Lines and fenders stowed, the fleet gathered in the starting area off the harbor at Las Palmas ready for the starting signal. ARC meteorologist Chris Tibbs had promised the crews a classic ARC start, and the weather lived up to his expectations, with a pleasant NE breeze around 10-12 knots allowing boats to set asymmetric spinnakers on the start line.
During the afternoon and evening, winds were expected to increase to around 15-20 knots, with stronger winds likely in the acceleration zone that lies to the south of Gran Canaria.
Weather Outlook for the Passage
Speaking after the start Chris Tibbs commented on the outlook for this year’s ARC, “I don’t expect any records to be broken as it looks like we will have light to moderate tradewinds for the crossing this year. However, it should be very pleasant sailing, a classic ARC Tradewind passage with most boats likely to head south of the rhumbline course to Saint Lucia.“
ARC Divisions
While the ARC is a cruising rally, there is a start and finish line, and the boats are split into divisions according to size, type, and competition.
Multihull and Open Divisions: At 12:00 UTC the sound-signal for the first start was given by Sir Chay Blyth, from the Spanish Navy boat Meteor, as boats from the multihull and open divisions set off. Sir Chay has been in Las Palmas this week to meet crews and show support for friends sailing on Nizuc raising money for Parkinsons’ Research. First over the line mile-long line, leading the group of forty catamarans and two yachts sailing outside of competition, was Pierre Caouette’s Outremer 5X Bio Trek.
Racing Division: Twenty-six boats in this year’s Racing Division were led across the start line by Ross Applebey’s Oyster Lightwave 48 Scarlet Oyster followed by fellow British flagged charter boat Rocket Dog. Both are regular ocean crossers with the ARC, sailing with crews of mixed abilities led by a professional skipper. Third across the line was Volvo 65 Austrian Ocean Racing Project, crewed by a group of ambitious young sailors hoping to take on Ocean Race 2021/22 as the first Austrian team in history.
Cruising Division: It was an impressive scene as the majority of the fleet, over 120 yachts, sailed across the start line for the Cruising Division led by Dufour 520, Bianco at 12:30.
Record Number of Entrants
The departure of the ARC fleet sailing directly to Saint Lucia means a combined total of 283 yachts are sailing the Atlantic under the ARC banner in 2019 – a record number in the 34 year history of the rally.
Ninety-three boats in the ARC+ fleet departed Mindelo, Cape Verde for their second leg of their crossing last Thursday and are enjoying great downwind sailing and fishing triumphs reported in their logs sent into the World Cruising Club website. 72 yachts are bound for Saint Lucia and 22 for St. Vincent and the Grenadines, with the first arrivals from expected from 2 December.
Saint Lucia Welcome