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Sailing Solo Around the World Like It's 1968: The Golden Globe Race

4/29/202627 min

In 1968, nine sailors set off on the first solo nonstop race around the world. Only one crossed the finish line. Sir Robin Knox-Johnston returned aboard Suhaili to claim the Sunday Times Golden Globe - while behind him, one competitor faked his positions, another sailed to Tahiti instead of the finish line, and a third pushed his boat so hard it fell apart 1,200 miles from home.

Nearly fifty years later, Australian adventurer Don McIntyre decided to bring the race back. The rules were simple: sail around the world alone, without stopping, using only the technology available in 1968. No GPS. No satellite weather. No electronic instruments. Navigate by sextant, listen to music on cassette tapes, and if something breaks halfway round the world, fix it yourself or retire. Fewer than one in five who start the Golden Globe Race will finish it.

Don joins Hugh to tell the full story: from his boyhood obsession with Knox-Johnston to the moment he decided to recreate the race that started it all. He explains why the GGR has become the purest test in ocean racing, why its followers are more gripped by short daily text updates than live satellite feeds from other races, and why — in an age of autopilots, AI, and nineteen-million-euro campaigns — stripping everything away and leaving one person alone with the sea might be exactly what the world needs.

The 2026 Golden Globe Race starts from Les Sables-d'Olonne, France, on 6 September. Follow the race at goldengloberace.com. If you haven't seen it, the documentary The Voyage of Madman, covering the 2018 edition, is free on YouTube.

Arthur Beale is an official partner of the Golden Globe Race. We have produced the exclusive clothing and accessory collection for the race — rooted in a heritage of craftsmanship that reflects the resilience, determination, and spirit needed for true adventure. The collection is available to buy from arthurbeale.co.uk from May 2026.

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First 90 seconds
  1. Speaker 00:00

    You're listening to a podcast right now, driving, working out, walking the dog. If you're into podcasts, chances are you have something to say too. With RSS.com, starting your own podcast is free and easy. Upload an episode, and we distribute it to Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and more. Track your listeners, see where they're from, and start earning from ads just like this. If you've been thinking about starting a podcast, this is your sign. Start your new podcast for free today at RSS.com.

  2. Hugh Taylor· Host0:28

    It's the toughest mind game in the world. It's grueling. It's ugly. It's really quite demanding. Not to mention the fact that every inch that they move around the world is entirely because of their own effort. The Golden Globe Race is a solo, nonstop, unassisted circumnavigation of the world. No GPS, no electronic instruments, and if something breaks in the middle of the ocean, you better know how to fix it yourself. Inspired by the infamous Sunday Times-sponsored sailing race in 1968, the GGR strips it all back to one person, one boat, and roughly eight months alone at sea with nothing but your own skill, nerve, and single-mindedness to get you across the finish line. Fewer than one in five who start ever finish it. I'm Hugh Taylor, and you're listening to The Art of Adventure, a podcast brought to you by Arthur Bill, outfitters to sailors, adventurers, explorers, and vagabonds for over

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