Please select your home edition
Edition
Stoneways Marine 2021 - LEADERBOARD

A windscreen repair engineer celebrates equator crossing and King Neptune ceremony of Clipper Race

by Clipper Race 6 Oct 2025 13:53 UTC
Equator crossing ceremony on board Team Qingdao © Clipper Race

Alastair Golding, a windscreen repair engineer from Sandy, Cambridgeshire, has celebrated crossing the Equator while racing across the Atlantic Ocean as part of the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race.

As Alastair and his team, Team Qingdao, sail from the Spanish port of Puerto Sherry to Punta del Este, Uruguay, this milestone marks the first Equator crossing of the circumnavigation.

Founded by sailing legend Sir Robin Knox-Johnston in 1995, the Clipper Race is a 40,000-nautical mile circumnavigation of the globe, open to anyone regardless of previous sailing experience. Formed of ten teams racing identical stripped-back ocean-going yachts, non-professional Race Crew are led by a professional Skipper and First Mate.

Alastair will take on the full circumnavigation, meaning that he will be at sea for over 250 days of the eleven-month adventure. Before signing up, Alastair said: "This is an adventure that I have dreamed of doing for a long time and I want to test myself at the start of my retirement."

Having already ticked off 26 days at sea, sailing 4,000 miles south, Alastair has now crossed into the Southern Hemisphere and celebrated with the traditional King Neptune ceremony. A long-standing maritime tradition, the ceremony turns all Pollywogs into Shellbacks as crew mark their first-ever Equator crossing - one of the many highlights of the circumnavigation.

Reflecting on the journey so far, Alastair said: "This ocean crossing is everything I expected it to be. It's been very challenging, but lovely scenery! Which has been the biggest surprise considering we are surrounded by water all the time. The sky at the end of the day and into the night has been unbelievable. It's fulfilling a lot of the promises that I thought it would.

"Crossing the Equator is definitely one of those life boxes to tick, not many people have done it, especially not in the way that we have done it!"

This is the second stage of the Atlantic Trade Winds Leg, which saw Alastair depart Portsmouth, UK, on 31 August, and race over 1,000 nautical miles through strong winds and big sea states across the Bay of Biscay to Spain. Teams have since navigated around the Canary Islands, honed their light-wind sailing skills in the doldrums, and now move south on course for South America.

Looking ahead to the rest of the race, Alastair added: "I'm looking forward to a lot of things - that's the beauty of doing a circumnavigation, there will be different challenges, and different opportunities to see different things. I'm particularly looking forward to going to China.

"We're one big family, and all families have teething problems, but we all have one common goal and I'm looking forward to going around the world with these people. This yacht is my home, and I have to treat it that way."

Clear of the doldrums, the fleet is expected to enjoy a steadier race across the South Atlantic before arriving into Punta del Este. By the time Alastair reaches Uruguay, he will have raced approximately 6,250 nautical miles (12,000 km) and completed the first of eight legs that form the global route.

Race Crew representing more than 40 nationalities will take part in the Clipper 2025-26 Race, from professions including teachers, chefs, plumbers, students, accountants, firefighters, retirees, geographers, lawyers, software developers and doctors.

After a stopover in Uruguay, the Clipper Race fleet heads to Cape Town (South Africa), Fremantle and Airlie Beach (Australia), Subic Bay (Philippines), Qingdao (China), Tongyeong City (South Korea), Seattle (USA), Panama, Washington, DC (USA) and Oban (Scotland) before returning to Portsmouth.

Applications are still open for crew to sign up to participate in the Clipper 2025-26 Race, and applications for the 2027-28 edition are now open. To find out more, visit www.clipperroundtheworld.com

Related Articles

Inside the ultimate endurance challenge
"I don't think any of 100s of crew would disagree with me, there's no going back to who you were." What drives someone with no sailing experience to sign up for one of the toughest endurance challenges on the planet? Posted on 22 May
Youth development scheme snaps up Clipper 70
Built for the world's toughest oceans and ready for next chapter After completing five circumnavigations and turning thousands of ordinary people into ocean racers, a Clipper 70 (one of the Clipper Race's ocean racing yachts) is beginning a new chapter. Posted on 20 May
No autopilot, no shortcuts
Why people seek the ultimate sailing endurance challenge What drives someone with no sailing experience to sign up for one of the toughest endurance challenges on the planet? To race around the world on stripped-back, manual racing yachts? Posted on 13 May
Chef from Cheltenham racing from US coast-to-coast
“I had done some family sailing holidays, but they were more about sunbathing than sailing” Lucy Stocks, 22, a chef from Cheltenham, is taking part in the penultimate leg of the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race. It's the last leg of the race that she will complete before her parents join her to race her 'home' this summer. Posted on 4 May
Wokingham man turns 43 twice, mid-ocean
cCrossing the International Date Line whilst competing in the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race Kevin Lynch, from Wokingham, Berkshire lived his 43rd birthday twice this year as he crossed the International Date Line whilst competing in the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race. Posted on 2 May
Ross Ryan from Bottesford sets sail from Seattle
“I have bought everything for us to eat for 55 days - I hope I've not forgotten anything!” Ross Ryan, a Development Manager from Bottesford, Leicestershire, is fulfilling a life-long ambition as he departs Seattle to race to Washington, DC with the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race. Posted on 29 Apr
Global sailing race bids fond farewell to Seattle
The Clipper Race begins the penultimate leg of its global race route The Clipper Round the World Yacht Race departed Seattle on Tuesday, April 28, to begin the penultimate leg of its global race route. Posted on 29 Apr
Grit, tenacity and 5,500 nautical miles
Clipper Race Crews complete North Pacific crossing Team Power of Seattle Sports, the team led by Dutch Skipper Angela Brandsma, has finished victorious in Stage 9: The Big One to Seattle of the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race. Posted on 28 Apr
Airline Pilot from Kiel wins Clipper Race Stage 9
Victory after 26 days sailing 5,500nm across the North Pacific Ocean Julia Heitmann, a 36-year-old airline pilot from Kiel, Germany, has arrived in Seattle, USA, after spending 26 days sailing 5,500nm (10,186 km) across the North Pacific Ocean in one of the most challenging legs of the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race. Posted on 24 Apr
Two things
The first time something occurs it's happenstance. Next is circumstance. The third is enemy action. So, there's an axiom that states, the first time something occurs it's happenstance. The next is circumstance, and the third is enemy action. Now on paper, and under that ruling, that makes this here Ed the latter. Hhhmmmm. Posted on 19 Apr
Crewsaver 2021 Safetyline FOOTERRugged Marine LogbooksArmada Cup 2026