The Canal
The Saintes Maries de la Mer Speed Canal, known to windsurfers as The Canal, is a man-made canal or trench near the French Mediterranean coastal town Saintes Maries de la Mer, built especially for speed record-breaking sailing by windsurfers.
Background
The Canal, also called "The French Trench" by the English-speaking community of windsurfers, is long and wide, in a west-northwest/east-southeast orientation designed to take advantage of the Marin and Mistral winds that blow in that location.In 1987, the idea of building a speed canal was thought up by British speed windsurfer Erik Beale and St Marie speed week organizer Michel Roussolet. The first version was 850 m long and it enabled Beale on 13 November 1988 to become the first sailor in history to officially break the 40-knot barrier, setting the Outright Speed Sailing Record of:
- 40.48 knots by British windsurfer Erik Beale in 1988.
- 42.91 by French windsurfer Pascal Maka in 1990
- 43.06 by French windsurfer Thierry Bielak in 1991
- 44.66 by French windsurfer Thierry Bielak in 1991
- 45.34 by French windsurfer Thierry Bielak in 1993
Three consecutive Outright Speed Sailing Records, measured on a 500-metre course, were set on The Canal by windsurfers in 2004, 2005 and 2008:
- 49.09 knots by French windsurfer Antoine Albeau, in March 2008.
- The previous two records were held by the Irish-born windsurfer Finian Maynard, who competes for the British Virgin Islands, also on The Canal:
- * A 48.70 knots record set on 10 April 2005,
- * A 46.82 knots record set on 13 November 2004.