Saint Lucia: World ARC 2023 Sets Sail from Rodney Bay
The World ARC 2023-24 fleet set off from the Caribbean island of Saint Lucia at 12 Noon on January 7, 2023, thus beginning their adventure of a lifetime following years of dreaming, thinking, planning and preparations.
Published 2 years ago
World ARC 2023 crews represent different nationalities, ages, motivations and dynamics and so in between the serious preparations such as safety checks, seminars and briefings, everyone has been getting to know new cruising friends, who’ll be together for the many months ahead.
Over 50 rally supporters assembled to see off the fleet, accompanied by local media and the Race Committee onboard the marine police vessel ‘Protector’. The rally crews gathered their lines and made their way out of The Cut towards the starting area in Rodney Bay. As sails were hoisted ahead of the pre-start sequence, the ‘liquid sunshine’ arrived with a squall adding to the steady 15-20knts of breeze that was forecast to whisk the fleet away from Saint Lucia’s shores.
Friendly Competition
Although World ARC is a rally not a race, friendly competition was already evident as Salt (SWE) and Lover of the Light (USA) were over the course start line as the horn was blown, and it was Mistral of Portsmouth (GBR) officially leading the way across the start line. The rest of the fleet followed in close succession leaving Rodney Bay, keeping the Barrel ‘O’ Beef to starboard and then making their way along the coast down to Castries. On reaching a turning mark, the fleet gybed away from the Caribbean island which has hosted the start of their adventure, raising their downwind sails to make the most of the glorious trade winds.
New World Cruising Club Helsman Farewells the Fleet
2023 sees a new face at the helm of World Cruising Club with Paul Tetlow formally taking over as Managing Director and he was out on the water in Rodney Bay to bid the World ARC 2023-24 fleet farewell.
“This is an exciting time for this group of sailors as they set off on their next sailing adventure,” Paul said. “From our experiences of leading previous World ARCs, we know these participants are assured of some great sailing, some warm welcomes to new countries and some fun and interesting exploration ashore.
“These are also exciting times for World Cruising Club as we start the New Year with World ARC 2022-23 just leaving Cape Town, South Africa, making its way to Saint Lucia in April, and the ARC January fleet currently in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, preparing for their Atlantic Crossing to arrive in Saint Lucia at the end of January and early February. As one fleet is leaving, others are making their way here to Rodney Bay!”
The start marks the end of a fantastic programme for the World ARC crews in Saint Lucia. The programme would not be possible without the support of several local organisations. World Cruising Club and the World ARC participants would like to thank the Saint Lucia Tourism Authority, Events Company Saint Lucia, IGY Rodney Bay Marina and the Saint Lucia Yacht Club for all their generous assistance.
Next Stop – Colombia
Next stop for the fleet will be Santa Marta Marina on the Caribbean coast of Colombia. The stopover is one of the most popular on the World ARC route, with plenty of good food, exceptional beaches and warm hospitality awaiting their arrival. They can expect good trade wind conditions along the way with occasional and isolated squalls, typical of ocean sailing.
The boats should start to make landfall from Wednesday 11 January. Those yet to depart from Rodney Bay, FAR, Hoka Hey, Leviathan and Sara of Stockholm hope to be underway shortly and catch up the fleet.
About World ARC
World ARC 2023-24 is the 12th edition of the rally and the 14th round-the-world rally organised by World Cruising Club. It started on 7 January 2023 in Rodney Bay Saint Lucia
and will finish back in Saint Lucia, after more than 26,000NM and 15 months sailing around the world. Boats can also choose to start and finish in Australia.
The fleet leave Saint Lucia to visit Santa Marta on the coast of Colombia, then transit the Panama Canal and explore the Pacific islands of the Galapagos, Marquesas, Society Islands, Tonga, Fiji and Vanuatu en route to Queensland, Australia.
After cruising up the Great Barrier Reef, the rally will visit Lombok, then cross the southern Indian Ocean, stopping at Cocos, Mauritius and Reunion before stopping in South Africa for Christmas and New Year. In January 2024 they will depart across the Atlantic to Brazil, with a stopover in St Helena. The fleet cruise the Brazilian coast for carnival, before heading to Grenada in the Caribbean and finish in Saint Lucia in April 2024. The route avoids the northern Indian Ocean, Red Sea and other areas of pirate activity.
Follow the Fleet Website: www.worldcruising.com/worldarc
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Related to following destinations: Caribbean Coast (Colombia), Colombia, Rodney Bay, Santa Marta, St. Lucia
Related to the following Cruising Resources: Circumnavigation, Rallies