The IMOCA fleet departs tomorrow for Arctic waters, but the Vendée Arctique village in Les Sables d’Olonne has already delivered something rare: eight days of genuine connection between racers, their families, schoolchildren, sponsors, volunteers and curious locals drawn to the story of offshore sailing at its most demanding.

The village became a working heart of the event rather than mere logistics. All week, visitors queued to meet the skippers, collect signatures, hear race plans and learn about the environmental and social causes woven into each campaign. That proximity matters. It sits at the core of what the Vendée Arctique is trying to be.

The standout moment came with the Women at Sea evening, where several female skippers sat alongside the Alice Milliat Foundation to discuss women’s place in offshore racing. A documentary about Violette Dorange screened afterward, sparking genuine conversation with the crowd. The event offered no platitudes, just honest talk about what it means to race at this level as a woman.

Environmental commitment runs deep in this race’s DNA, and it showed during the environment day when volunteers collected rubbish from Paracou beach. It was a simple act with clear purpose: the ocean the skippers cross for months deserves protection. Plastic Odyssey sessions extended that conversation into real solutions.

Between the serious work came music, children’s activities, craft workshops, exhibitions and evening concerts that gave the village its warmth. It hummed with energy, something local officials including Vendée département council president Alain Lebœuf came several times to witness firsthand. They saw what the race builds: not just a sporting event but a gathering where community, sport and purpose align for a few days.
Now the mood shifts. Ropes come loose tomorrow and the ocean claims them again. The village falls quiet, but what happened here over the past week won’t. The skippers carry it north.










