and cruising in Australia,New Zealand Europe and the Caribbean. Most of his sailing has been in multihulls, but is happy cruising in Passepartout even though he misses the speed.

Passepartout's ARC crew include experienced Australian sailor Cathy Hawkins, Frenchman Jean-Louis Le Baron who has previously crossed the Atlantic with this boat, and son Hugo Cuming coming along for the experience of the crossing. We have a new spinnaker for the ARC and hope to keep it up most of the way.

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06/12/2017

Passepartout - Five days to go rolling on downwind

We are all anticipating arriving in St Lucia in five and bit days after sixteen days of sailing.Life onboard is good: we have been flying along under spinnaker, catching our rivals, and enjoying each other’s company.But after two weeks on board we are looking for a proper shower, nice bed and a beer or two.Not that we suffering too much as there’s still plenty of food cooked by master chef Hugo and wine for our sundowner each night.We’ve managed to catch a few Mahi Mahi which have been delicious, but hoping for a tuna for sashimi at some stage.We’ve been under spinnaker for the last week, a pleasant change from the prior heavy upwind work and then being becalmed the week before.The spinnaker has been a great asset pushing the boat a knot or two faster than a poled out jib, and more. read more...


30/11/2017

Passepartout - The power of positive thinking

What do you do when you are 250 miles behind the leaders in your division, sitting mid fleet - those behind are not in racing mode.Think positively!After our southern detour to avoid a stronger than expected low in the northern route, we fell back behind to our more southerly competitors, then had to cross a windless ridge to get to the southern tradewinds that would take us all the way to St Lucia.At noon we would get the position updates and our deficit grew each day: 40, 80, 110, 180, then 250 miles!Enough to make a navigator cry!However we knew that the daily distances that our competitors were travelling were not in keeping with the wind forecasts, and that they must be motoring, as allowed under the ARC Cruising division rules.Here’s where the tricky bit comes in: we have decided. read more...


27/11/2017

Passepartout - Dry times and a dud dunny!

We are through the pain and suffering (exaggeration) of days of 30 to 37 knot headwinds after our retrospective fruitless detour northwards in our quest to stay in wind and avoid becalment at all cost. What we didn’t count on was the development of a belatedly predicted second low. Since then, a third low has materialised to our north confirming our decision to go south as being the right one as we pray to the bust of Ganesh above the cockpit! So, we have made miles south - all to windward - in a new attempt to cross a rigging barrier of light air at its narrowest point. This weather routing can do your head in.Crystal gazing....We’re hoping to pop out of this light air ridge and poke our nose into fresh trade winds where we can hoist the spinnaker and start making fast downwind miles.We. read more...


25/11/2017

Passepartout - Elation and despair on Passepartout

We are now into our sixth day of the ARC crossing and the initial feeling of elation has been replaced by despair as we head almost due south to escape the low that has blocked our path westwards on our chosen northerly route. Elation because we had a great first three days under spinnaker, reacher and two sail reaching to gain a good lead over our competitors.Despair because we will now be following them as they had chosen a more cautious southerly path.Engla and Duale, our closest competitors in division H, are now about 40 miles ahead when they were the same behind on day 3, although we can’t discount the use of their motors during the lighter winds on days 3 & 4. To get to this position we have just been through an unpleasant 24 hours of strong and gale force winds trying to. read more...


24/11/2017

Passepartout - No motoring for bilingual Passepartout

Despite being in cruising division H the temperaments on board Passepartout are in full-on racing mode. No motoring penalties for us as we tweak and sail change 24/7; religiously download weather GRIB files; debate wind arrows and best course scenarios; eagerly plot competitor positions and; stalk SSB scheds to relish in other’s tales of windless woes.The origin of our race mode temperament comes from our youthful days as shorthanded ocean racing multihull sailors which laid a solid foundation for ‘no pain no gain’.As of yesterday, before last night’s despairing light airs, we calculated that we were coming first in Division H and had also knocked-off the boats in divisions G, E and F.On occasions some rituals remind us we are ion the edge of “cruising” mode as we trawl for fish, knit,. read more...



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