Newswire
January 02. 2009 at 07:17Derek due in Hobart on Sunday
"I am slowly closing in on the coast of Tasmania with just over 300 miles to go to reach Hobart. The winds, albeit very strong, have been very helpful in helping me reach land. I am on starboard jibe with the wind from the south west at about 28 knots. It will clock around later today into the north west and decrease further to 15 knots for the week end. As best I can, I am predicting an arrival for Sunday in Hobart. The mast seems to be stable enough on starboard but I will take it easier on port as that is the damaged side. The time seems to be long as I an anxious to get ashore, see the family and start working on going forward. I am watching the race from the sidelines and starting to miss the action already."
Derek Hatfield (Algimouss-Spirit of Canada) in his daily message
January 02. 2009 at 06:53Not enough wind for Sam
"I've got no wind! Or very little! To be honest, with my solid little Roxyboat, I'd rather have too much wind than not enough. Roxy's been caught up by another little ridge of high pressure and we're temporarily stuck! I'm doing all I can to squeeze every quarter of a knot out of her to keep wriggling along. It doesn't seem fair that the leaders have managed to run all the way with the depression and we're stuck wallowing out here! In fact it seems just about the worst for me here I have my own little bubble of no wind! Anyway, it should only be for a few hours and we will get going again! Just this morning I was in 25-30 knots of wind and surfing some of the South Pacific's finest waves! It was amazing, as I was preparing the big gennaker on the bow, and on each surf it was like I was flying, as only the back of Roxy was touching the water and I was several meters up in the air as we whizzed off at 20+ knots! I used to be a "bow chick" on fully crewed boats, so I'm used to the tough jobs up forward whilst speeding along, but the difference now is that there is no back-up behind me, and I am no longer trusting a skilled helmsman not to "wipeout" "chinese gybe" or "stuff it" on each wave, but Chuck - my famous autopilot. For us solo sailors, our autopilot is our best friend, but can quickly become our worst enemy if it decides to go wrong."
Sam Davies (Roxy) in her her daily message
January 01. 2009 at 22:45Aviva in a patch of weed
"The New Year has not bought any change in the weather conditions. The visibility may have improved marginally but the drizzle remains and the grey landscape stays unchanged. The weather has not been conducive to mainsail repairs so that job remains on the list, otherwise we push on to the next ice gate some 650 miles away. It is great having these milestones along the way as they help tick off the miles before the big left hand turn at the end of the Pacific. My New Year was spent with weed issues as I looked aft to see a brown stream from my leeward rudder. Upon investigation I saw a large amount of seaweed streaming from the rudder. It was huge and flat and brown. Anyway after bearing away and pulling at it with a boat hook we eventually disentangled ourselves. Sailing on Aviva for over 50 days now has meant that you know every noise and more importantly if there is a new strange noise. A low pitched vibrating noise had started and was intermittent. I checked the keel box, then the transom for the steering gear and the pilot. The noise was louder and only on the windward side but not directly related to anything. Looking over the back of the boat I saw now some more weed, but a different type streaming off the lower edge of the windward rudder. Slowing the boat down did not allow me access to the weed with my boat hook so I tried a different approach and heeled the boat over so the rudder would clear the water in between waves. After a few waves this proved successful, washing the weed from the rudder tip and stopping my vibration. Mission accomplished now back to sailing again."
Dee Caffari (Aviva) in her daily message
January 01. 2009 at 16:10Surfin' safari
You can see for yourself the fine conditions enjoyed by Sam Davies in the southern seas. In her latest video for the New Year, we see Roxy surfing along in pleasant weather. To watch the video just click here.
January 01. 2009 at 14:35He's got the power
"Out here in the Southern Ocean the lights are burning brighter on board Bahrain Team Pindar, as I have changed the alternator and the regulator on the charging system. Also have gone through every wire on the battery system and found some loose connections that may have caused the problems with the first alternator, which led to it failing after 50 days use. The alternator now installed is the original one, (that we replaced before the start for the brand new one), and it seems to be working OK. At the same time I am going to take apart the broken alternator and see if there is anything fixable in there, and at the least I will have some spare parts for the one currently installed. Never taken an alternator apart before so should be interesting, Happily whilst our global team were working on this project, our natural energy supplies from wind and solar were supplying enough power to keep the boat sailing down the course towards the New Zealand Ice Gate, which I passed through on New Years Eve at 163 30W. I now head for Ice Gate number 9. I had to minimise power consumption by switching off the computer and communications systems and most of the power went towards the autopilot. It is extremely foggy here and the solar panels are still putting in a little charge, but the wind generator is doing the majority of the work. As soon as there is any direct sunlight the solar panels put enough electricity to run the whole boat and more."
