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Barcelona World Race - Day 85

by Barcelona World Race media 25 Mar 2011 19:26 GMT

Haunting the ghosts?

Who is haunting who, or is it who is hunting who? When second placed MAPFRE went into ghost mode early this morning it meant that, for the second time in this Barcelona World Race, the top two boats pressed the ‘invisible’ button in close succession.

Speaking on this morning’s Visio-conference live with Race HQ in Barcelona, Spain’s Xabi Fernandez reaffirmed that one of the key reasons for utilising the ‘Ghost’ mode again is because their weather options have opened up more, giving the Spanish Olympic medallists an opportunity to develop any new strategy unseen by the long time race leader Virbac-Paprec 3.

Jean-Pierre Dick and Loïck Peyron are due to re-appear this evening again, returning from their self imposed exile from the public tracking system.

When the two boats were both last ‘live’ Virbac-Paprec 3 lead by 250 miles, MAPFRE sailing east of the track of the leading boat.

As the duo play with the extending tentacles of the Azores anticyclone which is effectively barring the direct route to the Straits of Gibraltar, it may be that MAPFRE are simply calling the bluff of the French duo Jean-Pierre Dick and Loïck Peyron, or perhaps they have chosen to head away from the lighter winds closer to the centre of the high and invested east to try and fine more wind pressure and a better angle closer to the Moroccan coast?

Fernandez reported this morning: “Yesterday we saw that the weather was getting a bit more complicated between here and Gibraltar and Virbac-Paprec 3 have more complex winds, so we decided to play a bit with this since the weather forecasts change each day. And we thought it makes sense to play this card before Gibraltar. Yes, the main alternatives are to go north or east, but a few days ago the option looked to be going north was the only option. So Virbac-Paprec 3 and us, we have chosen to do this because the options are all a bit more open now.”

With the two leading boats engaged in their supposed cloak and dagger moves for their approach to the Canary Islands, Virbac-Paprec 3’s track through or past the archipelago should be immediately apparent this evening.

Meantime, phantom or not, ghost mode did not stop Fernandez from appearing on the Visio-Conference, though the view of the Spanish spectre was strictly ‘indoors only’, as a little ‘technical difficulty’ prevented him from letting the watching world see what the weather and sea conditions were, but more importantly what tack they were sailing on on MAPFRE.

Fernandez was clearly showing some effect of their diet regime, cut to two meals a day now. He confirmed that they have set aside rations until the 5th or 6th April.

Broken boom

We Are Water duo Jaume Mumbru and Cali Sanmarti are looking for the first suitable, practical option to put their composite repair skills to the test after their boom was snapped in two by the force of a big, breaking wave last night, some 650 miles to the west of Cape Horn. The duo, who seem to have had more than their fair share of the race’s big storms, were making good progress towards the Cape which they should reach late Sunday, sailing only under staysail or jib.

“We took the main down very early and for the two days prior to the storm we were preparing, taking everything off the deck which we thought could break. It is difficult to explain how chaotic the sea was, the winds and the cold. This is another cruel thing for us, we felt confident and happy because we felt like we had done a good job preparing the boat. The boom was perfect and secured so all we can think is that it was pushed sideways bt the force of a wave. We can only think a wave hit it. It has done a lot of miles, so we are feeling a bit unlucky.”

Into the North

Emerging into the Northern Hemisphere this morning, there is no let up in the tussle between Neutrogena in fifth and Estrella Damm in fourth. Only 22 miles separates this pair after a productive night of Doldrums work by the American-German duo Ryan Breymaier and Boris Herrmann who have kept themselves firmly in contention at this key stage of the race. And Estrella Damm still only have 142 miles of deficit to Renault Z.E Sailing Team. Without doubt this is setting up as a second half of the Atlantic battle which will be every bit as engaging as it has been since Cape Horn. The two red boats were due to pick up speed later today as they too breathe the oxygen of the strengthening NE’ly trades

Renault Z.E Sailing Team’sToño Piris reported today:
“We crossed to the North yesterday at 13.44 hrs and we gave our offering to Neptune: the alcohol free beer (cold, cold, cold –My God, 40º degrees on deck) some Jamón Serrano and the last small piece of chocolate we got.”
“As soon as we get into the North Hemisphere we had enjoyed some nice puffs. Nice gusts that heeled the boat…!Great”.. A nice welcome into the North!”

