Newswire
November 08. 2008 at 11:44A tough first night
Weather around Les Sables d’Olonne is very wet and windy. The forecast for tomorrow’s start at 1302hrs (local/1202GMT) is for a SW’ly wind of between 15 and 20 knots, but that is due to increase fairly quickly in the afternoon to 30-35 knots with gusts up to 40 knots during the night. The sea state will be moderate at first, then rough and very rough during the night. After that the fleet will cross a cold front in the Bay of Biscay then they will have to tack maybe in the middle of Monday, then the wind will veer and decrease very quickly and from Cape Finisterre, then it will be lighter winds. (Sylvain Mondon, MeteoFrance, Race Meteorlogists)
November 08. 2008 at 09:16Live from the Pontoons this morning
This morning (Saturday) will be the final opportunity to listen to the programme Live from the Pontoons from Port Olona. At eleven (French time), Pierre-Louis Castelli and Frédéric Ottenhof will be talking to Jean-Luc Van Den Heede, Patrice Carpentier, Hervé Laurent, Sébastien Josse, Richard Silvani and Philippe de Villiers.
From Monday, each morning at eleven you will be able to listen to the radio session with the Vendée Globe skippers broadcast live from Race HQ in Paris on the official website www.vendeeglobe.org.
November 08. 2008 at 09:13Sam Davies aboard the champion.
Sam Davies (Roxy) will be setting sail on Sunday at 13h02 (1202GMT) on the IMOCA Open 60 that won the previous two editions of the Vendée Globe: «I'm feeling fine. I know I'll feel stressed in the final hours leading up to the start. After all the excitement of the past few weeks, suddenly you find yourself alone and you don't know if you are happy, sad or nervous. In the beginning, I wanted to win, but today my goal is more personal: I want to beat the boat's record (87 days 10 hours 47 minutes and 55 seconds) held by Vincent Riou. I've written it down on the entrance to the cockpit to make sure I keep that in mind. It is a long race and there are often a lot of breakages, so we never know… »
November 08. 2008 at 08:56Set sail on the Vendée Globe
Several thousand virtual skippers have already registered to line up for the start of the 2008 Vendée Globe. You too, can try your hand at sailing around the world from the comfort of your home or office. To register for the Virtual Regatta: http://www.virtualregatta.com/index_vendee.php?langue=EN
November 08. 2008 at 08:39Everything changes and remains the same
Roland Jourdain (Veolia Environnement) is back in the Vendée Globe for the third time, but still remembers his retiral in New Zealand in the 2004 race: «In my head, I've already been through it all and the start in Les Sables doesn't mark the end or beginning of anything. For me, it is a continual process. I tell myself that: today, the goal is that… In the coming days there will be all sorts of other questions: how we will get out of the harbour area, make sure we don't collide with any other boats at the start line. And by then, in my head, we're already up to Monday or Tuesday. I'm trying to find the same state of mind that I was in before the start of the last Route du Rhum. You forget the most painful moments quickly enough and pick yourself up and start again… I'm also pleased to be returning to a place where it may be cold and not that easy at times, but that I really like. And there's something I haven't done for a long time that I want to do again: that is the second part of the course, even if the conditions in the Atlantic are hard on the way back… »
November 08. 2008 at 08:02Sunfish
Arnaud Boissières (Akena Vérandas) is able to set sail on his first Vendée Globe, not only because he is supported financially by a partner, who was already involved four years ago, but because Jean-Philippe Chomette is the owner of the boat. She is officially called Solune: «That means sunfish, but it is also the name of the son of Incal in the comic book by Moebius… »
November 08. 2008 at 07:17Full circle
Each Vendée Globe monohull has a number given by the Imoca class, but the skippers are able to choose their own number, which may be simply their lucky number or refer to a particular event. Kito de Pavant (Groupe Bel) has chosen the symbolic 360: «We're going to be sailing around the world, returning to the same point, which means we'll be going 360°! »
November 08. 2008 at 07:02Brownian movement
Some drops of rain can be expected today (Saturday) on the eve of the start of the Vendée Globe: a low-pressure area off Ireland is deepening and a front will mean the wind will veer from the south west (15 knots) to the west and strengthen this afternoon (25 knots). We can therefore expect a rather showery day, but it will remain mild with temperatures above 12° this morning and increasing to 18° this afternoon. The low pressure area is swirling around the south of Iceland and will be deepening further tomorrow; we can expect some strong south-westerlies.
