Kingston, October 17, 2023 – Melodie Schaffer from Toronto was named Sail Canada’s 2023 Rolex Sailor of the Year during Canada’s Celebration of Sailing event held by Sail Canada and the Port Credit Yacht Club on Tuesday.
Sail Canada’s Rolex Sailor of the Year Award has been presented annually since 1986 to individual(s) who have provided global recognition to Canadian sailing and Sail Canada, and who are renowned leaders that have attained high levels of excellence with significant results and accomplishments in world events or activities. Along with recognition for exemplary sportsmanship, they have held the respect of their fellow sailors.
Melodie Schaffer started training at the Royal Canadian Yacht Club and raced in Lasers, 470s, International 14s, 8m, Sharks, and J105s. She has been an offshore racer for five years and has sailed 80,000 nautical miles (close to 150 000 km). She has competed in many offshore events, including the RORC Caribbean 600 three times, and has raced in the Antigua to Bermuda race, the Fastnet Race, the Normandy Channel Race, and the Transat Jacques Vabre. In addition, she has worked as a mate at a Volvo Ocean 60 Race, and has competed in the Clipper Round the World Race, before that event was interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic.
From June 2022 to March 2023, she took part in the Globe 40, a 35,000-mile, eight-leg, double handed competition that takes sailors around the world in Class 40s. Seven teams took part in the 175-day event which started in Morocco and had stops in Cape Verde, Mauritius, New Zealand, French Polynesia, Argentina, Brazil and Grenada, ultimately ending up in France.
Melodie and her team had to face some highs and lows, including dealing with many changes regarding the skipper. Melodie pieced this race together, one leg at a time, and finally had six different skippers for the eight different legs, so the majority of the starts were with someone new. “Whiskey Jack” boat set three speed records in the race, in legs 1, 7 and 8. Overall, “Whiskey Jack”, skippered by Melodie and co-skippers Gary Jacques, Mikael Ryking, Jeronimo Santos, Robert Phillips, Paul Stratfold and Tom Pierce, took 5th place, and set the overall speed record for the race with an average speed of 14.3kn, for a distance of 347 miles in 24 hours.
Through the race, she also faced storms and countless broaches, dodged pirates, had to do over a dozen sails repairs with four needing to be replaced, had a damaged rudder and two incidents of smoke in the cabin, crashed a main computer and lost wind instruments. On leg 2, five out of eight sails were damaged, the satellite navigation communications went down multiple times – resulting in days without weather updates or communication, while the primary and secondary wind instruments failed. The final 10 days were sailed by instinct and wool “tell-tales” tied to the shrouds. The leg, which was 36 days in length, finished with a repaired head sail flying in fragments and, despite all the trials, a podium finish. On leg 3, leading the race after the first week, her team had a spinnaker wrap that took 36 hours to clear in 25kn winds and 5m waves, and their mainsail tore from leech to luff. Again, the instruments went down and three weeks were sailed ‘old school’ by tell tales on shrouds. On leg 5, the bow sprit snapped in half, so they could no longer fly spinnakers, and then a UFO (unidentified floating object) damaged the port rudder so they only had one active rudder for the rounding of Cape Horn.
From the nomination form: “Melodie is made of pure grit, but she also dances to music on watch, is awed by the night skies, the ocean wildlife and delights in the people she connects with around the world. The maple leaf decorates the boat and she flies her club burgee and the Canadian flag with pride at every port. She may be smaller, female and older, but it is her ability as an offshore sailor, her skill and her determination that define her. The message she shared is anyone can sail, girls and women can and should be skippers, and everyone can chase a dream! Unquestionably, Melodie opened the way for more female presence in major offshore racing and ocean racing and she carried the colours of the Canadian flag very high.”
Melodie has a masters degree in biomedical engineering and is a sailing photographer, as well as a mother of three.
