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Day 79 - Super
Nature
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Hugo Boss duo hope to leave Monday recharged and repaired after
Falklands stop
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Forum
Maritim Catala pass Cape Horn
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Ballast break controlled by Virbac-Paprec 3 pair
There is
a certain, almost automatic solidarity between islander and seafarers, both
having the pace and rhythm of their lives dictated by the ocean. Often they
share the same fatalist outlook underpinned by the knowledge that neither
will beat the power of nature.
In the
Falklands it is the resolute, hardy islanders who have taken Andy Meiklejohn
and Wouter Verbraak into their houses and made them feel completely at home
while the Barcelona World Race co-skippers finish the sail and hardware
repairs to Hugo Boss which they hope will let them get back on to the race
track tomorrow (Monday) morning.
But up
at the front of the fleet, where the peloton trio contemplate their slow
passage to the Doldrums, and the two leaders now into the Northern
Hemisphere, perhaps the co-skippers will be recalling that simple maxim as
the tensions inevitably rise in these very close races over the coming weeks
to the finish.
Push as
hard as they can and will, but it will be down to the winds to decide who
profits most and who does not.
Verbraak
and Meiklejohn are determined to be back in the fray as soon as possible,
ready to cut off the advances of Forum Catala Maritim, which passed Cape
Horn this morning at 0715hrs.
“ We
still have a race on, we still have a boat which we put a long way behind
us, and it is now back in the picture, so there is still a lot to play for
and we want to make up miles on the guys in front.”
warned Meiklejohn this
morning.
“
We are feeling good, we are largely over the
fact we have had to stop, that is a real shame for us, for Alex Thomson
Racing and for Hugo Boss that we have had to stop, but we all have to go
forwards form here, to take the positives out of it. We will get the repairs
done and move on at 100% or as close to it as possible and so we are looking
at having a great leg back up the Atlantic and showing what the boat can
really do.”
“ It
has been fantastic, the locals have been so nice, the first couple of nights
we were billeted with a local woman who cooked us some great meals and it
was kind of like being at home. It’s like that. A lot of people have arrived
here on boats for a short stop and 30 years later are still here . So we
rather would stay here any longer, but it is a lovely place.”
For
Gerard Marin this morning was a special landmark in the young Catalan
sailor’s career when he passed Cape Horn. For a decade he was a leading
light in the Europe singlehanded dinghy, vice world champion in 2002, third
in the European championships in 2007 and fifth in 2002.
“Who
would have told be ten years ago I would be here now? We were training in
the Olympic port in Barcelona then, now here I am on the other side of the
world at Cape Horn. It is so very different that dinghies, in dinghies you
can go to the limits and can be very aggressive all the time, here in an
IMOCA Open 60, you cannot go beyond the limits and the race is so long so
you cannot push the boat too hard. You think that you can push so hard then
realize that, no, you have to look after the boat. Everything can change in
an instant. This racing makes you reflect on your reasons for it even more,
it is a race of passion and you have to think a lot.”
For
Marin, one of Spain’s rising ocean racing stars, his horizons have broadened
considerably since making two successful Mini Transats. Now he has completed
the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans and admits he is motivated by race
up the Atlantic perhaps with Hugo Boss.
For his
first passage of Cape Horn, the 29 year old IMOCA Open 60 rookie, had to be
content with a night passage, albeit lit by a full moon.
For
co-skipper Ludovic Aglaor, also on his first major IMOCA Open 60 passage,
this was his third rounding of the Horn once on the Jules Verne Record and
once in the opposite direction on Gitana 13 from New York to San Francisco.
And as the progression goes it was the fifth passage of the Horn for the
evergreen former Kingfisher, once on delivery from New Zealand with Ellen
MacArthur, once in her 2000-1 Vendée Globe, with Nick Moloney in 2004-5 and
then in the first Barcelona World Race with Albert Bargues and Servan
Escoffier.
Meantime
Jean-Pierre Dick, leading now in the trade winds by 144 miles from MAPFRE
revealed today that they had a close shave a day and a half ago:
“All is well. We have fifteen knots of SE’ly wind. We are going well, quite
fast. It is pleasant, especially after what happened the other day. A day
and a half ago we had a squall with 35 knots of wind. We broke the front
ballast and it took some hours to repair, finally finishing a few hours ago.
Now we have ideal conditions. And we are satisfied with what we see ahead.”
