Newswire
November 18. 2008 at 13:02A question of instinct
Contacted by his shore team this morning, Jean-Pierre Dick confirmed the weather in the Doldrums is particularly difficult to predict at the moment.
«About 400 miles from here, I'll be entering the Doldrums. The weather info in the various models does not concur. We have to take advantage of any opportunities that may appear. I tend to be working by instinct in addition to what I see in the computer data."
November 18. 2008 at 11:50Light winds for Sam
"I went past the island of Santo Antao, the westernmost island of the Cape Verdes, last night. I was careful to leave 60 miles between me and the island to avoid any wind shadow... and I had checked on the satellite images that there was no nasty wind shadow..... BUT, between me checking, and me arriving there, something changed, and consequently I plonked myself in a bit of a patch of light wind. So, to take my mind off the fact that I had finally let Dominique overtake me, I got out my ipod and listened to some music out in the cockpit, where I could keep an eye on the sail trim at the same time, as in the light and shifty winds it is important to trim to perfection, and I did NOT want to give away any more miles than necessary! Although I am a bit frustrated, the consolation is that (except Dominique) I think the option to pass West of the islands will gain some miles on the others."
Sam Davies (Roxy)
November 18. 2008 at 09:58Back to porridge this morning
"A good night for me – better speed and better direction. Hopefully I will have taken a few miles off the guys directly in front of me. It's amazing to watch Mich sprinting down the west at such pace. Incredible. Anyway, breakfast time once again. I think I will have some porridge today, a bit more traditional than the curry I had yesterday!"
Jonny Malbon (Artemis II)
November 18. 2008 at 07:21Brian Thompson through the middle of the islands
Brian Thompson (Pindar) has just passed the Cape Verde Islands and last night explained his decision to cut through the middle.
"I was not expecting to take this route through the islands, but the weather reports from both the European and US models were showing very light winds to the west of the archipelago for when I got there. Going west would be the route that I would normally want to take. The two weather models are wildly divergent on what will happen after the islands. The US model shows 25 knots of wind and the European one 5 knots! Something in between would be fine by me. The doldrums still look messy, and I am sure all the skippers are looking at the satellite pictures, quickscat data and gribs, and still looking at their tea leaves as well."
November 18. 2008 at 06:14Last night's messages
"Hi there, a dark sleepless night. Lots of sail changes in the pleasant warmth of the night. Sailed upwind of Boavista, but couldn't see anything."
Arnaud Boissières (Akena Vérandas)
"The half moon is shining and the stars are out. The spinnaker and mainsail are looking very white in the moonlight. Calm seas given the wind. 20-24 knots of wind and a boat speed of 14-16 knots. The boat is sailing well and I'm doing fine. See you tomorrow..." Rich Wilson (Great American III)
November 17. 2008 at 20:04Discovering the world
Currently sailing at the latitude of Mauritania, Steve White is in 17th place this evening, 450 miles from the new leader Jean Le Cam.
"It's like an oven here today, we have complete unbroken cloud cover and it is very hot and humid indeed, although I suspect it will get more so as we are a way off the equator at the moment. I am further south than I have ever been I think, having just passed the latitude of the Bahamas. That's the thing with sailing, point the boat in one direction for a few days, and you finish up in a completely different world - if I had some good (very good) binoculars I could see Cuba to my right, and lions and such like to my left, which is incredible if you think about it, we only left home a week ago. Somehow I don't expect this when I go sailing, it's not like flying where it is never a surprise to disembark in a foreign and different country; but when you step ashore in a new country from a boat, you feel so much more like you've earned the right to be there."
"A friend of mine bought me a Breton Fisherman's prayer on a clay tile - not very good for weight, but I've stuck it up anyway! It is below the boat's own lucky charm which is a bolt from the Cutty Sark, which was a present to the boat when Josh had it. It was to bring good luck for getting around Cape Horn, as this bolt has apparently been around there a few times successfully when it was a part of the ship! "
"I found the vegetable oil to go on the Tortellini I had for lunch - it is a four litre bottle! Besides making it difficult to add a few drops (for "drops" read "large uncontrolled splashes"!), if it bursts I could have a major clean up operation on my hands. Still, It's good for upping my calorie intake - when I get back I am going to join one of those on-line dieting clubs and recommend a few of my own recipes...."
