The ongoing 2018 Golden Globe Race is a 50th-anniversary homage to the 1968 Sunday Times Golden Globe Yacht Race, the first single-handled nonstop around-the-world sailboat race. In the 1968 race, Sir Robin Knox-Johnston was the winner and the only contestant to complete the race. Last June, 18 solo-sailors set off in sailboats similar in size and equipment to that used by Sir Robin 50 years ago. Each sailor is racing for 30,000 miles, alone, non-stop, with no outside assistance.
The racers are using sextants and paper charts rather than GPS and chart plotters, judging the weather by reading a barometer rather than getting updates from weather routing services, and relying on wind vanes rather than autopilots. The racers are all sailing on production boats between 32ft and 36ft overall (9.75 – 10.97m) designed prior to 1988. For safety, each boat will have a satellite transponder and an emergency kit, equipped with a race-supplied GPS and satphone.
So, how is the retro-race going so far? Continue reading