Standings at 1400hrs
Sunday 20th March 20, 2011
1
VIRBAC-PAPREC 3
at 2791,4 miles from the finish
2
MAPFRE at 144,5
miles from the leader
3
RENAULT Z.E at
860,1 miles
4
ESTRELLA DAMM
Sailing Team at 1045,8 miles
5
NEUTROGENA at
1051,9 miles
6
GAES CENTROS
AUDITIVOS at 2091,7 miles
7
HUGO BOSS at 3676,1
miles
8
FORUM MARITIM
CATALA at 4031,3 miles
9
WE ARE WATER at
5852,2 miles
10
CENTRAL LECHERA ASTURIANA at 8758,9 miles
RTD
FONCIA
RTD
PRESIDENT
RTD
GROUPE BEL
RTD
MIRABAUD
Andy Meiklejohn (NZL)
Hugo Boss:
“The repairs are going well, the guys
from Doyle are here, they have the tools and the gear and they doing a great
job, working last night until about 0100hrs and then this morning they are
going again at 0700hrs, so we are hoping to have it finished pretty soon and
be back on track.
The
boats are difficult to sail and are very weight conscious and so things are
built close to the edge and there has been a few small failures because of
this, in hindsight maybe we could have done something about, but everybody
is always pushing for those last few grams, so a small repair to everything
but it all adds up in the big picture.
There are few key sails, we had the mainsail problem, without a main you
can’t go far, so no mainsail no go. There are a few other little problems
around the place, we cant continue without a mainsail.
The
guys from Doyle’s have been fantastic in their support and their problem
solving. It is unfortunate we are where we are just now.
Ross
our shore manager got on the RAF flight at the very last minute, these guys
flew from New Zealand to Chile and then Chile to the Falklands, but it looks
like they might be spending a little more time here than they bargained for
afterwards!
We
have used the biggest building on the island which is the local defence
force building which they have given us for the next week, we won’t need all
that time, but it is fantastic we can spread the mainsail and the Code Zero
out and could not really ask for anything more.
We
are feeling good, we are largely over the fact we have had to stop, that is
a real shame for us, for Alex Thomson Racing and for Hugo Boss that we have
had to stop, but we all have to go forwards form here, to take the positives
out of it. We will get the repairs done and move on at 100% or as close to
it as possible and so we are looking at having a great leg back up the
Atlantic and showing what the boat can really do.
It
has been fantastic, the locals have been so nice, the first couple of nights
we were billeted with a local woman who cooked us some great meals and it
was kind of like being at home. It’s like that. A lot of people have arrived
here on boats for a short stop and 30 years later are still here . So we
rather would stay here any longer, but it is a lovely place.
We
are working towards Monday morning. You have to have a deadline for these
things so they don’t drag on so we are pushing for tomorrow morning
sometime. How realistic that is we will make that call later on this
afternoon.
We
still have a race on, we still have a boat which we put a long way behind
us, and it is now back in the picture, so there is still a lot to play for
and we want to make up miles on the guys in front.
We
talk a lot about how physically hard it is, we talk about things outside of
the boat, family friends, old war stories, the past and future, we talk
about whatever pops up.
Wouter has done an amazing job. I keep telling myself this all the time. He
jumped on the boat for ten days and here we are 80 days later. We are both
stubborn, very determined characters. But we have a good way of working
through our problem solving and we have a common history, there are a lot
positives and we would not have got far with all those positives.”
Gerard
Marin (ESP) Forum Maritim Catala: The
passage of Cape Horn has been too long and very tiring, we thought we would
arrive earlier but the last bit was very complicated, with a lot of
manoeuvres, a lot of reef in reef out, sails up and down and I thought so I
am very tired. Now everything is OK and I am relaxed and happy, I am very
content to have rounded the three great Capes, it has been a dream of mine.
It
was not how I expected, I hoped we would pass in daylight but we had a full
moon, but we saw the Cape quite well. We were very tired but we had a little
cava, a small cup.
In
the Pacific we did not push the boat too much and so we have not had many
failures, sometimes we have the feeling we could push harder, but a failure
could be terrible, so we have been staying with a conservative strategy in
this sense and we are very satisfied.
Who
would have told be ten years ago I would be here now? We were training in
the Olympic port in Barcelona then, now here I am on the other side of the
world at Cape Horn.
It
is so very different that dinghies, in dinghies you can go to the limits and
can be very aggressive all the time, here in an IMOCA Open 60, you cannot go
beyond the limits and the race is so long so you cannot push the boat too
hard. You think that you can push so hard then realize that, no, you have to
look after the boat. Everything can change in an instant. This racing makes
you reflect on your reasons for it even more, it is a race of passion and
you have to think a lot. This could be very hard and very difficult. To race
alone you would need to be more conservative and take more time to do
things. It is a very difficult way to sail like this on your own, doing the
manouvres on your own, and I really can see that now.
To a
question from a young sailor from YC Palamos: I realize now what it really
is to race around the three great Capes. In fact Cape Creus is a challenge
in itself, especially in 60 knots, that is very hard also! But this is very
hard too, Cape Horn is very hard too.
The
forecast for the next 24 hours suggests strong downwind conditions. Hugo
Boss is a fast boat in strong winds and up wind, but we will be close and
see what happens, to see if we can be more than 100 miles closer to them.
That would make for a greater motivation for us
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