CPD
Well-known member
Preferably with first hand experience, what is the recommended timing to complete a circuit (UK start) within a year, or as short as possible. What did you do ??
Not unless they have to for some pressing reason. A quick Look at the routing charts for the N Atlantic will show you why sailing S until the butter melts is such an easy and obvious solution to crossing the Atlantic.Does anyone go from the UK to Canada or North USA directly?
It is a genuine question as at times the wind direction on the pressure charts looks reasonable.Not unless they have to for some pressing reason. A quick Look at the routing charts for the N Atlantic will show you why sailing S until the butter melts is such an easy and obvious solution to crossing the Atlantic.
You would have to go quite a bit north via Iceland and Greenland and across to Newfoundland an interesting experience no doubt but it would be much easier the other way as JM points out. Also it would only be viable in the summer months and likely to be uphill (wind)It is a genuine question as at times the wind direction on the pressure charts looks reasonable.
Having never sailed the oceans I have no idea.
It's the crossing of the Ostar race, have a look here under "Race" for a brief description of the various possible routesIt is a genuine question as at times the wind direction on the pressure charts looks reasonable.
Having never sailed the oceans I have no idea.
Indeed. And the West to East passage is normally during the summer months. Routing yourself so that you don’t go so far N you get caught up in any depressions but far enough N to try and pick up favourable winds. Many (most?) people sail back to Europe via the Azores.You would have to go quite a bit north via Iceland and Greenland and across to Newfoundland an interesting experience no doubt but it would be much easier the other way as JM points out. Also it would only be viable in the summer months and likely to be uphill (wind)
The newport jester challengers do it every 4 years.Does anyone go from the UK to Canada or North USA directly?
As ever, Roberto gives good advice based on experience. I have said several times that booking Christmas dinner in the Caribbean is not a good planning consideration. November is in the NOAA Atlantic hurricanes season. Since 2o20 there have been some 8 tropical storms in December and only 2 in January. Basically, the later the better.-Did it twice: left Atlantic France early june; july to sept cruising Galicia to Canaries (through Madeira once), oct-nov NW africa (Cape Verde once, not my kind of place), december crossed to Brazil (once through Fernando de Noronha), from there I planned to be in Martinique for start of return transat first half of May, jun-july cruising Azores, early Aug departure from Azores to Brittany. One might cross to the Caribbean in december and spend the winter there.
Climate-wise, the points I would follow: leave UK not later than early september; crossing december/january, return transat during May, leave Azores not later than beginning of August. Of course, "climate is what you expect, weather is what you get", so actual dates could well be adjusted differently depending upon actual conditions
Longer sgo than I care to remember, the Met office Weather routers were asked to advise for a 10 kt ship carrying race h-Rees to N America from the UK. Our advice was to put the horse boxes on the starboard side, wait until it looked likely that there would be power pressure in Mid-Atlantic, then go just south of Ice,and and Greenland.". You would have to go quite a bit north via Iceland and Greenland and across to Newfoundland an interesting experience no doubt but it would be much easier the other way as JM points out. Also it would only be viable in the summer months and likely to be uphill (wind)
And a sizeable chunk of the fleet often don't make it across - generally get at least one serious bashing each time.The newport jester challengers do it every 4 years.