#06

Sunday 8th November 2020, 1:02pm. I was one of 35 contestants departing from Les Sables-d’Olonne for the Vendée Globe – the solo, unassisted, non-stop round-the-world sailing race.

I left behind the land, my friends and the whole world on that day, and wouldn’t see them again until 111 days later, on February 28th 2021, at 7:23 am.

I came 24th and I’m so proud to have completed this world tour, to have succeeded, to feel like I have won, to have achieved my dream.

It was not an easy task. I left with a small budget and a more than 20-year-old IMOCA, the Penguin, built in 1998 for Catherine Chabaud (Vendée Globe 2000).

This boat certainly knows its way around after 6 world tours and 4 Vendée Globe races. With it, I wanted to achieve the dream I have had since I was a little girl, obsessed with open-sea races and oceans.

My race was punctuated with intense moments of happiness, storms, calm waters and multiple surprises. I battled with the elements and the events of the race with the same determination, even when I was physically suffering, for the last three weeks, after falling on my back.

I am the 10th woman in the world among nearly 100 skippers to have finished the round-the-world race without stopping and without assistance. More people have been to space than have completed the Vendée Globe!

I am not a number