Tag Archives: sailing

irish sailing video

Lap of Honour?

One of the many freelance hats I wear is as web editor for Afloat Magazine’s online portal, Afloat.ie.

Right now, one of the biggest stories in sailing is the news that Ireland will host the finish of the Volvo Ocean Race.

When Knut Frostad, CEO of the race, came to Ireland to announce that news, I got 20 minutes with him to ask him about his plans. The video is pasted above. What’s interesting today is that Auckland has, overnight, been announced as the final stopover port for the race. If you scroll through the video to around the 2.15 point, Knut talks about the possibility of sending the boats on a lap of Ireland (or possible Britain and Ireland) en route from Lorient to Galway. And he says that he’ll announce details like that once the stopover ports have all been announced. Which means: anytime after today.

Fingers crossed.

Video shot with Kodak Zi8 Camera on a tripod and a new lapel mic

sailing

HOOKERS! GET SOME!

www.galwayhookerassociation.ie

Cruinniú na mBad begins today in Kinvara.

film sailing Uncategorized

Lucky Strike

I spent last weekend working in the press office for the Volvo Dun Laoghaire Regatta, with a few hours each day of frantic news-gathering for the daily report, in-Design work producing the newsletter, and interviewing the sailors.

Story of the weekend actually happened before the racing got underway – when Antix Dubh narrowly avoided being struck by lightning on its journey up from Cork. The blast hit the water 15 metres from the boat and fried the electronics for a time. Here, delivery skipper Rob O’Leary describes the incident.

Portfolio sailing Sunday Business Post

Giving it Welly


What with interviewing Torben Grael, and waxing on about Ericsson 3, you may have guessed that I was a guest of the Ericsson Racing Team down in Galway. Somehow I forgot to post about my Sunday Business Post article last Sunday, about the branding side of the VOR, and in particular the gear development angle.

Helly Hansen talked me through their product research programme as main clothing sponsors on board the Ericsson boats. One of the big outcomes has been the Helly Welly and their range of footwear in general. As a sailor, you learn early on not to expect much from footwear.hellyhanson-helly-welly_10257_folded Ireland led the way for a while with Dubarry boots, but their lining always pulled inside-out within a few months, which made them increasingly uncomfortable. The Helly Welly is lighter, more comfortable, and dispenses with the lining. And they’re bringing out one with a gaiter for super-duper offshore sailors.

What’s particularly nice is the way it rolls down to make it an ankle boot when it’s hotter – very clever.

The article on the Ericsson/Helly Hansen development programme is here.

Sunday Business Post, June 7, 2009

Ocean Race works as live lab
by Markham Nolan
When the Volvo Ocean Race fleet left Galway yesterday, it marked the end of a unique 18-month exercise in clothing product research and branding, Two crews headed out of Galway Bay bound for Sweden on board Ericsson-branded boats, clothed head-to-toe in technical sailing gear from Helly Hansen. Much of that gear had evolved considerably since the crews started training 18 months ago in Lanzarote.

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podcast sailing

Left For Dead

portal-graphics-20_1155780aIt’s been quiet for me on the writing front lately – having a completely separate business to run and all that. But I still get to do bits and pieces of work from time to time for magazines and radio.

Roisin from Outsider magazine  (They’re on Twitter too – @OutsiderMag) asked me to interview Nick Ward a few weeks back for their upcoming ‘Survival’ issue. Nick is a survivor of the 1979 Fastnet race – yacht racing’s most famous disaster. When he came to in the water, tethered in by his lifeline and with a broken leg, he realised the rest of his crew (those that were still alive) had abandoned ship, and spent 14 hours with his dead crewmate hoping for  a rescue before being spotted.

And when he was found – did his crewmates come visit him in hospital?  Nope. They didn’t even send flowers.

It’s an amazing story, and the Outsider guys have given it a great treatment in the pages of the mag, which you can pick up for FREE in many outlets, listed here. The entire article is below the fold.

Having written a book about the whole affair, Nick seems fairly zen about having been abandoned in one of the worst storms in living memory. Apart from entitling his book ‘Left for Dead‘, that is.

Below is a snippet from the interview we did, wherein he gives his views on the call his crew took to abandon their 30-foot Grimalkin, along with him and the dying Gerry Winks.

read more »

ireland Portfolio sailing sport Sunday Business Post

OutFoxing the Fleet

vor11802Ireland is running pretty short on heroes at the moment, with the economy in tatters and a cabal of wealthy conmen running for cover. Heroes are unlikely to be found in the Dáil, or the banks, or big business, and so we turn to sport.

On Saturday, one of Ireland’s marine heroes was recognised by his sporting community, but true to form, he was off doing battle with other men and Mother Nature, and could only connect via satellite.

