Yachting World

Wrestling the Kraken

THE KRAKEN CUP IS THE MOST EXTREME SAILING RACE YOU’VE NEVER HEARD OF, REPORTS HELEN FRETTER

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The East African coast’s Kraken Cup is the most extreme sailing race you’ve never heard of, reports Helen Fretter

Ò This is probably the most extreme and uncomforta­ble sailing I’ve ever done,” says Simon Walker. “And I have sailed twice the wrong way around the world, 17 times across the Atlantic. I’ve sailed to the Arctic, the Antarctic – so that’s quite something when you’re in an absolute tropical paradise of clear blue skies and seas.”

Walker is describing the Kraken Cup, formerly known as the Ngalawa Cup, a unique adventure sailing race held off east Africa in the traditiona­l Tanzanian fishing boats called Ngalawa.

The premise of the race is simple, but punishing. Teams of three charter a Ngalawa and race it over seven days and multiple stopovers for about 180 miles across the Zanzibar archipelag­o, pitching camp at each stop. Crews are banned from sailing past nightfall, but the › days are long. At the end of each day’s racing the crews drag their

boats up the beach and sleep on the sand or in a hammock slung wherever they can find.

There is very limited support, and the organisers’ website points out: ‘These are not holidays. These are adventures and so by their very nature extremely risky. ‘That’s the whole point.’

Profession­al sailor Walker skippered Toshiba in the 1996 Global Challenge, before becoming managing director and chief executive of the next two editions of the round the world race. When two former Challenge colleagues set up an extreme travel company, The Adventuris­ts, he joined as a non-executive director.

The Adventuris­ts run a number of what Walker calls “challengin­g journeys on very unsuitable vehicles”, including a vintage motorbike race across frozen Siberia and a rally across India in a rickshaw.

The Adventuris­ts then decided to add a sailing based event to their portfolio, so Walker used his yacht racing event experience to help build the Kraken Cup, which is now in its sixth year and in 2019 had grown to an impressive 23 entries. It is billed as: ‘Possibly the most ridiculous ocean race in the world.’

Central to the race are the Ngalawas, which are quite unlike any boat that any participan­ts will ever have sailed before.

“The hull is a hollowed out mango tree – so, literally, a dugout canoe. Beams are lashed on to the hull that support the outriggers. A short, stubby mast with a lateen sail is stepped on a small thwart in the mango tree,” explains Walker.

“If there are any fastenings they are literally crude iron nails. It wouldn’t look out of place a thousand years ago in terms of the materials used.

“There’s a very short, stubby rudder with forged rudder pins, that you make in a blacksmith’s. The sail is canvas, for want of a better word, which is lashed to a bamboo spar.

“I guess the only nod to modernity is we were using braid on braid line as opposed to manila. But the locals are

‘THE HULL IS A HOLLOWED OUT MANGO TREE – A DUGOUT CANOE’

just using polypropyl­ene and any line they could get their hands on. There are lots of lashings – all beautifull­y done. And basically, that’s it. It’s a pretty simple thing.”

The Ngalawas raced are near-identical to the ones still used by the East African fishermen. The only modificati­ons are the safety equipment that the Kraken Cup crews take – individual satellite trackers for each crew member, additional buoyancy with blow-up flotation bags, and items like danbuoys.

Otherwise the main difference is that race entrants’ boats are fully loaded with basic camping equipment, clothing, spares, food and water – and sailed with three crew. “And sailing with three was pretty full on, particular­ly a gybe,” recalls Walker.

“Meanwhile the Ngalawa fishermen were doing it with just two of them, on the littler boats on their own, and they are sailing them beautifull­y, elegantly balanced with a fishing line out. They usually have a cigarette in the other hand and they’re just making it look effortless.”

Despite their primitive constructi­on, the Ngalawas require both finesse and seamanship skills.

“The bit that really got me excited was actually the seamanship aspect,” explains Walker. “So, in a boat which

isn’t particular­ly close-winded and you can’t tack – you can only wear ship, or go around in a gybe – being aware of the lee shore becomes so important.

“There are countless other examples: bailing, balance, trim – especially trim fore and aft so the rudders are in the water. For a western sailor, it’s very unforgivin­g and it’s very unfamiliar. You can get away with murder sailing amazing modern plastic boats that actually hide a multitude of sins. But suddenly when you sail these boats that don’t hide those mistakes, even the most experience­d of us look positively amateurish.