Brian Thompson (Bahrain Team Pindar) in his daily message
January 01. 2009 at 10:43Information about the rankings
Some very strange figures can currently be seen in the rankings in the column concerning the distance covered in 24 hours and the distance between the competitors. This is due to the method of calculation based around passing the East Pacific Gate. A competitor like Michel Desjoyeaux, who crossed the gate at its western tip finds himself ranked according to the next reference point, while the others were still ranked in relation to this gate.
January 01. 2009 at 07:15Sam's New Year's Resolutions
My New Year's Resolutions
Sail around the world
Take a photo of Cape Horn
Stop eating the Nutella out of the pot with my fingers
Do not fall asleep with the motor on charging the batteries
Sponge the bilges every day
Brush hair more than once a week
Eat more
But eat less chocolate
Cancel the above resolution as it is impossible
Catch up some miles on the leaders
Be nice to Chuck, the autopilot
Take no risks
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Sam Davies (Roxy) in her daily message
December 31. 2008 at 16:12Dee's mainsail troubles
"I could do with some sunshine though because I need to get out on deck and patch up my mainsail because it is falling apart. It needs to come down but to do that I need it to be sunny. I have been patching it for the whole of the Southern Ocean but the patches keep falling off so I am trying something different. All the layers are separating so I need to do something and hopefully I will be able to do it tomorrow because the forecast is for it to be easier and the winds to be lighter. Arnaud and I are in email contact and it is nice being so close. He told me had a lot of sunshine today whereas it has been really wet but I'm not sure if these lighter winds will allow me to gain a few miles. They are saying it is the worst weather the Vendée has ever had. I've had worst weather than when I've been down here before but I was in a boat which was designed for that sort of weather. It's very different when you are racing in an Open 60. But I am really enjoying this. I can't believe I am half way round the world in 50 days. It is really cool doing it this fast."
Dee Caffari (Aviva) in her daily message
December 31. 2008 at 15:08Smooth sailing for Derek
"The winds are cooperating for now and I have 23 knots from the south west so I'm being pushed along smoothly towards land. The winds dropped to 13 knots over night and I even ventured to put the staysail up for a while which really helped me along. Now the wind is back in the low 20's so I have taken the staysail down as I don't want to take any chances on over-stressing the mast. Unfortunately, the synthetic rigging on the port side that is damaged is taking a beating as it winds itself up and then unwinds itself and flogs against the spreaders and mast in the process. I'm not sure how much will be usable by the time I reach land. I've been cleaning the inside of the boat and getting all the water out. A case of chocolate boost drink exploded in the rollover so I have liquid chocolate everywhere. It's getting warmer now and it is starting to smell. You get the picture.
I've had a lot of sleep in the last day and the sun is shining this morning so my outlook on the whole situation has improved dramatically."
Derek Hatfield (Algimouss-Spirit of Canada) in his daily message
December 31. 2008 at 14:01Loïck spends 4h in Australia
Three weeks after Gitana Eighty’s dismasting in the Indian Ocean, Loïck Peyron arrived in Perth at 0845 this morning (local time) after sailing over 2800 miles under jury rig. After customs formalities, Loïck Peyron was able to join up with Dominique Wavre and Mike Golding. It was an opportunity for the three sailors to share their thoughts and discuss the terms of the repatriation of their respective boats. In mid-January, Gitana Eighty, Temenos and Ecover are due to be loaded onto the same cargo ship bound for Europe. Once reassured, Loïck hopped onto a plane to return to France just four hours after reaching Australia.
Infos précédentes :
- December 31. 2008 at 13:33 : Yann back in Brittany
- December 31. 2008 at 12:47 : Bernard Stamm on Reunion Island
- December 31. 2008 at 10:46 : Easy miles for once
- December 31. 2008 at 06:24 : Sam's brains
- December 30. 2008 at 20:05 : Greatest distance over 24 hours
- December 30. 2008 at 15:56 : For your gifts, think Vendée Globe
- December 30. 2008 at 14:26 : Yesterday once more
- December 30. 2008 at 13:59 : And then there were three...
- December 30. 2008 at 09:26 : Rich past the East Australia Gate
- December 30. 2008 at 07:48 : The Doors and the Gates
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- 26/02/10 at 19:24 - Jean-Yves Gau in Auckland
- 04/02/10 at 11:33 - Virbac-Paprec 3 ready in the ...
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