Cape crusaders
News
January 14. 2009 at 18:48There has been little time for respite for Dee Caffari, GBR, Arnaud Boissiéres and Brian Thompson, GBR, as
While Cape Horn’s fearsome reputation is well deserved, for ocean racers it is as readily associated with release, the transition from the Pacific to the
For Caffari, who has sent pictures of the latest damage to her badly deteriorated mainsail, these are particularly worrisome times as she seeks to become the first woman to haved sailed solo non stop round the world in both directions.
Marc Guillemot (Safran) stopped on the north east corner of the
Dee Caffari, Aviva: "A nightmare twenty four hours where I spent most of it in 50 to 65 knots of wind. Aviva survived, I survived, but the mainsail didn't. No great surprise as the wind was vicious but it was the sea state that was the scariest thing. I have never seen sea so huge before. The wind has eased but has left a messy and still big sea state which is making progress difficult with a mainsail that can go no higher than four reefs. I am stuck with this until I can get conditions where I can assess the damage and decide a repair to get me going again. My biggest concern now is the fact that slow boat speed may mean I will be hit by the next storm too and I do not think I can do it all again!"
Michel Desjoyeaux (Foncia) “ It's not too bad, in fact, this morning. We're still heeled over and we'll be on the same tack for a while all the way up the Brasilian coast to the Doldrums. I have finished climbing the stairs. Each step up required a lot of work. I think now I have reached the top. With Roland, we're seeing the accordion phenomenon: if you look at all the zigzagging back and forth we're still more or less the same distance apart, so there's nothing unusual about that. In any case Roland is going to be following the same trajectory and I'll be back on a straight course at 12-14 or even 15 knots, so at that point the "accordion" will stretch out again in my favour. I reckon there's really 350-400 miles separating us. I was lucky to round the Horn in calm conditions, and get around on the right side of the low. For now, we're heading up to the Doldrums, which we should cross between 28 and 33 West. I took a look yesterday at the wind charts for 10-15 days ahead, but seeing what a mess it was, I didn't really study it. It's so unstable that you cannot see that far ahead and we'll have to wait until we're there. I don't have a crystal ball and am no astrologist, but we should finish in the first few days of February. We'll know a couple days after the Equator once we've reached the
Roland Jourdain (Veolia Environnement: "We're in a different world. It's 27°C outside and the sea is at 24°. The wind is stable and the sea is settling down. The icing on the cake is that I'm gaining ground without really doing anything. Just as well, as I'm feeling a bit exhausted after all my work with the composites. What with recovering what I could, observing the situation and the DIY work, I haven't had much time to look at the weather charts, but the speeds look weird to me. I've been wondering whether
Infos précédentes :
- 14/01/09 at 18:48 : Cape crusaders
- 14/01/09 at 16:17 : More repairs for Dee and an escape route for Desjoyeaux
- 14/01/09 at 08:49 : Please Release Me
- 13/01/09 at 21:13 : Day 65 Round Up
- 13/01/09 at 21:11 : Catching the Professor?
- 13/01/09 at 19:05 : Oceans apart, different challenges
- 13/01/09 at 13:46 : Comebacks
- 13/01/09 at 08:48 : Stick or Twist?
- 12/01/09 at 23:21 : DAY 64-RESUME
- 12/01/09 at 21:25 : A beating off Brasil
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