Newswire
February 26. 2009 at 13:36Steve finishes
And Steve White finishes his Vendee Globe in eighth place at 13:38:55 local time, not quite knowing what to do, no jumping about, just a quiet smile and a wave to everyone. Incredible. He just looks very relaxed.
February 26. 2009 at 13:33Alongside Steve White
Less than half a mile to go to South Nouch and the finish line, the final minutes of Steve's Vendee Globe and Toe in the Water heels to a big gust and is charging to the finish.
February 26. 2009 at 13:22Alongside Steve White
Hand in his pocket White looks almost emabrassed at the welcome, but he looks very relaxed, his hair is long but he seems to have shaved for the occasion, not sure what with but not cooking oil one would hope since his wife Kim warned him that she would not come near him if he finished smelling like a chip. There are few boats which have arrived back from the Vendee Globe in better shape than they left, but his boat looks just shipshape and tidy, he his trimming the gennaker for a few extra knots. He held his elbow a little when waving, but has bent to the task of grinding to furl the gennaker as the wind heads. His kids have just arrived alongside with Kim in a yellow RIB. They have big plastic feet to wave, for the Toe in the Water charity. He has slowed now but the beaches of Les Sables d'Olonne are shimmering just three miles or so away, and Steve has rolled out his staysail now to sail the last mile or so to the line.
February 26. 2009 at 13:13Alongside Steve White
And Steve White will finish at a canter, after the long battle against light winds and headwinds Toe in the Water is under full mainsail and gennaker moving along very nicely toeards the finish less than three miles away, doing eight knots. The media boats are alongside now on this beautiful afternoon, with just a light NE'ly breeze. White is delighted to have company, to see friends and family at last. He looks well, the boat looks well and he is ready to finish in the next 30 minutes.
February 26. 2009 at 11:36Light winds and slow speeds
Earlier this morning Steve White was slowed to under three knots and his ETA is now around 12h30 GMT. He still has 16 miles left to sail and is currently advancing at around 6 knots
February 26. 2009 at 11:00Brian getting used to life ashore
"It is now just over a week after the finish of the Vendée Globe and I am home on the Isle of Wight with my wife Nathalie and children Genevieve and Tristan. Although I spent nearly a hundred days at sea, that time now feels very far away, as I quickly get reacclimatised to ‘normal’ life. I am relishing the freedom to walk, to run, to go outside the 60 foot radius I was limited to. I am loving being with the family, and to see people and talk to them face to face rather than over a scratchy phone line. I am absolutely amazed to go to a shop and see a cornucopia of goodies that I was not able to have for so long; fresh milk - just go and pick it up, vegetables - take what I wish, chocolate - which flavour would I like? I am relishing listening to the radio, picking up a newspaper, going to the cinema, walking on grass, seeing the first daffodils appear. It’s all new and fresh to me.
" Do I miss those last few weeks and days of the race, being stressed and covered in hydraulic oil, coaxing Bahrain Team Pindar to the finish line to keep 5th place? Not really.
" Do I miss the Southern Ocean, the warm tradewinds, the purity of the sea? Yes, I have been immensely privileged to see it once again, to live in that world for so long, to really understand we do live on a blue planet, wrapped by the sea. I am sure I will be back, hopefully in another Vendée, perhaps on another speed record attempt, and then one day cruising and showing the kids this wonderful world that we are entrusted with. I will never forget the finish of course, it was the most amazing experience, the most perfect morning to bring the circle to a close."
" There was a flotilla of boats at the finish that sped out at dawn from Les Sables to meet me like those helicopters in Apocalypse Now. As I crossed the finish line I sat on the bowsprit and enjoyed the feeling of elation and relief. Not till the last mile was I really sure I was going to make it, as just that night my keel pin had broken in two and I was sailing with just a free swinging keel, so was always concerned about Dee catching up during that final night. But the last mile I truly enjoyed, with all family, friends and supporters in the boats alongside enjoying the moment too. "
" Coming up the channel in Les Sables it was just astonishing to see so many people lining the walls to welcome me back, total strangers who just embraced the adventure of the race and wanted to be part of it. I had not really slept in two days but the energy of the crowds kept me going all that day, and those memories will certainly never fade. Thanks to everyone who wrote to me during the race and those who logged on to our site and had their own Vendée experience."
