Please select your home edition
Edition
Ocean Safety 2023 - New Identity - LEADERBOARD

Team Australia Sydney to Auckland record attempt update

by Lisa Ratcliff / Team Australia media 17 Oct 2013 07:07 BST 16 October 2013
Team Australia, Sean Langman's giant ORMA 60 trimaran with a crew of 6 attempting to break the record Sydney to Auckland © Andrea Francolini

Like driving down a mine

Team Australia's navigator Josh Alexander this morning described careering eastwards to Auckland with a 40 plus knot WNW wind on their aft quarter and not being able to see the waves as like driving the trimaran repeatedly down a mine.

The six-man crew weathered the worst of the overnight conditions without breakages or sea sickness. They are now deep into the Tasman Sea and more than a third of the way across the 1,260nm passage record attempt which began from Sydney Harbour at 12.09pm yesterday afternoon.

"It was a rough night, 40 knots plus for a good 3-4 hours and mainsail only for a while. We are still in 30-32kts WNW with a triple reefed main and small headsail. It's still rough," Alexander advised at 8.20am.

"There was a good moon early on but by 2am we couldn't see the waves, we just drove it down the mine. It was scary.

"We haven't broken anything but the boat's leaking like a sieve. It's wetter than on the way to Hobart. In fact it's the wettest ride I've had on this boat. The bunks and the back end are dry but the water is coming in through the escape hatches from the pressure. Last night we were averaging 30 knots of boat speed for 15 mins to half an hour at a time.

"It's looking like a good 24 hour run," Alexander added.

The soggy crew managed to get some hot food down while the trimaran was bucking and leaking saltwater through the front end, something pulled from the fridge labelled 'Tasman Tuna' that worked a treat for the hungry horde and even better for the Kiwi navigator once soaked with Tabasco sauce.

The wind and seas are expected to back off which may foil skipper Sean Langman's plan to reach Auckland inside three days. Forecaster Roger 'Clouds' Badham has advised that following a truckload of breeze all night there will be a steady ease all day today, with an even slower left trend.

"Looks like the hard work for me is tomorrow, to find you a way around and down the east coast of NZ. This is where we have to be smart," Badham has forewarned the team.

Team Australia is not gunning for a magic number to beat. Surprisingly there is no World Sailing Speed Council sanctioned record, just hearsay of five days being the best time for the popular ocean passage.

If they slow down too much the issue of food supplies could come into play. Many an ocean crossing has finished with rationed drinking water and bags of lollies the only sustenance left.

Sleep is sporadic with all hands needed to keep the beast on a leash. Having fulfilled his media duties Alexander handed over to skipper Sean Langman and hit the rack at 8.30am after a long stint driving in the dark on only a half hour power nap.

Temperatures are pleasant enough, the six crewmen in thermals and wet weather gear and no "bear suits" dragged out as yet.

Team Australia's sprint to Auckland can be tracked via the website teamaus.net.au

Updates posted regularly on the official Facebook page.

Related Articles

Keeping a candle lit for Captain Donald Lawson
Audacious plans seem to have ended in disaster While the sailing world has been focused on this year's rough-and-tumble Rolex Fastnet Race, my mind has been on Captain Donald Lawson and his audacious plans to break 35 offshore records as part of his Dark Seas project. Posted on 1 Aug 2023
Rex sets new Pittwater to Coffs Harbour record
The ORMA 60 multihull from Queensland takes 5 seconds off the previous mark Dale Mitchell and his crew on Rex, the ORMA 60 multihull from Queensland, early this morning broke the multihull record in the 2023 Pittwater to Coffs Harbour Yacht Race - by 5 seconds - it seemed to suit the occasion - April Fools' Day! Posted on 1 Apr 2023
Andoo Comanche and Rex to chase race records
In the Pittwater to Coffs Harbour Yacht Race When the gun fires sending the fleet on its way in the 2023 Pittwater to Coffs Harbour Yacht Race at 1pm, on Friday 31 March, Andoo Comanche's crew will be chasing the race record of 17 hours 10 minutes 31 seconds. Posted on 28 Mar 2023
Captain Donald Lawson on his Dark Seas Project
We love fast boats and cool people at Sail-World We love fast boats and cool people at Sail-World, and while the French horde many of the coolest multis, a few make it to the USA. Such was the case when Donald Lawson acquired Defiant, his ORMA 60, a pedigreed trimaran that's ready to rewrite records. Posted on 1 Aug 2022
Brisbane to Gladstone Multihull race record
A new Race Record of 14hrs 16mins 28secs Rex, the ORMA60 trimaran previously known for many years as New Zealand's Team Vodafone, has bettered the previous race record, set by Beau Geste MOD70 in 2019, by more than an hour in this year's City Winery Brisbane to Gladstone Multihull Yacht Race. Posted on 16 Apr 2022
Captain Donald Lawson on his Dark Seas Project
David Schmidt finds out more about the diversity, equity, and inclusion project It's not every day that an American acquires a high-performance, offshore-worthy multihull. Rarer still is when the yacht's owner aims the project at expanding DE&I within sailing, while also taking aim at a lengthy list of offshore records. Posted on 14 Apr 2022
Dark Seas Project acquires ORMA 60 Trimaran
The Dark Seas Project announces Mighty Merloe for their record and education program The Dark Seas Project today announces the acquisition of the ORMA 60 Trimaran, Mighty Merloe for their record and education program. The ORMA 60 was acquired from the sailing team owned by Mr. Howard Enloe. Posted on 11 Apr 2022
History repeating
Here's something very new, as such… Here's something very new, as such... However, in the 60s, another bunch of avant-garde enthusiasts pretty much did the same. Posted on 6 Jun 2021
Mirabaud Yacht Racing Image of the Century
French photographer Gilles Martin-Raget announced as the winner The international jury decided to honour the French photographer Gilles Martin-Raget and his image of the Orma 60 Fujifilm II trimaran, taken during the Course des Phares 2002. Posted on 24 Nov 2020
Airlie Beach Race Week day 2
Winds arrive and ORMA 60 makes it two from two Despite a forecast for more light winds at the Airlie Beach Race Week Whitsundays Festival of Sailing today, the winds Gods changed tack and gave the 64 boats and crews a run for their money in the Whitsunday Sailing Club's (WSC) annual event. Posted on 8 Aug 2020