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    ‘Slow travel’ start-up launches cross-Channel crossings by sail

    DOVER (AFP) – The crossing may be “a bit choppy”, Captain Andrew Simons warns a dozen of his passengers waiting in the French port of Boulogne to cross the Channel with only wind to get them to England.

    SailLink is a British start-up that aims to offer sailing as a low-carbon alternative to ferries.

    This week, it made its first paid crossings of the English Channel on its catamaran, a route that will soon become daily.

    Despite the swell and icy gusts on Thursday, Johannes Schneider, 67, fully enjoyed the crossing in the catamaran. He paid GBP85 for the privilege, more expensive than a pedestrian ferry crossing.

    “Really interesting to really be able to live it, rather than being on a big ship, where you see nothing, or a plane where you see even less,” he said.

    SailLink’s catamaran is 17 metres long and can carry up to 12 passengers.

    To compensate for sometimes rough seas, the crew offers its passengers mint tea to combat motion sickness, and pastries and blankets in the cabin, where they can shelter from the spray.

    SailLink was born in the summer of 2019 when Simons, who was about to board a ferry to England with his daughter, looked at the Cherbourg marina in northern France and wondered why its moored little boats could not be used instead for the crossing.

    He found ferries polluting and impractical with their out-of-the-way terminals.

    Simons imagined a new mode of cross-Channel transport “offering that experience of the sea to people who are not travelling with a car”.

    His initial idea of a co-navigation platform – a sort of BlaBlaCar for boats – proved too complex to implement.

    So Simons modelled his approach on the existing ferries, offering pedestrians and cyclists a fixed, daily route with set schedules.

    He had to raise EUR500,000 (USD560,000), including EUR350,000 to buy the boat, which he raised from a handful of private investors “who really believed in it”.

    Sail passenger routes already exist in France. Sailcoop has run a route between Saint-Raphael on south coast to the Mediterranean island of Corsica since 2022.

    Another company, Iliens, has since 2021 run a route between Quiberon, on France’s Atlantic coast, to the island of Belle-Ile-en-Mer.

    A few kilometres before reaching the English coast, a container ship blocked the catamaran’s way and Simons and his team had to briefly use a motor to move away.

    Navigating one of the busiest seas in the world is no easy task, with about 700 to 800 commercial vessels and around 1,400 fishing boats using the strait every day.

    SailLink still managed the crossing to Dover from Boulogne-sur-Mer in less than four hours.

    That is faster than the scheduled five hours, but longer than the 1.5 hours ferry journey.

    “It’s a new relationship with speed, a new relationship with the landscape,” appealing to fans of “slow travel,” said researcher Sylvain Roche.

    A crew member manoeuvres on a catamaran belonging to SailLink. PHOTO: AFP
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