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Displaying items by tag: Solo Transit Race 2015

#Race&Waves- Baltimore Maritime Centre will have two presentations for The Glenua and Friends lecture series in 2015 at the Poolbeg Yacht and Boat Club, Ringsend, Dublin on Thursday 8 January.

Starting at 20:00hrs, the admission for both presentations is €5 which is in aid of the RNLI.

The evening's opening presentation is: Solo Transit Race 2015, which will be given by Tom Dolan, Les Glenans sailing manager in Concarneau.

Tom will give a short presentation on his bid to race solo in a 6.5m boat for 4,000 miles from Brest to Guadeloupe, starting 15 September 2015. He has acquired a Pogo 2 but, apart from his winter training, is actively seeking sponsorship.

Dolan has been sailing professionally in Ireland, France and the Caribbean since 2007 and originally a volunteer sailing instructor with les Glénans in Ireland. More on the Tom Dolan Solo Sailor story here. 

The second presentation is titled: Extreme Waves in Ireland - Their Observation and their Generation

This presentation is from Frédéric Dias, Professor of Mathematics at UCD where he leads a team of 15 people working on wave energy converters.

In 2012, he received a prestigious Advanced Grant from the European Research Council (ERC) to work on the understanding of extreme wave events, followed in 2014 by a Proof of Concept Grant from the ERC to work on wave measurement.

Also in 2014 Professor Dias was awarded the Emilia Valori prize for applications of science by the French Academy of Sciences.

During this illustrated talk, Professor Dias will provide some evidence of extreme wave events and describe the main mechanisms for their generation.

There will be a special focus on the west coast of Ireland and on the winter of 2013/2014. The study of extreme wave events on the ocean is a rapidly expanding area of research worldwide.

Although much work in this area is based on modelling and experiments in controlled wave tanks, the starting point of all studies is of course observation in the natural world.

 

Published in Boating Fixtures

About the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race

The Clipper Round the World Yacht Race is undoubtedly one of the greatest ocean adventures on the planet, also regarded as one of its toughest endurance challenges. Taking almost a year to complete, it consists of eleven teams competing against each other on the world’s largest matched fleet of 70-foot ocean racing yachts.

The Clipper Race was established in 1996 by Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, the first person to sail solo, non-stop, around the world in 1968-69. His aim was to allow anyone, regardless of previous sailing experience, the chance to embrace the thrill of ocean racing; it is the only event of its kind for amateur sailors. Around 40 per cent of crew are novices and have never sailed before starting a comprehensive training programme ahead of their adventure.

This unique challenge brings together everyone from chief executives to train drivers, nurses and firefighters, farmers, airline pilots and students, from age 18 upwards, to take on Mother Nature’s toughest and most remote conditions. There is no upper age limit, the oldest competitor to date is 76.

Now in its twelfth edition, the Clipper 2019-20 Race started from London, UK, on 02 September 2019.