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Perrine Louvet
East Gregerie Channel, United States Virgin Islands, USAApr 13, 2025

Distance

12.3nm

Avg. speed

4.5kts

Duration

2h 46m

It’s not goodbye it’s see you later 😪

My final sail for now… back to city living for a bit. It don’t worry, I’ll be back ❤️

Perrine Louvet
Caribbean sea, Island subdivision not defined, United States Virgin Islands, USAApr 13, 2025

Distance

3.7nm

Avg. speed

4.6kts

Duration

48m

The final dive 😪

Last day onboard. Screaming crying throwing up. I don’t want to go home… Anyways sailed off the mooring and into this anchorage. Time for one last dive 🫧

Perrine Louvet
Virgin Islands National Park, Island subdivision not defined, United States Virgin Islands, USAApr 11, 2025

Distance

3.8nm

Avg. speed

4.3kts

Duration

53m

I’m a helm girl

Hand steered this whole passage again which is just so fun?!! I never get tired of it 🥹

Perrine Louvet
Rendezvous Bay, Cruz Bay, United States Virgin Islands, USAApr 10, 2025

Distance

9.2nm

Avg. speed

5.3kts

Duration

1h 43m

Back to the motherland

Let’s hope immigration lets me in 😅

Perrine Louvet
Norman IslandApr 10, 2025

Distance

6.4nm

Avg. speed

6.4kts

Duration

1h

Another day another dive

You know the drill…

Perrine Louvet
Peter IslandApr 8, 2025

Distance

10.4nm

Avg. speed

5.5kts

Duration

1h 54m

Afternoon nap

I was so tired this afternoon! So I slept through most of this ngl…

Perrine Louvet
Virgin GordaApr 7, 2025

Distance

13.9nm

Avg. speed

6.9kts

Duration

2h 1m

Dive spot :)

Look how gorgeous MoVi is!!!

Perrine Louvet
North Atlantic OceanApr 5, 2025

Distance

10.8nm

Avg. speed

5.3kts

Duration

2h 1m

Hand steered this whole passage 😅

This was fun!! Should do it more often 😋

Perrine Louvet
Frenchmans CayApr 2, 2025

Distance

7.6nm

Avg. speed

6kts

Duration

1h 15m

Exploring the BVI 🥰
Perrine Louvet
Peter IslandMar 31, 2025

Distance

4.2nm

Avg. speed

5.3kts

Duration

48m

Very quick hop
Perrine Louvet
Falmouth Harbour, Antigua and BarbudaMar 21, 2025

Distance

18.2nm

Avg. speed

4.3kts

Duration

4h 12m

John’s yachtmaster training day

Title says it all… test is tomorrow, everyone say good luck John!!

Perrine Louvet
Five Island Harbour, Antigua and BarbudaMar 16, 2025

Distance

2.8nm

Avg. speed

2.4kts

Duration

1h 10m

Sunset kayak trip :))

This was very calming and peaceful and beautiful ❤️

Perrine Louvet
Baie de la Potence, Marigot, Saint MartinMar 12, 2025

Distance

3.3nm

Avg. speed

5.7kts

Duration

34m

tuva’s last sail 🥲🥲

noooo don’t goooo what am I gonna do without youuu @tuvaanine ❤️

Perrine Louvet
Baie de la Potence, Marigot, Saint MartinMar 10, 2025

Distance

25.4nm

Avg. speed

5.4kts

Duration

4h 42m

Long sail but we made it!!

Leaving Tuva hereee 😢😢

Perrine Louvet
Baie-Mahault, GuadeloupeMar 2, 2025

Distance

30.6nm

Avg. speed

6.4kts

Duration

4h 47m

This was longer than expected…
Perrine Louvet
Anse Deshaiesa, Deshaies, GuadeloupeMar 2, 2025

Distance

9.5nm

Avg. speed

5.4kts

Duration

1h 46m

Early hop bc the last anchorage was RO-LLY!
Perrine Louvet
Saline Bay, Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesFeb 24, 2025

Distance

3.1nm

Avg. speed

7.2kts

Duration

26m

Short hop to a dive site!!
Perrine Louvet
Prickly Bay, GrenadaFeb 21, 2025

Distance

16.4nm

Avg. speed

6.9kts

Duration

2h 22m

Our last stop down south! 🇬🇩
Perrine Louvet
MartiniqueJan 22, 2025

Distance

2 168.1nm

Avg. speed

7.2kts

Duration

12d 11h 51m

Atlantic crossing!!!! ⛵️🌊🫶

The first few days of the passage were so incredibly peaceful. We were going 9knots downwind and the boat was the most comfortable it’s been since I got on in Madeira. We quickly got into a routine and it was so nice being able to get so much done while also having time to hang out and share meals as a crew. I especially enjoyed my night watches, during which I would - read (I loooved the two books I read: “Les choses humaines” by Karine Tuil, and “Intermezzo” by Salley Rooney) - work out (with dive weights, to the few musical soundtracks I had downloaded which proceeded to get irritatingly stuck in my head: My fair lady and The sound of music) - record little voice diaries for my best friend - study my sailing theory In the middle of our 5th night, ~700 nautical miles off of Cape Verde, we had a serious accident. Everything was going smoothly until our spinnaker suddenly ripped in half (we think it caught on the top spreader) and started dragging behind the boat, bending the pole 90 degrees and causing it to swing uncontrollably forward and back. In the midst of this, the chafing of lines caused the preventer on the boom to snap and the boom swept across the deck and hit our captain Roy in the head. Roy was unconscious on the deck for ~5 mins… we all assumed the worst but jumped into action: our first mate got the boat back to safety while I provided first aid to the captain. It suddenly felt terrifyingly real that we were in the middle of the Atlantic, several days away from helicopter range or any kind of medical help, and with limited means of communication. Thankfully Roy regained consciousness and didn’t seem to have any major problems other than some short-term memory loss, which is normal after a concussion. We got him inside and monitored him while using the satellite phone to get in contact with the Martinique coast guard doctor. Since Roy was stable, we decided the safest decision was to keep going towards Martinique (~1400nm) and try and make landfall as soon as possible (hell of a mission without a spinnaker). Our first mate took over as acting captain and did a wonderful job. He reorganized the watch schedule between the three of us, which was manageable but definitely more intense. We were all a bit traumatized by what had happened and found the night shifts particularly stressful. Two days later the wind picked up to force 7, and our night watches became busy reefing up and down for squalls that came towards us at full speed. The sea state worsened and the boat was extremely rolly and uncomfortable. As the days passed, Roy got better and we all started to calm down and trust the boat again. The end was in sight, and we would soon enter helicopter range (100nm) where it seemed like all our problems would be solved. The last night was a lot calmer, the sky was beautiful, and I was finally able to take a breath and feel the realness of it all. We had made it. Through the ups and downs, and the fear, and the weather, we crossed the damn Atlantic Ocean. It’s not the Pacific, it’s not high latitude sailing, it’s not what my plan was when I first decided to spend this year sailing around the world, but it is still a crazy accomplishment and I feel so so proud and grateful for it all ❤️Plus 12.5 days is prettyyy damn good! 🥂 To my first ocean crossing!! (many more to come I’m sure xx) PS: as much as I complain about not having starlink onboard, it was actually kind of wonderful to be offline for 2 weeks hehe (not ready to be back to reality 🥲).

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