The sea will be moderate for the start of the Vendée Globe at 13h02 with a twenty-knot south westerly wind, but for the thirty solo sailors is the Bay of Biscay is going to be rough. Still not that difficult until Monday lunchtime, it will become very heavy afterwards with 35-40 knots winds later in the day on Monday veering south to south westerly and strengthening to 45-55 knots. Fortunately this rough weather will rapidly move off after the two fronts go over and by midnight on Monday, there will be a 25-knot west to north westerly breeze taking the competitors down to cape Finisterre. The boats should be passing the tip of Spain early on Tuesday morning in much quieter weather wit a ten knot wind veering north-westerly and then northerly.
Tide times
Saturday 8th November: coefficient 38 - 43
High tide: 0h33 – 12h45
Low tide: 6h07 – 18h41
Sunday 9th November: coefficient 49 - 56
High tide: 1h22 – 13h34
Low tide: 7h05 – 19h33
November 07. 2008 at 17:05Norbert Sedlacek: 40 kg of noodles
In 2004, Norbert Sedlacek became the first Austrian to line up at the start of the Vendée Globe. A keel problem forced him to retire at Cape Town (South Africa). The former tram driver,who is now a chandler (Nauticsport) in Vienna, is setting sail aboard the same boat that he has strengthened and improved over the past two years. With one of the smallest budgets, he hopes to complete the voyage at his second attempt and to be able to build a new 60-foot boat for the next Vendée Globe. Here area few extracts from this morning's press conference…
«I have an old boat, a small budget, but the experience of my first attempt. I would like to see IMOCAs taking off in German-speaking countries. If this Vendée Globe is successful for me, I would like to build a new 60-foot boat for the next race.»
«My goal is to enjoy a great adventure, to sail well and return in under 110 days. If I end up somewhere around twentieth, it will be extraordinary. But I don't want to be last.»
«After the 2004 Vendée Globe, I put the boat into the yard for two years in Port Bourgenay. An assistant and my son worked on her, taking her apart to improve and strengthen her. She weighs 800 kg less than four years ago. With a small budget (just 750,000 euros), it is not easy to change everything. But going to and fro from Vendée, we now have a lot of friends here and have been well supported. This human aspect is very important in this project. »
«My supplies are 70% food that has come from Austria. I have got some French meals for festive occasions: birthday, New Year, Cape Horn. And as I really love Chinese noodles, I have 40 kg of them on board.»
November 07. 2008 at 16:32500kg taken aboard without counting the sails
A few interesting facts and figures about what has been taken aboard Roxy by Sam Davies:
Sails: The heaviest element. Taking into account the sails that are ready and those that are stowed.
117 kg of food: Samantha Davies is taking only freeze-dried food. But she loves her cup of tea with a touch of milk and is also taking a lot of chocolate with her, as this is something she enjoys. There are also 7kg of dry biscuits and 8.5kg of bread.
50 kg of clothes
30 kg of spare rope
25 kg: The weight of the hydro generator, which she will use to recharge her batteries
20 kg of tools for any repairs
20 kg of spare equipment: automatic pilot, electrical, hydraulic and electronic equipment
18 litres of drinking water: The Roxy Sailing Team has opted for two desalination units, one fixed and one portable. This option means Sam will only take 18 litres of water (2 packs) instead of the normal 72 litres. She will require 9 litres of drinking water for emergency purposes
14 kg: this is the weight of the cleaning and washing equipment required for the boat and Sam
14 kg is the weight of the engine parts (Belts...)
12 kg of deck fittings and 12kg of other products (adhesive tape, grease…)
10 kg of composites to allow repairs to be carried out
9 kg of spare computer equipment
8 kg of small items required to repair the sails (material and thread…)
Infos précédentes :
- November 07. 2008 at 16:28 : Ellen MacArthur: Maybe four years from now
- November 07. 2008 at 15:39 : The final Live from the Pontoons
- November 07. 2008 at 14:52 : Kito de Pavant: the cow jumped over the boat
- November 07. 2008 at 10:50 : Live from the Pontoons this morning
- November 07. 2008 at 10:09 : Busy on Boss
- November 07. 2008 at 09:02 : The young man and the sea
- November 07. 2008 at 08:50 : The age of the skipper
- November 07. 2008 at 07:24 : A mixed bag
- November 07. 2008 at 05:48 : The sea is round
- November 06. 2008 at 18:09 : Loads
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