Preparing in Wellington

And good progress to report for the Central Lechera Asturiana duo Juan Merediz and Fran Palacio who, three weeks after they arrived with a broken rig, have managed to step their repaired mast in Wellington. The duo intend to make two trial sails to fine tune their rigging before making their final decision.

Skipper Quotes:

Jaume Mumbru (ESP) We Are Water:
“Now the worst of the storm is over and so we are are trying to sleep a bit and build our strength and try to get closer to land which will be complicated. We broke the boom during the storm. We were following it closely with the weather forecasts and it followed the pattern. The pressure was very low, wind from the bow and we sailed only with the storm jib.
We took the main down very early and for the two days prior to the storm we were preparing, taking everything off the deck which we thought could break.
It is difficult to explain how chaotic the sea was, the winds and the cold.
This is another cruel thing for us, we felt confident and happy because we felt like we had done a good job preparing the boat.
The boom was perfect and secured so all we can think is that it was pushed sideways bt the force of a wave. We can only think a wave hit it. It has done a lot of miles, so we are feeling a bit unlucky.
The boat was sailing well under storm jib only, we had two ballast tanks full in the back to stabilize the boat. We had some snow showers. Now the wind has started to drop, we have about 35kts, and the sea is a bit better too. It seems the worst of the storm is behind us. We are optimistic that we will be able to repair it, at first glance it does not look like it’s impossible, but we are 400 miles from land and 500 miles from Cape Horn. We carry on with a storm jib, or staysail.

Xabi Fernandez (ESP) MAPFRE:
“MAPFRE in ghost mode? It is all going well. Yesterday we saw that the weather was getting a bit more complicated between here and Gibraltar and Virbac-Paprec 3 have more complex winds, so we decided to play a bit with this since the weather forecasts change each day. And we thought it makes sense to play this card before Gibraltar. Yes, the main alternatives are to go north or east, but a few days ago the option looked to be going north was the only option. So Virbac-Paprec 3 and us, we have chosen to do this because the options are a bit more open now.
We can’t change to show you the outside cameras because it upsets the GPS (!).
Fortunately we realized early on that we were going to be low on food, so we starting saving up and rationed what we had, so I think we will be OK until the 5th or 6th.
The passage to the Canary Islands is changing all the time, so we don’t know where we go through the islands. We will decide later on, because it’s complicated.
We have had no health problems at all, not even opened the medical kit once, some fungal stuff here and there, and took a couple of asprins, but nothing we have ever worried about.

Wouter Verbraak (NED), Andy Meiklejohn (NZL) Hugo Boss:
“This is our last bag of porridge, and in fact we are happy about that because it means the weather will get hotter from now. Complicated (their weather) means opportunities, we have had 52 knots a few days ago and so we don’t need any more of that any more, we are happy to be sailing downwind in about 20 knots of breeze with the spinnaker up. Life is good.
Last night we made a gybe east and my the looks of things we can skirt the eastern side of the high and just get to the north of it. The more challenging thing will be the trades, at the moment they are not really there. We are hoping they will begin before we get up there.
We are back into. We have been doing it for eighty days, a couple of days on land does not change a lot.
We are back to normal quickly, after 80 days you are pretty set in your ways, it is pretty standard three hours on and off, and we eat every six hours, it was a little break to be back on land but it has only taken a day or so to get back into it.
Being an island everything has to be brought in so our choice there was a little bit limited, we have tuna and salmon wraps for lunch now and that too is a signal that the weather is starting to get warmer.
Teamwork is certainly one of our strengths in this race, a lot of the teams in this race have a skipper who is used to single handed racing who has brought someone along, the two of us come from the same situation, we have not done of this two handed racing before, so we have a great team spirit and things are going well.
Every time we go and do a sail change we realise how hard it is we are wondering how on earth they can sail a boat like this single-handed around the world. In that way thinking about going to do the Vendée Globe is a huge challenge and definitely neneds a lot of preparation and a lot of balls, but it is an interesting idea and an interesting challenge.
We are still very motivated, the Hugo Boss has very strong key core values: perfection, position and being creative. And those values we can still apply every day in what we are doing, so we try to apply them every day in what we do, to do a good job: good sail changes, sailing the boat to its maximum, and being creative in finding a way through the weather, using the circumstances to their very best. A very big motivating point for us is that the Easter holidays are very close to our ETA and I definitely want to make that so I can go skiing in Norway.”

