In 1968 nine sailors set out from the British Isles to achieve in sailing what had never been done before: race non-stop around the world. Alone.
When it was over only one had finished. One was dead, five had retired, one sank (rescued) and another just kept on sailing around again.
It was the Golden Globe race. And now it’s back. Australian adventurer Don McIntyre is staging a fiftieth anniversary re-run of the Globe in 2018. Yesterday McIntyre released more details about the event.

In a nod to history, the rules will limit technology to what was available years ago. That means no GPS, no satellite communication or modern boat designs. About all they can use is high frequency radio.
Racers will be provided a satellite phone that only the race committee can call. A GPS (in a sealed box) will be available for life-threatening emergencies only. McIntyre says on his website:
They will be navigating with sextant on paper charts, without electronic instruments or autopilots. They will hand–write their logs and determine the weather for themselves. Only occasionally will they talk to loved ones and the outside world when long-range high frequency and ham radios allow.
If the 2018 edition is anything like the original, it will be a wild ride.

The winner of the 1968 race, Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, was already a skilled sailor and went on to be hailed as a sailing hero for the rest of his career. In 1995 he was knighted in the UK. The French mystic Bernard Moitessier held a clear lead in the race but deliberately turned away near the end and sailed off to Tahiti, allowing Knox-Johnston to win. Moitessier said he was disillusioned with the commercialization of the race.
The strangest of all was Donald Crowhurst, a small-time English businessman and electronics designer. With the help of sponsors he built an unusual, not-very-seaworthy trimaran.
Sadly, Crowhurst literally went off the deep end. He was late to depart in Falmouth, England and soon after had serious problems. While the others were proceeding around the world, Crowhurst — plagued by a leaking hull — remained in the Atlantic, calling in false position reports to the race committee.
Ultimately Crowhurst committed suicide. His abandoned trimaran Teignmouth Electron was found but his body never was. He left behind journals with rambling, unintelligible entries written by a man losing his mind. In a further twist Crowhurst’s preparation for the race was captured on film and later released in a documentary (Deep Water, 2006). I saw that film a few years ago. It’s a personal documentary with interviews of Crowhurst, his family and financial backers. In the film you can sense Crowhurst’s anxiety. The pressure of raising money and building a round-the-world racing yacht was getting to him.
I’ve left out the most intriguing bit of his story in case you want to read it for yourself. I recommend the book A Voyage for Madmen by Peter Nichols.
It can’t wait to see who competes and how this new Golden Globe plays out. I’ll be watching as it does.