“But then, when you’ve got the balance right, you realise that actually these boats were in many ways very sophistica­ted.

“For example, the Ngalawas have outriggers. When you first get on the boat, everyone treats it as if it’s a trimaran but the floats are only very thin planks, they have very little buoyancy. So, they’re not for buoyancy, they’re effectivel­y foils.

“As you power up, you realise that the boards are angled and they’re very subtlety toed in so you get lift to weather. The people of the Arab world where the boats came › from had learnt all these hydrodynam­ics lessons and

‘IN WAVES THE BOATS WILL SURF ALONG AT NEAR DOUBLE FIGURES’

applied them to something that was built with an axe, which is just one of the elements that I found so fascinatin­g.” The race appeals to both sailors and adventurer­s. Some are experience­d yachtsmen and women who have sailed around the world, but want to experience something completely different.

“Another group are the adventure junkies, who have learnt various other sports and literally just learn to sail for this event,” explains Walker.

Both will be challenged. “The yachtsman often isn’t used to being in the water all the time and dinghy sailing from first principles and that sort of very physical roughing it. Whereas someone who has come from a dinghy background or just learnt to sail would be less comfortabl­e with the passagemak­ing.”

Teamwork and a willingnes­s to learn are critical to picking up the skills to handle a Ngalawa.

“In something that is so unfamiliar, that cycle of continuous improvemen­t is really critical,” says Walker. In waves, the boats will surf along at near double figures although swamping and capsize are everpresen­t risks. Crew must use their body weight to hike out, and the mainsheet is wrapped around a crossbeam – there are no winches or fittings – so easing the sheet rapidly can be a challenge.

Floats frequently break off or lashings work loose, requiring the teams to make pit-stop repairs and get help from the locals. This forces the paying western crews to engage with the communitie­s they sail through, which Walker describes as sail-based economies, where boatwork is a part of life.

“Bits on the boat break all the time and you can’t fix them yourselves. Because of the nature of the society you’re in, every village will have a fundi, which means expert in Swahili.

“These guys are the boatbuilde­rs and they’ll come with some really basic tools: an axe, a saw and a drill bit to make holes, and string. And they’ll expertly fix your boat and put caulking in it. And you pay them a really modest fee to do that.

“The whole spirit of all the events The Adventuris­ts do is that you do get lost and you do get stuck and you do break, because that forces you to have conversati­ons with the people who live in those countries.

“You get invited into their homes and you get helped, and it’s a really unusual and sort of spirit-lifting experience to have. The people there are not wealthy but they’ll share half of what they don’t have with you.”

Navigation is by charts and GPS, but largely line of sight, with stages usually ranging from 10-30 miles.

“As much as anything, it’s about keeping your wits about you and realising what you’re going to get blown onto or drifted onto,” explains Walker.

“One thing I was worried about are these proper, proper reefs: you just see walls of white water. Remember, in the Indian Ocean you’ve got a fetch of literally thousands and thousands of miles so when the rollers kick in, they’re really big.”

The other challenges are those of survival and discomfort – spending hours out in the tropical heat with no shelter or respite during the day, then limited rest in the evenings.

At each stopover the crews must drag their Ngalawa up the beach, buy fish from the local villagers, cook over a primitive fire, then make camp, usually with just a mosquito net and mat. Occasional­ly they might be treated to a bed in a villager’s home.

In return, the crews get to visit areas of Zanzibar and Tanzania that are untouched by tourism – lush green islands surrounded by white sand beaches and coral reefs, sailing through warm turquoise waters alongside dolphin and manta rays.

For many crews the racing element is important (there are time penalties and demotion to a non-racing › division for any boat that accepts a tow).

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 ??  ?? Above: boats are built and often repaired by experience­d local boatbuilde­rs. Right: bailing, balance and trim – essentials to keep the Ngalawa moving at best speed.Below right: all hands to a launch off the beach
Above: boats are built and often repaired by experience­d local boatbuilde­rs. Right: bailing, balance and trim – essentials to keep the Ngalawa moving at best speed.Below right: all hands to a launch off the beach
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 ??  ?? Far left: end of the day’s racing usually means cooking on an open fire and camping on the beach.Left: when everything’s held together with rope or string, running repairs can be fairly straightfo­rward
Far left: end of the day’s racing usually means cooking on an open fire and camping on the beach.Left: when everything’s held together with rope or string, running repairs can be fairly straightfo­rward
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