After an authentic exploit around the world, Jean-Pierre Dick returns to his home port this Saturday, February 9, 2013, starting at 9:30 a.m., at Entrecasteaux quay in Nice. Come and welcome this great Nice champion and meet him after his fantastic adventure.

By completing his solo round-the-world trip in fourth place despite losing his keel, the skipper of Virbac-Paprec 3 achieved an authentic exploit. He crossed the finish line on Monday, February 4 at 4:05 p.m. after 86 days, 3 hours, and 3 minutes 40 seconds of racing, writing a beautiful page in the history of the Vendรฉe Globe.
Many spectators came to cheer Jean-Pierre Dick along the canal of Les Sables d’Olonne. An emotional arrival that salutes the tenacity of the Nice skipper.
The testimony of Jean-Pierre Dick
Arriving safely:
โI feel proud to have brought my boat safely to port. The race took a different turn for me when I broke my forestay, then lost my keel. It wasn’t easy to stay in contact with the leading group, they were fast. I reconciled myself to my third place, then there was this twist of fate. After that, I refocused on arriving. It was a great intellectual exercise. It was a tough choice, but today we can say I made the right decision.โ
My greatest fear: losing my keel
โThe scariest moment was when I lost my keel because the boat really heeled over. I was lucky to be next to the mainsail sheet and I was able to react quickly. I filled my leeward ballast tanks. In my misfortune, I was fortunate to right my boat.โ
Confidence and self-knowledge:
โThe greatest lesson I take from this race is that when faced with problems, even if you don’t have self-confidence to solve them, if you tackle them one by one, like a surgeon, you can manage to solve them. I’m not a natural handyman, but I manage to achieve potentially incredible things by building a plan of action step by step.
You feel strengthened, you gain self-confidence during an adventure like this. You have to give it your all, and succeeding in overcoming challenges one by one boosts self-confidence. Today I am a better sailor, but I also have an increased knowledge of myself.โ
From race to adventure:
โWe are competitors at heart. I set off trying to win this race, but I ended up in an adventure. Sportingly, the goal is not achieved, but on a human level, itโs far beyond what I hoped for. I think I will find it easier to come to terms with my loss of third place because there is this glorifying aspect of the race’s end. I am proud to have brought my Virbac-Paprec 3 back to Les Sables dโOlonne.โ
An intense race, without half-measures:
โYou must have an incredible desire, you have to fight. With the new generation that has arrived, you must be extremely physically involved, eager to go, there is no half-measure.โ


