top of page

Ellie Driver and Oliver Hill (Women’s Engineering Society), 17th in the Transat Paprec!

  • Photo du rédacteur: Antoine Grenapin
    Antoine Grenapin
  • 10 mai
  • 2 min de lecture

At 23 and 24 years old respectively, Ellie and Oliver had everything to discover during this transatlantic race. The two Brits, distanced at the Portuguese coast, hung on until the end. They completed the race rankings by finishing their Transat Paprec less than 24 hours after the winners. Above all, they enjoyed an incredible welcome in the dead of night in Saint-Barthélemy.


ree


THEIR RACE IN NUMBERS


Arrival time: Saturday, May 9 at 11:43 p.m. (local time), 5:43 a.m. (metropolitan time)

Race time: 19 days 16 hours, 41 minutes, 23 seconds

Gap to first: 21 h 24 min

Distance traveled: 4,184 miles

Average speed (actual): 8.85 knots


THEIR RACE DECRYPTED. Smiles, at the end of the desire


It's as if you have to fight harder than the others to get the thrill. Before setting off on the Transat Paprec, the two young Britons had to dig in their heels to make it. " It was really hard to be at the start, " they confided in an audio message last week. " And for us, everything was new, including all the steps to take at the start. Everything was complicated ." But it takes more than that to undermine their motivation.


There 's an incredible enthusiasm between Ellie and Oliver, visible in their smiles that light up their faces in all circumstances. She has sailed a lot with a crew, he trained offshore with his father. The Figaro is " an excellent way to progress ," assures Oliver, " a fantastic opportunity to learn ." On the pontoons in Concarneau, the "goodbyes" are moving: their parents are there, they throw themselves into each other's arms, we look for tissues to dry the tears that flow down their faces.


What followed was the race, and the infernal pace imposed at the front of the race. In contact with the fleet at the start of the race, the duo fell slightly behind along the Portuguese coast and overtook La Palma in last place. No matter: Ellie and Oliver continued to give it their all. The fact that the entire group of competitors was blocked by a windless zone allowed them to gradually close in. They were the only ones surfing and blasting along at high speeds when the fleet was jammed.


The two Britons had to hang on until the end and hold on as the arrivals continued. At the finish, "we didn't expect such a welcome," Ellie assures us. Dozens of them were on the pontoon, including a large number of the Transat Paprec skippers. Smoke bombs, applause, hugs: it was their turn to taste the joy of the sweet madness of the Saint-Barthélemy night.


ree

 
 
Plan de travail 2_edited.jpg

PARTENAIRE TITRE

Fichier 7_600x.png

COLLECTIVITÉS HÔTES

REGION BRETAGNE.png
Concarneau.png
CCI finistère blanc.png
COLL SAINT-BART.png
saint-barthelemy-tourisme.png
Logo-cem-blanc.png

PARTENAIRES OFFICIELS

Armor lux
Corsair
highfield
Fichier 1.png
suzuki.png

PARTENAIRES MÉDIAS

Logo TLG Blanc.png
OUEST FRANCE
france info
ICI
figaro-nautisme.png
meteoconsult.png

FOURNISSEURS OFFICIELS

Fichier 1_2x.png
brasserie de bretagne
france-location
Le Barthélemy.png
Fichier 1_2x.png
virtual regatta.png

AVEC LE SOUTIEN DE

ffvoile
MONO CLASSE FIGARO BENETEAU.webp
championnat-de-france-elite
concarneau-drapeau
Ifremer.png

UN ÉVÈNEMENT ORGANISÉ PAR

oc sport pen duick

FOURNISSEUR TECHNIQUE

adrena.png
bottom of page