Manu Cousin crossed the Arctic Circle during the night, his Coup de Pouce finally breaking through to the southern leg of the Vendée Arctique. The fleet had all turned for home, their bows pointing back down toward Les Sables d’Olonne. But where the heading was now common, the racing—the strategies, the weather calls, the accumulated fatigue—had splintered the fleet across vastly different trajectories.
The northern passage had been no reckoning for Cousin. Technical problems had dogged him since departure, born partly from the late launch and the furious winter modifications to the boat. He’d treated the race as a full-scale sea trial, knowing the Arctic crossing would reveal what no tank testing could. “The climb wasn’t simple,” he said. “I won’t pretend it was. But that’s partly why we came.” He’d watched competitors slide ahead while his boat remained temperamental, yet the real measure wasn’t position. It was persistence. Crossing the 66th parallel north marked something in a sailor’s career, a threshold you don’t forget. “Everything we fundamentally changed on the boat is working well,” Cousin reflected. “There will be adjustments to make. We’re paying for them in cash. But that’s normal. Nothing replaces sailing in the Arctic to learn.”

His focus had narrowed to a single objective: bring the boat home intact. Neptune had been brutal on the way up. He was hoping for mercy on the way down. His routing showed arrival sometime between Friday night and Saturday morning, though the weather forecast for the Bay of Biscay could yet shift everything by a day either way.
While Cousin pushed south from the top of the world, Violette Dorange was threading the Irish coast, where wind howled off the land in wild swings from flat calm to twenty knots in minutes. She’d chosen to go west of Ireland, knowing she’d sacrifice distance against the fleet. The inner route through the North Channel promised speed in the breeze, but thirty knots and the swell she’d already taken in close-hauled conditions had felt like overreach. “I didn’t see myself pushing the DST in those conditions,” she said. The outer passage cost her roughly a day on paper.

But the forecast was shifting. Light winds—a “molle,” in sailor’s parlance—were supposed to arrive as the fleet approached the finish. If it materialised, it could compress the gaps that had opened during the hard running down the Atlantic. “If the fleet regroups, that would be brilliant,” Dorange said. The gaps between her and competitors like Ambrogio Beccaria and Élodie Bonafous weren’t vast. A soft wind pattern could yet reshuffle the finishing order. She’d lost her mainsail several days ago, a loss that would sting in light airs. Still, her own routing had turned more encouraging since the turn around Ireland. The very thing she’d feared at the outset—being caught in strong wind and heavy seas—might yet release its grip before the finish line.
The race was far from over.











