With some large cracks in the deck of his Maisonneuve, Jean-Baptiste Dejeanty does not yet know whether he will be setting sail again, not simply because of the time it will take to carry out solid repairs, but also because of safety issues.
«The work required is technically not very complicated. The problem is how long the repairs will take. For this type of job, you have to carry out the work in stages waiting for everything to dry and preferably in warm conditions. Easy enough in a boatyard, but more difficult in a port, under tarpaulins. They're going to have to turn the heat up in Port Olona! Today, all I want is to set sail again. I'm disappointed, a bit disgusted, as everything was going so well right up to the incident. The problem is that if I set sail ten days after the others, not only are we in a different race, but it would also mean sailing in the far south completely alone away from the fleet in hostile conditions. That becomes a safety issue. We'll see how things go and we shall probably be taking a decision on Friday.»
As soon as she was back in Les Sables d’Olonne at 1h00 this morning, Maisonneuve moored up at the Vendée Globe pontoon. A support team of seven people set up a work area on the boat under tarpaulins and started to cut away the cracked area in the middle of the monohull to judge the extent of the damage. Throughout the night the team worked with Jean-Baptiste. This morning a composites engineer came to help the team and this afternoon an expert is on the way from Brest.