“It’s better to protect the coral than to repair it”
After his express voyage aboard an Ocean Fifty between Saint-Malo and Le Havre, our special correspondent Brieuc Maisonneuve sends us news from southwestern Mexico, where he has joined a crew dedicated to protecting the environment aboard a motorized trimaran.
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Publié le
27/11/2025
Par
Gilles Ruffet
Numéro :
205
Parution :
Jan.
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Feb.
2026
Where: Scorpion Reef, Yucatán, Mexico
Multihull: Leen 56
Website: www.seashepherd.org
After crisscrossing the fjords of Alaska under private ownership, this multipower exploration vessel has found a new calling. Taken on by the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, it now sails to defend one of the last coral sanctuaries in the Gulf of Mexico: Scorpion Reef, a fragile atoll located over 60 miles offshore.
On board, a team of scientists, volunteers, and committed sailors works together to track down illegal boats that plunder stocks of conch, those iconic mollusks now threatened with extinction. The Roger Payne serves as a logistical base for surveillance, research, and environmental education, in partnership with the Mexican Navy and the Ministry of the Environment.
Its name pays tribute to Dr. Roger Payne (1935-2023), an American marine biologist, world-renowned for discovering the vocal communication of humpback whales in the 1970s. His recordings, broadcast around the world, profoundly transformed the perception of these giants of the seas and inspired a whole generation of oceanographers and conservationists.
In the dim evening light, the trimaran watches over the reef like a silent guardian. Its mission is no longer to explore the world, but to protect it.
Here, luxury has taken on a new meaning: that of a multihull vessel used to protect rather than consume, a ship that has found its purpose.
“It is better to protect coral than to repair it” - Pritam Singh, CEO Sea Shepherd Conservation Society.