Recognizing a lifetime of achievement
Published on November 26th, 2024
They came from all corners of the Globe – Australia, China, France, Italy, New Zealand, South America, Sweden, UK, and USA to share experiences of rounding Cape Horn and to honor one man, veteran French Cape Horner Jean-Luc van den Heede who has rounded the infamous Cape 12 times – a record among living circumnavigators.
The annual International Association of Cape Horners lunch, held in Portsmouth in November, was their largest gathering to date with 162 attendees.
They included Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, the first person to sail solo non-stop around the Globe back in 1968, along with other IACH Cape Horn Hall of Fame inductees Andrew Cape, Dr Roger Nilson, Skip Novak (4), and Sir Chay Blyth.
The greatest applause, however, was reserved for Van Den Heede, the inaugural recipient of the IACH/Pindar Cape Horners Lifetime Achievement Award. The 78-year-old French seadog has rounded the Horn six times solo eastabout, four times solo westabout, once as part of a two-man delivery crew, and once while cruising in 2014.
The former Math teacher still holds the world record for the fastest solo westabout circumnavigation of the world, which he completed in 122 days, 14 hours, 3 minutes, and 49 seconds set in 2004, together with the record for the Golden Globe Race set in 2019.
“I am quite surprised and very honored,” offered Van Den Heede. “In France, some people think that I am not normal, but I can tell you I am completely normal and very happy with my life. I would not change anything.”
He began sailing at the age of 17 and was soon bitten by the bug, starting out in dinghies before graduating to cruising yachts, a Corsaire, and later a Cape Horn. Like many who now looking for a pathway to events like Vendée Globe solo round the world race, he cut his ocean racing teeth in the Mini Transat, coming second both in 1977 and 1979.
In 1987, he finished second in Class Two in the1986/7 BOC Challenge sailing his 45 footer Let’s Go – his first solo circumnavigation. He returned to this event in 1994/5, and finished 3rd in class One despite running aground spectacularly south of the Sydney stopover after falling asleep in the cockpit of his yacht Vendée Enterprises
Van Den Heede also competed in the inaugural Vendée Globe non-stop round-the-world yacht race, finishing 3rd in his 60ft yacht, 36.15 MET. That podium place prompted him to leave teaching and became a full-time sailor.
He raced in the second Vendée Globe in 1992 and finished 2nd in Sofap-Helvim – the yawl rigged narrow beamed yacht nick-named ‘le Cigare Rouge’ – the red cigar
His 7-year campaign to break the solo westabout circumnavigation record took 7 years and 4 attempts before finally re-crossing the Ushant start-finish line after 122 days 14 hours, 3 minutes and 49 seconds at sea, beating the previous record by 29 hours 50 minutes.
Perhaps, his most significant achievement was winning the 2018-19 Golden Globe Race at the age of 73, aboard the Rustler 36 cruising yacht, Matmut, despite being pitchpoled in 65 knot winds and huge rolling seas deep in the southern oceans which led to the connecting bolt attaching all four lower shrouds tearing a 9 inch split in his aluminum mast while leading the race by some 2,000 miles. His initial thought was to head to Chile to make repairs, but that would have relegated him to the Chichester Class for entrants making one stop.
That prompted him work out a way to jury rig the lower shrouds to the spreader root and rejoin the race. By then, he had lost a 1,000 miles to 2nd placed Dutch rival Mark Slats who continued to eat into his lead back up the Atlantic.
By the Azores, the two were almost level. It led to a nail-biting final few days on the race back to Les Sables d’Olonne to keep the Dutchman at bay – which The French veteran did – just, winning the race in what remains a record time of 211 days 23hours 12 minutes!
Membership to the International Association of Cape Horners is open to anyone who has rounded Cape Horn under sail as part of a non-stop passage of at least 3,000 nautical miles which passes above the latitude of 52° south in both the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans without the use of engines for propulsion.
The association keeps a record of all modern-day solo non-stop, solo with stops and multi-crewed circumnavigations of the world: click here
Public nominations for the 2025 Hall of Fame awards open in May next year and are voted on by the IACH membership. For details, click here.
From the first induction in 2022, the Cape Horn Hall of Fame has recognized 40 of the most famous round the world sailors.
Names honored in the IACH Cape Horn Hall of Fame:
• Willem Schouten (1567-1625), Netherlands
• Jacob Le Maire (1585-1616), Belgium
• Vice Admiral Robert Fitzroy (1805-1865), England
• Capt. Vern Verner Björkfelt (1900-1982), Finland
• Capt. Thomas Carter (T.C) Fearon (1813 – 1869), USA
• Capt. Adolph Hauth, Germany
• Capt. Louis Allaire (1880-1949), France
• Alan Villiers (1903-1982), Australia
• Vito Dumas (1900-1965), Argentina
• Marcel Bardiaux (1910-1958), France
• Sir Francis Chichester (1901-1972), England
• Sir Alec Rose (1908-1991), England
• Sir Robin Knox-Johnston (1939-), England
• Bernard Moitessier (1925-1994), France
• Sir Chay Blyth (1940-), Scotland
• Ramon Carlin (1923-2016), Mexico
• Éric Tabarly (1931-1998), France
• Cornelis van Rietschoten (1926-2013), Netherlands
• Dame Naomi James (1949-), New Zealand
• Kay Cottee (1954-), Australia
• Jon Sanders (1939-), Australia
• Philippe Jeantot (1952-), France
• Titouan Lamazou (1955-), France
• Sir Peter Blake (1948-2001), New Zealand
• Dilip Donde (1967-), India
• Stan Honey (1955-), America
• Dee Caffari (1973-), England
• Jean-Luc Van Den Heede (1945-), France
• Dame Ellen MacArthur (1976 -), UK
• Grant Dalton (1957 – ), New Zealand
• Skip Novak (1952 – ), USA
• Jeanne Socrates (1942 – ), UK
• Franck Cammas (1972 – ), France
• Michel Desjoyeaux ( 1965 – ), France
• Loïck Peyron (1959-), France
• Jean Le Cam (1959-), France
• Francis Joyon (1956-), France
• Andrew Cape (1962-), Australia
• Dr. Roger Nilson (1949-), Sweden
• Mike Golding (1960-), Great Britain
Source: IACH