Damian Foxall, currently mid-Pacific as watch leader on Ireland’s Green Dragon entry in the Volvo Ocean Race, was crowned Ireland’s Sailor of the Year, announced live on Tom MacSweeney’s Seascapes radio programme. Foxall, 39, was recognised as sailor of the month in February for his win in the Barcelona World Race, a non-stop round-the-world yacht race starting and ending in Barcelona. The Kerryman paired with French sailor Jean-Pierre Dick for the race, a 24,679 mile endurance test which they completed, unaided, in 92 days, 8 hours, 49 minutes and 49 seconds.

Foxall is the quintissential quiet man, appearing every now and then to meekly accept an accolade, before disappearing to silently do great things, the likes of which others only dream. He’s softly spoken, every word carrying authority, and larger in his presence than in his actual frame, which is surprisingly diminutive.

He started his offshore career with appearances in the famous Figaro race, the offshore sailing world’s sprint circuit, and progressed from there to bigger and better things, taking in a host of round-the-world races and speed record attempts. Offshore sailing, and solo sailing in particular, breeds a particular type of individual due to the stresses and strains it exerts. Racing a high-performance yacht over long distances is tough enough for a full team, but when you’re on your own sleep deprivation is heightened, and responsibility for all the navigation, the decision-making of the skipper and the brute force usually supplied by grinders rests on your own shoulders.

Foxall bears it with a simple shrug.

While not the skipper on board Ireland’s Green Dragon, Foxall is watch leader, and part of what sailors call the ‘afterguard’, the group of key decision-makers on the boat, akin to the generals in times of war. But unlike portly generals, you’ll see Foxall at the front line regularly. As someone who’s used to doing all the work himself, Foxall leads by example, and mucks in to the toughest work like an enthusiastic junior recruit.

I’ll not go on. I was lucky enough to sail with Foxall and the Green Dragon crew from Galway to Cork earlier in the year – the resulting article for the Sunday Business Post is here. Congratulations, Damian.

Markham is a freelance journalist and contributing editor with Afloat Magazine, Ireland’s Sailing and Motorboating Magazine.

Sunday Business Post, August 17, 2008

Preparing for a 39,000-mile yacht race is a matter of meticulous checking and rechecking before anyone even goes on the water. Lists are made and everything gets investigated two or three times. The boat, the rigging, the crew list and sail choices are all pored over for potential flaws. Everything is tested and retested.

It’s July 31 and Ireland’s Green Dragon ocean racing team are off the coast of Kerry testing their sails one by one. In October, they leave Spain for a sprint around the world by sea, crossing all of the world’s major oceans and stopping in ten ports, including Galway, on the way.

Having passed the Skelligs in thick drizzle, it becomes clear that someone has already screwed up the preparations. ‘‘Tofu? Who the hell thought tofu would be a good idea? Who eats tofu?’’ All the kinks get worked out during training, and the menu is no exception. read more »

blogging sailing Sunday Business Post

Extreme blogging

If your laptop was in a noisy, vibrating sauna – would you blog? Probably not. And if it took you 45 minutes to upload a minute of video, would you bother? No, probably not. And what if, while blogging, all you could eat was flavourless, grainy rehydrated slop – would you keep writing? No, me either. But I know some guys who do.

Currently making their way down Africa’s west coast are the eight crews in the Volvo Ocean Race, all blogging furiously from inside the carbon fibre hulls of their boats. At times, these boats hit speeds of around 70kmh, and each boat has one dedicated crew member whose sole responsibility is to send back pics and video, all fully edited from on an on-board suite of laptops, to race HQ.

Mikel Pasabant/Telefonica Black/Volvo Ocean Race

But that doesn’t stop the others getting in on the action. The navigators (like Mr Nilson, pictured) are sat down below, right down the cramped stern of the boat, trying to pick their way through weather patterns on their computers. They are chained to their desks at the moment as the boats navigate the doldrums. One such navvy is Matt Gregory, navigator on the Irish/Dutch entry Delta Lloyd, writing on his aptly-named blog, Volvo Hotseat.

From yesterday:

The hotseat is HOT today and don’t mean metaphorically. I am sitting in a sauna. It is well over 100 degrees down below. My only option for cooling myself is pointing the small fan at my nav desk directly at my head while drinking water with sports drink powder added. The water is desalinated from the sea, which is hot as well. Neither seems to be of very much help.

That’s some dedicated blogging, there Mr Gregory.

Also worth checking out – the site of the Irish/Chinese Green Dragon (currently in the lead), with team blog and lots of other goodies. And, of course, my piece on the Green Dragon for the Sunday Business Post.