Brian Thompson (Bahrain Team Pindar)
February 26. 2009 at 09:19Slow in the Water
Les Sables d'Olonne is glassy calm this morning, with just a few ripples out on the water. At 0800hrs GMT this morning Steve White still had over 20 miles to sail against what wind there is. He was making just over seven knots but it is does not seem like he will break the line before 1100hrs (midday local) and then will have a wait of three hours to get in the canal. But it is another lovely sunny day, with mild Spring-like temperatures and so the wait continues.....
February 26. 2009 at 08:52Steve slowed this morning
Steve White's progress towards the finish was slowed down this morning. The skipper of Toe in the Water is having to tack in fading winds blowing at just 5 knots. At 07h30 GMT, he was still 23 miles from the finish. This means he is likely to reach the finish line at around noon today
February 26. 2009 at 07:21Slow finish for Steve
At 0330hrs GMT this morning Steve White still had 37 miles to go to the finish line to complete his eighth place in the Vendee Globe. Winds are very light this morning and Steve has slowed to just 3 knots since and so he is not expected on the finish line before 0830hrs GMT (0930hrs local time) to 0930 hrs GMT (1030hrs local time).
February 26. 2009 at 07:17Happy Birthday from One Adventurer to Another
Rich Wilson, USA (Great American III):
"1823 utc 32/26 n 41/47 w 5.1 kts @319T solent and full main, broad reaching, more stable in light winds than big sail i think. difficult 24 hours. tried to get across high pressure ridge last night. as one wraps around where you think the end of it might be, the wind will supposedly
follow you. as we weren't making much progress, at 1-2 knots, thought best to try to cross perpendicularly, to make the crossing shorter. as ridge was ne/sw, we headed nw. 4 times the wind changed direction to suggest it was coming in from s or sw, so gybed 4 times, and then it did, but then it didn't, so gybed back, 8 gybes in all last night, all at 2-5 knots, very frustrating. would try to sleep in between, do the gybe, turn off the lights on the instruments so i couldn't see them, and sleep, since i hadn't been in the bunk really for weeks. worked ok, got some good naps, but also awoke twice to pilot off, and mainsail aback and solent aback when one of
these wind shifts would come in. all a tease. ended up this morning simply heading higher on starboard up into ridge, it seemed as though we actually were across almost, and then late in the afternoon gybed back nw again because we were getting lifted right back up into the zero wind zone. and as we get to nw, should get headed up toward north. then the next huge high
comes in with ne winds. and the grib file shows that the long range shows a giant depression in bay of biscay when we get out of the high finally. we'll see how to approach that."
" The best thing about today is that it is my mother's birthday - Happy Birthday Mom! My mother was the original adventurer in our family, going to Alaska to work at a radio station in Fairbanks in 1938.This was 20 years before the Alaskan Territory became a state. Her show was called "Tundra Topics"!. When people nowadays go to Alaska as a great frontier, I wonder what it must have been like for a single woman to go there 70 years ago. And she thinks nothing of it! What an inspiration she is. We have a photo of her with a friend swimming in a lake there, with a distant shore of trees a mile or two behind, and on closer inspection, you see that the white in between the two swimmers and the shore in the distance, is ice! There she was, my mom swimming in an ice-filled Alaskan lake! She looks as though she is working on her stroke! Elle est incroyable! Happy Birthday Mom! I love you very much and wish I was there with you today."
Infos précédentes :
- February 26. 2009 at 07:11 : Dee, at home in the UK
- February 25. 2009 at 10:09 : Dee returning home
- February 25. 2009 at 09:40 : Latest ETAs
- February 24. 2009 at 20:53 : Frustration does not come close
- February 24. 2009 at 09:10 : Latest ETAs
- February 24. 2009 at 07:55 : Tiring work for Rich
- February 23. 2009 at 19:45 : Steve's tour of the islands
- February 23. 2009 at 18:07 : Roxy heading to Lorient
- February 23. 2009 at 10:58 : Latest ETAs
- February 22. 2009 at 21:30 : More adverse conditions for Rich
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