Brewers kitesurf Channel with barrels of bread

Martin Marescaux smiling at the camera. He has wet hair and is wearing a wetsuit.Image source, Pain de Minuit - Andoni
Image caption,

Martin Marescaux said he was "tired but happy" to complete the challenge

  • Published

Two kitesurfers from France are claiming two world firsts after crossing the English Channel, carrying barrels of bread on their backs.

Martin Marescaux, of Pain de Minuit brewery in Lille, and Theo Vanmarcke crossed from Portland, Dorset, to Cherbourg on Wednesday.

The men were carrying 36 dry loaves from a Dorset bakers which will be used for making blonde ale.

The say they are the first to cross that part of the Channel by kitesurf and the first to make a delivery across the world's busiest shipping channel.

Image source, Pain de Minuit - Andoni
Image caption,

The men say they are the first to make a delivery by kitesurf across the Channel

The men set a time of 4hrs 30mins, which they believe is a first - and therefore a world record - for that route.

Mr Marescaux said: "We are tired but we are happy.

"We will make beer with the bread we collected and in eight weeks the beer will be ready."

Pain de Minuit usually recycles bread from bakeries across France for its brewing operation.

The team began planning the cross-channel challenge two years ago after Steve Oxford, owner of Dorset bakery chain Oxford's, offered them his unsold stock.

Image source, Pain de Minuit - Andoni
Image caption,

Martin Marescaux (left) and Theo Vanmarcke carried barrels full of bread

Image source, Pain de Minuit - Andoni
Image caption,

Steve Oxford (right) met Martin Marescaux and the team in Portland

Mr Marescaux said: "At the beginning we said we couldn’t collect the bread because it was too far and, for the planet, it was better to put it in the trash – it’s sad but the logistics were too much.

"We reflected about it and we decided to ask the authorities to have the authorisation to collect the bread, kitesurfing, and to make these records.

"After two years, we have all the authorisations and we’ve done it."

Mr Oxford met the team on Chesil Beach on Wednesday morning with a consignment of his unsold sourdough bread.

He said: "They will make it into beer – 3,000 bottles of it – by fermenting the bread that I gave them.

"They’re kitesurfing with it - it’s absolutely crazy."

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