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Day 91 Sting in
the Tail? …Check!
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Gibraltar deals a 40 knot sting in
the tail after 91 days at sea for
Virbac-Paprec 3
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MAPFRE link live to Princess Sofia
Regatta in Palma
Just as it did in 2008, the at
times malicious Straits of Gibraltar did not offer an easy passage
to Jean-Pierre Dick and Loick Peyron
as they guided Virbac-Paprec 3 back into
the Mediterranean early this morning, returning into the teeth of 40
knots of Levant easterly wind, funnelling through the passage.
It may be the final hurdle for
the French duo to negotiate, but it was one which demanded absolute
respect and prudence, Loïck Peyron reported this
morning, after an exhausting night. Their mode is that of the
express delivery of a tired boat and wearied crew and they were
taking no risks as the Straits dealt them one final gale and the
busy shipping lanes required extra vigilance, taking on some of the
most demanding challenges through 91 days of racing:
“ The passage of Gibraltar
was hard,”said Peyron, “ We get some sleep
now to recover from the night. It was some of the worst times with
the boat since we left. We had a lot of wind, 40 knots with a short
sea which could break things. And it is still the same in the
Alboran. What a welcome to the Mediterranean which sometimes has the
worst sea conditions. It is lovely for swimming but not for sailing
when you have the wind on the nose. And that has been the case for
15 days. That has been a little too long. We are upwind, upwind,
upwind. And at the moment we are slamming a lot still. And as I
speak I am checking out the small window for ships to make sure we
don’t hit one or two because we are right in the middle of the
shipping lanes. It is slamming and it hurts the boat, and when it
hurts the boat, it hurts us. It is to finish suffering. It is
difficult for the boat, it suffered a lot, as much now as it has at
any point in the last three months. Upwind is not very good for the
structure of the boat, but in fact it is difficult to relieve it.”
Their passage of the Alboran sea
was offering little relief, but by Saturday afternoon off Almeria
and the Cabo de Gata point, the French duo should see their upwind
conditions start to ease. And the final stretch from the Balearics’
latitude could slow for the final 175 miles. Best estimates formed
from the current weather models have Dick and
Peyron breaking the finish line Monday morning.
For the pursuing duo there is
the reality of lighter winds forecast for their passage of
Gibraltar, but for Iker Martinez and Xabi
Fernandez on MAPFRE missing out
on Spain’s premier Olympic regatta, Palma’s annual Princess Sofia
Regatta, the first ISAF World Cup event of the European season, did
not stop the double Olympic medallists from joining their
compatriots from the Spanish Olympic team, linked by
Visio-Conference with the Yacht Club of Arenal.
“There is no excuses for
underperforming for you, we will be watching the weather and
watching on the internet.”Joked Xabi Fernandez.
Asked about whether their future
plans would include the 2012 Olympics, he said:
“You will all know soon
enough. In a short time we will talk about our plans for the
Olympics, we will talk about them in Barcelona. And we will tell you
then.”
Quotes:
Loïck Peyron,
Virbac-Paprec 3:” The passage of Gibraltar was hard, We
get some sleep now to recover from the night. It was some of the
worst times with the boat since we left. We had a lot of wind, 40
knots with a short sea which could break things. And it is still the
same in the Alboran. What a welcome to the Mediterranean, sometimes
the worst sea conditions. It is lovely for swimming but not for
sailing when you have the wind on the nose. It has been the case for
15 days. That has been a little too long. We are upwind, upwind,
upwind. And at the moment we are slamming a lot still. And as I
speak I am checking out the small window for ships to make sure we
don’t hit one or two because we are right in the middle of the
shipping lanes. It is slamming and it hurts the boat, and when it
hurts the boat, it hurts us. It is to finish suffering. It is
difficult for the boat, it suffered a lot, as much now as it has at
any point in the last three months. Upwind is not very good for the
structure of the boat, but in fact it is difficult to relieve it. If
we slow down it is not doing any good, when we slow down it is not
pressed enough and the boat slams even more. So it is difficult to
get the right balance, it is a compromise between the angulation of
the keel, the ballast, and to keep up some speed. We are in fast
delivery mode, which is not compromising. The best drivers are those
who brake skillfully, not those who accelerate fast.
Our first technical
assessment is good. What was obvious or needed to be changed
required us to make two stops: in Brazil for our main traveler track
torn off, and the second in Wellington for the mainsail batten cars.
Since then there is no problem at all until two days ago when the
keel moved but it turned out to be a small electronic problem with
the terminal box which had worked loose a bit and meant some poor
connections everywhere.
We passed close to the
Moroccan coast for a change of scene, but more especially to protect
us from the waves. Often it was not enough because we were offshore
quickly.
The start of the night was
very cool, we shaved Cape Espartel. The NW corner of Morocco I know
well. My dad was born in Tangier. There are many memories of our
childhood there. We used to walk out to this Cape when we were
small. So it was a little like a return to my roots in a way. We
used to walk out to see the sea and here I am now on that ocean. We
passed within a few metres in the middle of the night, it was very
nice.
We have talked a lot about
things. I am a tweaker and a fiddler, always adjusting. To make
progress with a boat which is born well is exciting, but the
Virbac-Paprec team will do a good job with this. We noted a few
small things, not pages of this. There are some things which we
can’t rely on and would have concerns. The marks on a new boat which
has made a round the world passage tell their own tales, more
interesting than a new boat. A boat which has lived a bit speaks
volumes. But you have to analyse the marks and traces.
To sail as a duo over this
distance is interesting. Sometimes it feels a little long, as a duo
rather than solo. The escape is often sleep, and you sleep so much
better as a duo than solo.
I know more than others what
its like to live this close over three months. Damian Foxall could
tell you as much. We are two to have lived so closely with our
national hero JP. He is an astonishing guy.
Damian Foxall (IRL):
Winner with Jean-Pierre Dick of the first Barcelona World
Race:“I have been through the Straits of Gibraltar several times
but never with as much wind as with Jean-Pierre Dick when during the
last edition of the Barcelona World Race. After 88 days at sea, the
hardest thing was for the boat, not for us. With some technical
problems like breaking our stay in the South Atlantic, we really
looked after our material a lot. The last time it was not the
weather which we would have wanted. The boat held out and we passed
the Mediterranean without problems. Hugo Boss had their trysail
ripped off. The passage of Gibraltar is always a time of stress.”
Xabi Fernandez (ESP)
MAPFRE: “ We are sailing with 12-15kts from the ESE and
finally we are done with the big waves and we are making 12 knots of
speed, the waves have been with us all of the Moroccan coast and the
Canaries and it was a worry for us, because of all the slamming
which is not good for the boat. But now we are a bit more relaxed.
Tomorrow we should get to Gibraltar and perhaps in Barcelona on the
fifth. But of course that depends on the forecast and what happens
in the Med. Let's see if we get some good breeze in the Med, because
we could also end up stuck. It looks like early on, just after
Gibraltar we may find ourselves with very little breeze, but it
looks like after that we'll get some good breeze coming in from
behind and we could get there on the fourth in the afternoon or on
the fifth in the morning. We'll have to see, because as everyone
knows, these things can get tricky, but we hope to at get there at
least by the fifth".
“ We are very excited and
look forward to getting home. We are tired and it has been a long
time out here.”
“ In a short time we will
talk about our plans for the Olympics, we will talk about them in
Barcelona. And we will tell you then.”
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