Position Report at 1330 UTC:

RkSkipperBoatLatitudeLongitudeDTFDTLSpeed (Kts)Course (Deg)
1Jean Pierre Dick - Loick PeyronVIRBAC-PAPREC 3GHOST
2Iker Martinez - Xabi FernandezMAPFREGHOST
3Pachi Rivero - Antonio PirisRENAULT Z.E Sailing Team3 55.77' N30 32.53' W2890.2010.6336
4Alex Pella - Pepe RibesESTRELLA DAMM Sailing Team0 57.41' N29 30.03' W3011.21218.33
5Boris Herrmann - Ryan BreymaierNEUTROGENA FORMULA NORUEGA0 36.28' N29 36.07' W3032.6142.47.55
6Dee Caffari - Anna CorbellaGAES CENTROS AUDITIVOS7 20.10' S30 43.26' W3488.8598.59.321
7Wouter Verbraak - Andy MeiklejohnHUGO BOSS38 40.57' S41 23.86' W5443.12552.913.376
8Gerard Marin - Ludovic AglaorFORUM MARITIM CATALA42 04.87' S44 58.14' W5698.62808.41176
9Jaume Mumbru - Cali SanmartiWE ARE WATER54 34.85' S82 55.38' W7421.14530.910.895
10Juan Merediz - Fran PalacioCENTRAL LECHERA ASTURIANA41 17.42' S174 47.13' E11550.38660.1087
ABDDominique Wavre - Michele ParetMIRABAUD
ABDKito de Pavant - Sebastien AudiganeGROUPE BEL
ABDMichel Desjoyeaux - Francois GabartFONCIA
ABDJean le Cam - Bruno GarciaPRESIDENT

More Information:

Caffari and Corbella wait for weather window to carry out essential repairs

The all female duo aboard GAES Centros Auditivos are still waiting for suitable calm weather conditions to be able to affect a repair to the crack in the ballast tank discovered a week ago. Although a temporary fix has been put in place, Caffari needs the winds to drop before she can carry out more extensive work which she hopes will hold for the next 3,500 miles until they cross the finish line in Barcelona.

The repair will involve Caffari cutting into the ballast tank to mend both sides of the damage and the record breaking British yachtswoman has been sanding down the area for the last few days in preparation.

Caffari reports:
“I have spent the last two days sanding carbon either in the sail locker or with my head actually inside the ballast tank. The high temperatures and carbon dust flying everywhere do not make for pleasant working conditions and my skin is massively itchy and painful as a result. It is a job that has to be done and thankfully the sea temperatures are warm enough now that bucket showers are easy to come by.”

Project Manager, Harry Spedding, added:
“Dee and Anna have been slightly frustrated over the last week. Hot and itchy from carbon dust they have been closing down the boats in front whilst waiting for an opportunity to repair the structural damage in the front of the boat. The frustration has come from the fact that they have been forced to race at 60-70% of the boat’s potential. If the sea state had just been a little kinder, and allowed them to apply an earlier fix, they would now be another 250 miles closer to the boats ahead.”

At the 0900hrs ranking, Caffari and Corbella maintain their 6th place at 3534 miles from the Barcelona World Race finish and 615 miles behind Neutrogena. At the front of the fleet, first and second placed Virbac-Paprec 3 and Mapfre have both elected to go into stealth mode for 36 hrs. Aviva has been a longstanding supporter of Dee Caffari and her inspirational record breaking sailing achievements, assisting her to three world records including becoming the first woman to sail solo, non stop, around the world in both directions. As Founding Partner of Caffari’s sailing campaign, Aviva is pleased to extend this support to Corbella and GAES for the Barcelona World Race.

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