Steve White (Toe in the Water)
November 17. 2008 at 19:11A busy day for Sam
"Today has been a busy day. In the early hours, the wind came aft enough to need the spinnaker. I waited to check it wasn't a momentary shift, and then went to change from gennaker to spinnaker. Unfortunately, the wind decided to play games today. After a couple of hours great spinnaker running, the wind increased.... turned.... that's not the end! In total, here are the sail combinations used today: (in the order of changes)
Gennaker + full main
Spinnaker + full main
Spinnaker + 1 reef
Solent + 1 reef
Solent + full main
Gennaker + full main
and the day is not yet over! I have a feeling another couple of changes yet, especially as the Cape Verdes will probably change the wind all over the place. So,as you can imagine, I am quite tired..." Sam Davies (Roxy)
November 17. 2008 at 18:42Wavre pleased with his westerly option
The first to return and start again from Les Sables d’Olonne after a stopover of 6 hours, Dominique Wavre (Temenos), in 14th place, 303 miles from the leader, spoke to his shore team this afternoon.
"It’s grey weather; the light is very white. I have between 15 and 20 knots of wind and, for the time being the seas aren’t really big and I have all the sail aloft. The automatic pilot is doing a good job but I go and help it at the helm from time to time because there are few waves so the boat is having some difficulty surfing. I’ve had more wind since midnight, and as the pilot was helming well that enabled me to get a little sleep. I am happy with my W’ly option, even though it cost me some miles yesterday. I was caught by a zone of high pressure and I lost ground but I tried to make up as much as possible of that today. I have a good angle in relation to the wind, which is allowing me to make some fairly good averages. It was a position based on gains in the long term. Statistically it’s the ideal trajectory but from time to time there are zones of high pressure dotted about the course, which can spoil even the best calculations. The different American and French models don’t concur, but on average neither of them give too much wind so it’s clearly not a lively tradewind. It is fairly spread out at the moment. I’m targeting a little gateway that I spotted, which may work on Thursday or Friday, but we’re still a long way off for the forecast to be reliable. Down below it is sticky and heavy so it’s more pleasant to be at the helm.”
November 17. 2008 at 18:05A tough day for Jérémie Beyou
"It was a tough day today. In fact, it's been tough since yesterday!
Yesterday there were choices to make in terms of the trajectory based on the weather models, which didn't agree with each other, and depending on the islands and positions of our fellow competitors. My aim was to sail as quickly as possible, to make it through a bolt hole to the north of the islands. I thought I'd found a good ploy...and then, in the ranking an hour later and in the next lot of weather charts, I saw that my friends out to the west were better off.
Then, there was an urgent repair job to do down in the bilges at 40°C, so this evening Beyou is furious and sweaty. Life isn't that easy around here. Lots of tacks to get back in the right place, looking after the speed and then the wretched Doldrums don't want to tell us what they are up to either." Jérémie Beyou (Delta Dore)
November 17. 2008 at 15:23First one in, first one out
"It's clear that the Doldrums can sometimes widen the gap, but the fleet will be grouped together, so I don't think it is likely that we'll see any major upsets. The positions will simply be squashed up. The first one in will be the first one out, as there's very little difference in longitude. In terms of latitude however, Jean is 200 miles to the east, way over yonder. The others are 70 or 80 miles away. All of the routes will tend to converge." Vincent Riou (PRB) on today's radio session.
Infos précédentes :
- November 17. 2008 at 15:13 : Derek Hatfield thinking of his supporters
- November 17. 2008 at 14:08 : Nothing is impossible
- November 17. 2008 at 13:13 : This morning's 11h rankings
- November 17. 2008 at 11:07 : Jean-Pierre spots Vincent Riou
- November 17. 2008 at 09:53 : Flying fish attack
- November 17. 2008 at 07:35 : Norbert at the helm
- November 17. 2008 at 06:57 : Because it's worth it
- November 17. 2008 at 06:46 : Mich Desj' in his slippers
- November 17. 2008 at 06:18 : Late night curry for Jonny
- November 17. 2008 at 05:35 : Arnaud Boissières getting ready for the Cape Verde Islands
Flash infos
- 18/11/09 at 11:47 - News of Jean-Pierre Dick
- 02/11/09 at 12:31 - Dee Caffari and Brian Thompson ...
- 08/10/09 at 18:53 - Vincent Riou suffers a minor ...
- 19/09/09 at 19:08 - Training off Brittany
- 29/08/09 at 15:04 - BT in for a minor refit in Port-la-Forêt ...
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