Please select your home edition
Edition
Trofeo Princesa Sofía Mallorca 2025

All solo skippers of the inaugural McIntyre Adventure Globe 5.80 Transat sail into Lanzarote

by Don McIntyre 11 Nov 2021 10:26 GMT 18 November 2021

With late starter Jim Schofield from Ireland arriving safely in Marina Rubicon Lanzarote on the 10th of November, all entrants of this eventful inaugural qualifier are now gathered in Lanzarote (Spain), including Class Globe 5.80 Class founder Don McIntyre.

All are celebrating the start of an adventure which began just over a year ago, as they each started building their plywood epoxy kit 5.8mtr Mini ocean racers. All in different countries, but with a common dream to make the Globe Transat.

N degrees 88, the swiss entry Numbatou from Etienne Messikommer won the first leg, completing the 600 nautical miles qualifier in 4 days, 20 hours and 55 minutes after a constant battle with the elements, and the Czech entry Menawan from Michal Krysta.

Many including skippers themselves wondered how the boat would perform due to the little time at sea, with only Numbatou and Menawan clocking offshore miles between Les Sables d'Olonnes and Lagos in Portugal prior to the start.

The boat however, behaved splendidly, the Globe 580 Transat Race Director Lutz Kohne puts it: "With all experiencing a mix of conditions and gusts to 35 knots and above with swells of 3-4 meters, these amateur home build boats just proved their seaworthiness and fun factor."

Don McIntyre sailed his TREKKA through the biggest storm and probably learnt the most about this new experimental design. After spending a night running under bare poles steered by wind vane at 5-8kts, getting plenty of sleep below, conditions continued to build next day climaxing in 45-55kts with 5mtrs seas for five hours before rapidly abating.

"She is simply an amazing boat that feels bigger than she is" said Don McIntyre" you have to sail her like a small displacement boat sitting IN the water, NOT on top and reduce sail to go faster! She will surf in swells, can take you around the world and really looked after me in that storm."

Most experienced surfing surges of 12-14kts with Michal clocking up to 16 knots and regularly posting 24 hour distance above 130 miles but could not work out how to use his windvane.

Michal recalls: "Due to issues with the pilot and windvane, I have spent up to 70 hours at the helm with winds of 40 knots going down big walls of water in the 5.80 reaching a personal best of 16 knots of boat speed!"

Other entrants have not helmed that much, praising the efficiency of their South Atlantic windvane such as Etienne: I am very pleased with the boat and the self steering gear in particular, I barely touched the helm. The boat is small and nimble, so I felt like a washing machine in the crossed, confused seas of the early days, but never in danger. She behaves like a bigger boat, and I have learned to push her to max speed in order to gain momentum and control in the big seas.

Third on the podium, Peter Kenyon had less time on the boat than Etienne and Michal but kept in touch throughout the race. "It was quite an eventful inaugural trip! From my best moment was dolphins waking me up from my nap in the cockpit to the worst, finding water in the aft compartment and not knowing where it had come from..." After finding the water ingress came from fittings in the cockpit that we constantly awash with waves, Peter has only praises for the design: "the boat is the biggest surprise of those testing 600 miles, she feels solid, really safe and confidence inspiring"

3000 nm to Antigua

Leg two is already in everyone's mind with a week before the start, while the boat design and home-built construction satisfied entrants and organizers alike some valuable lessons were learned from leg one, with tweaks and mods being planned.

Mostly improving storage on board with more places to store small items below and placement of deck fittings and blocks to simplify manoeuvres. The big question is weight distribution and loading. Many put heavy items at the mast position and above the keel, but some may now move weights further aft.

When asked about Leg 2, the Race Director Lutz Kohne mentioned "Sleep, mental strength and the right tweak of windvane and main sail will be the key elements to be competitive for the race starting Nov 18."

The gallant 5.80 skippers have a week to work on their boats, stock-up food and rest, but they are already established as trailblazers by the 150 other Globe 5.80 builders around the world, all watching and learning. They are making history in this new trend of home-built, one-design racing, all true legends within the fast-growing Class Globe 5.80 family!

The farewell press conference for the Globe 5.80 Transat with all skippers is set for 1100hrs UTC on Monday 15th NOV at Rubicon Marina Lanzarote. Covered live on Facebook at the Globe 580 Transat page www.Globe580Transat.com.

Related Articles

Jasmine Harrison continues her circumnavigation
Starting her 6,000 passage from Panama to Fiji this week A young British adventurer will start her 6,000 passage from Panama to Fiji this week. Posted on 29 Mar
McIntyre Mini Globe Leg 2 underway
7200 miles solo to Vuda Marina Fiji In an extraordinary feat of maritime logistics the McIntyre Mini Globe Race fleet has completed an unprecedented overland Transfer of 15 ALMA Globe 580 yachts from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. Posted on 28 Mar
McIntyre Mini Globe Race 2025 Leg 1
Antigua to Panama provides a fast wet-n-wild ride to start the global 26000 mile adventure The inaugural McIntyre Mini Globe Race (MGR) has officially set sail, and what a start it's been! The first leg from Antigua to Panama has already delivered drama, camaraderie, and a masterclass in offshore sailing in these Mighty Mini's. Posted on 13 Mar
Dan Turner races on with damage in Mini Globe Race
Aussie Dan Turner pushes past mast damage to sail 5.8m boat around the world in 4th place A damaged mast can't stop him - Aussie Solo Sailor Dan Turner Overcomes Significant Boat Damage Against The Odds and Maintains 4th Place in Mini Globe Race. Posted on 4 Mar
Mini Globe Race, Caribbean 600, Cole Brauer
McIntyre Mini Globe Race begins, Caribbean 600, Cole Brauer There's an old saw that goes something like this: Thou shall not sail offshore on a yacht with less waterline, as measured in feet, than thou has in years. Posted on 25 Feb
McIntyre Mini Globe Race is go!
Solo around the world racing changed forever on Sunday Thirteen men and two women from eight countries on Sunday set sail from the small Caribbean Island of Antigua Barbuda, to race solo around the world in Mini 19ft / 5.8mtr ALMA Globe 580 yachts, their only home for the next 13 months. Posted on 24 Feb
NSAA starts the McIntyre Mini Globe Race in 3 days
15 qualified solo sailors from 8 countries will be on the startline On Feb. 23rd at 11.30am local time, 15 solo sailors will set off from Falmouth Harbour ANTIGUA in home-built ALMA GLOBE 580, 19ft-5.8 metre plywood yachts to race 26000 miles around the world. Posted on 21 Feb
A look at the Mini Globe Race 2025
Mini Globe Race 2025, warm-water racing, Vendee Globe finishers Amidst all the recent focus on the Vendee Globe race and SailGP's Season 5 racing, it's important to remember that there's also great offshore racing unfurling on the opposite end of sailing's waterline spectrum. Posted on 18 Feb
Globe 580 Transat makes waves with record run
McIntyre Mini Globe set to make history! Third running of the 2025 Globe 580 Transat: Thrills, Spills, and Plenty of High-Seas Shenanigans in record time! Woop Woop! Posted on 12 Feb
Historic McIntyre Mini Globe Race sets sail!
After our years of planning, building, then preparing and training Imagine? Four years of planning, building, then preparing and training while all the time dreaming about sailing your own home-built plywood 19ft - 5.8mtr yacht 3000 miles solo across the Atlantic! Now it's time! Posted on 14 Jan