And these 100 duos who have entered the race for Class40, Ocean Fifty, IMOCA and Ultim 32/23 are the best possible proof of the continued popularity and vitality of the Transat Jacques Vabre, the Coffee Route which has long since established itself as the double handed Transatlantic, a unique race which has been a firm fixture on the ocean racing calendar for so many years now.
As the creator of a brand of coffee of pure origins, Jacques Vabre, came to competitive sailing in 1993 when they teamed up with the city of Le Havre to launch a new race across the Atlantic
"The main strength of the event was to find a real meaning for it.” Recalls Marc Dujardin the marketing director of JDE France, the company which owns the Jacques Vabre brand. “And so the race is the Coffee Route, an event which – since the beginning – has celebrated the richness of coffee producing territories as well as the people who take care of them, whilst at the same time inspiring people to dream and enjoy an extraordinary human and sporting adventure”.
And so the Transat Jacques Vabre was created, the official name of the first edition racing between Le Havre and Cartagena in Colombia, two destinations intimately linked by the coffee trade joined together by an event unprecedented in ocean racing.
In the beginning
Thirteen intrepid sailors set off on October 31, 1993. Some were there pursuing their top level sport, names like Peyron, Parlier, Gautier and the Bourgnons. But others were attracted by the adventure, like a youthful Vincent Riou, the youngest skipper in that inaugural event taking on his first Transat Jacques Vabre.
“After 20 days racing you met these canoe fishermen who live on the islands off Cartagena, you found yourself wondering where you were! And for me since then the Coffee Route has remained really synonymous with adventure travel. I discovered countries which were new to me, and I made friends each and every time.” Recalls Riou who has won twice, in 2013 and 2015. And now he sets off once again in this 30th anniversary year, this time on the Class40 Crosscall along with Aurelien Ducroz.
From this inaugural edition the winner, Paul Vatine, stands out. He won the first Transat Jacques Vabre, before winning again 1995 alongside Roland Jourdain. A native of Le Havre who won the first edition on a new course which had a distinctly exotic air about it, that was special.