Thank you so much, I am truly honoured to be receiving this award,” said Melodie Schaffer. “I had the same dream as many, which is to represent Canada in sailing. I raced dinghies at an elite level until my early twenties, and then shifted gears to focus on my career as a biomedical engineer. I shifted again to my next career as a full-time, stay-at-home mom. I never stopped sailing, but for a while it was as a casual racer and for family time.”
“In 2017, I tried offshore racing for the first time at the Carribean 600. I returned in 2018, and that was the beginning of where I am now – my third career as an offshore sailor. Offshore racing gave me the opportunity to be challenged again and to learn and grow in new ways.”
“Fast forward to now. I stand here not as a 20-year-old athlete, like I once dreamed I would be, but 30 years later as someone with broad life experiences. I have had the epic experience of racing my boat around the world in the double-handed Globe 40 race! The challenges were immense, not just on the ocean, but also personally. I was away for two years training and racing. I went six months without seeing my kids. I had no full-time shore team, and managed much of the logistics myself. I used my own savings to make this happen, betting on myself and my dream in every way.”
“There were so many challenging moments – but I also had moments of pride, and magical moments where I was in awe of the ocean and our world. I am lucky to have seen it from a perspective that very few have.”
“I would like to thank my family and friends for their support and encouragement. I would like to thank my teammates who stepped up for each leg of this endeavour, and the Globe 40 race organization, Sail Canada for the support that they provide to so many of our amazing athletes, Rolex for their ongoing support of sailing in Canada, and of those that strive to achieve excellence in sailing.”
“Being recognized with this award comes after a lifetime of sailing, with grit and determination, culminating in two years of perseverance to complete the Globe 40 race around the world. I am honoured to represent Canada on the international sailing stage, even more so as a woman, and a mom, coming to this as my third career. Canada is surrounded by three oceans, and with more lakes than any other country, we have every reason to sail, and to shine while doing so.”
“With my own background in sailing and managing offshore programs in the 1970s and 1980s, I have immense admiration for what Melodie has accomplished as well as a keen understanding of the adversity that she managed to overcome in achieving these successes,” said Hugh McGugan, Chair of Sail Canada’s Board of Directors.
“Melodie’s dedication in continuing to rekindle the passion for offshore competition with women in Canada is also an incredibly important accomplishment, and one that all sailors in Canada congratulate her for!”
Amongst previous winners of Sail Canada’s Rolex Sailor of the Year Award, Canada’s Olympic and Paralympic medalists Evert Bastet (2007), Terry McLaughlin (2001 and 2013), John McRoberts and Jackie Gay (2016), as well as Paul Tingley (2008) are all on that prestigious list, as is Ross MacDonald, who won it three times (1990 and 1992 with Eric Jespersen, and 2004 with Mike Wolfs).
This award was handed out during Canada’s Celebration of Sailing reception, where performances and experiences of Canada’s high-performance sailors of the past, present and future are celebrated. This year’s reception was attended by over 125 sailors of all ages, including members and alumni of Sail Canada’s National Team and Development Squad members, and several supporters of Canadian sailing.
More information is available on the Sail Canada website at: https://www.sailing.ca/rolex-sailor-of-the-year-award/.
About Sail Canada
Established in 1931, Sail Canada is the national governing body for the sport of sailing in the country. Sail Canada is a leading international sailing nation, proud of its world class athletes, lifelong participants and inclusive culture. The organization and its members are committed to excellence by developing and training its leaders, athletes, sailors, instructors, coaches and officials. With the valued support from our partners, the Provincial Sailing Associations and our member clubs, schools, organizations and stakeholders, sailing is promoted in all its forms. By setting standards and delivering programs from home pond to podium for Canadians of all ages and abilities, from dinghies to keelboats, cruising to navigation, windsurfing to powerboating and accessible sailing, Sail Canada sets sail for all, sail to win and sail for life.
A sport in the Olympic program since the first Games in 1896, except in 1904, the pursuit of success in these Games is what fuels the focus of Sail Canada as Canadian athletes have so far achieved nine Olympic and five Paralympic medals.