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Barcelona World Race - A gentleman’s duel

by Barcelona World Race Media on 7 Apr 2015
A gentleman’s duel - Barcelona World Race 2015 Gilles Martin-Raget / Barcelona World Race
Barcelona World Race - There are fewer than 500 miles to the finish for One Planet One Ocean and Pharmaton, but the challenges of the Barcelona World Race are not quite over yet. Aleix Gelabert and Didac Costa crossed into the Mediterranean Sea last night, passing the latitude of Tarifa (5°37°W) at 18h25 UTC (20h25 BCN). The fourth team to return to the Med, Gelabert and Costa arrived back in their home waters 95 days, six hours and 25 minutes after leaving Barcelona on December 31, 2014.

Conditions in the Straits of Gibraltar were favourable for the fourth placed boat, with seven to eight knots westerlies and an east-going current, which saw the pair gybing frequently as they passed the tip of Southern Europe. However, as One Planet One Ocean and Pharmaton sailed deeper into the Alboran Sea they were this afternoon faced with 20-knot headwinds. Their shore crew has reported that the easterly Levante wind is currently blowing 25-31 knots, and the team are tacking along the Spanish shoreline as conditions are lighter closer to the coast. They are also experiencing large swells, making headway slower going than the routing predicted, which had suggested an arrival time in Barcelona of the afternoon of Wednesday, April 8.

Bruno and Willy Garcia also passed into the Mediterranean this morning, Monday April 6th, at 0414UTC after 95 days, 16 hours and 14 minutes of racing. Around 25 miles south of Malaga, We Are Water is also now experiencing 20-25 knot easterlies. Their average boat speed remains consistently 0.5-1 knot faster than One Planet One Ocean and Pharmaton, and We Are Water gained 17 miles on their rivals in the past 24 hours. Passing lanes on a lumpy beat to Barcelona may be limited, but both duelling contenders will be fighting to the finish.

Self-motivation

Renault Captur has also passed the 2,000-mile to the finish mark. Sébastien Audi gane spoke earlier by video conference, reporting that they had just completed what they expected to be one of their final tacks of the race. “We are on the south-east edge of the Azores high. We tacked earlier, about two or three hours ago, and it was probably one of our last tacks. In any case I think we have done the last tack before Gibraltar, now we have a very long way until Gibraltar on the same tack, for three days. We have between 15 and 20 knots of wind, and we’re sailing between 9.5 and 10 knots.”

The Renault Captur duo continue to sail their race almost alone in sixth, now 1,400 miles from Gibraltar – having taken by far the most westerly return course up the Atlantic of any team – with Spirit of Hungary another 1,100 miles to the south. Whilst One Planet One Ocean and Pharmaton and We Are Water will no doubt be exhausted by the relentless pressure of their trans-Ocean head-to-head battle, Sébastien Audigane and Jörg Riechers are instead feeling the draining tiredness of motivating themselves continually with no near opposition. “We are a bit tired, mainly mentally because we have no competitors to play with,” reported Audigane today. “Physically we are fine, we’re sleeping well because we don’t have a lot to do on board, apart from making the boat sail fast upwind, which is not very complicated.

“Although we have had some problems, we have crossed a 600 mile area of seaweed – which gets stuck into the appendages – we have had an electrical breakage, and now we have a problem with the engine to charge the batteries, but I think we are going to solve it during the day.” They have sufficient food despite having initially provisioned for 92 days with a few days margin of error, although Audigane did report that they are running critically low on coffee and sweets.

Back to the beat

For seventh placed Spirit of Hung ary conditions have settled on a long starboard tack in established north-easterly trade winds, around 180 miles south and 400 miles to the west of the Cape Verde islands. As they approach this landmark of the North Atlantic, Nandor Fa and Conrad Colman are – finally – allowing themselves to imagine arriving back in Barcelona.

“The Cape Verde islands are the gateway to the Doldrums on the outbound leg so now that we approach their latitude heading north we can finally let our thoughts turn to the finish,” blogged Conrad Colman today. “We’ll be beside them tomorrow and then it’s a matter of linking up the Canary Islands with Madeira, Madeira with the approach to Gibraltar and then the final wriggle to the finish. After our protracted escape from the Med last time, I’m certainly not confusing Gibraltar with the finish line but after the tens of thousands of miles already sailed it feels like we’ll be able to smell the finish line whe n we pass the famous rock.”

In the meantime, however, they have more prosaic concerns, namely contending with the flying fish which land onboard Spirit of Hungary: “I got pegged in the back by one of these foul smelling winged missiles last night when I was checking the sail trim. We generally try to help them back into the water but several don’t make it back as we either don’t find them fast enough or they are knocked stone cold by their initial impact that there’s little to do for them. I for one am not going to risk smelling like the Tokyo fish market by attempting mouth to mouth with a dizzy fish with a death wish!”

Rankings Monday 6th April at 1400hrs UTC

Cheminées Poujoulat (B. Stamm - J. Le Cam) - finished 25/03/2015 at 17:50:25 UTC in 84d 05h 50min 25s
Neutrogena (G Altadill – J Muñoz) finished 30/03/2015 at 23:47:00 UTC in 89d 11h 47min
GAES Centros Auditivos (A Corbella – G Marín) finished 01/04/2015 at 17:09:28 UTC in 91d 05h 9min 28s
One Planet One Ocean and Pharmaton (A Gelabert – D Costa) + 413.9 miles to Barcelona
We Are Water (B Garcia – W Garcia) + 53.6 miles to leader
Renault Captur (J Riechers – S Audigane) + 1503.8 miles to leader
Spirit of Hungary (N Fa – C Colman) + 2183.5 miles to leader
ABD Hugo Boss (A. Thomson - P. Ribes)

Skippers quotes:

Sebastien Audigane, Renault Captur:


“We are on the south-east edge of the Azores high. We tacked earlier, about two or three hours ago, and it was probably one of our last tacks. In any case I think we have done the last tack before Gibraltar, now we have a very long way until Gibraltar on the same tack, for three days. We have between 15 and 20 knots of wind, and we’re sailing between 9.5 and 10 knots.
“We are a bit tired, mainly mentally because we have no competitors to play with. Physically we are fine, we’re sleeping well because we don’t have a lot to do on board, apart from making the boat sail fast upwind, which is not very complicated.

“Although we have had some problems, we have crossed a 600 mile area of seaweed – which get stuck into the appendages – we have had an electrical breakage, and now we have a problem with the engine to charge the batteries, but I think we are going to solve it during the day.”

Conrad Colman, Spirit of Hungary:

“The Cape Verde islands are the gateway to the Doldrums on the outbound leg so now that we approach their latitude heading north we can finally let our thoughts turn to the finish. We’ll be beside them tomorrow and then it’s a matter of linking up the Canary Islands with Madeira, Madeira with the approach to Gibraltar and then the final wriggle to the finish. After our protracted escape from the Med last time, I’m certainly not confusing Gibraltar with the finish line but after the tens of thousands of miles already sailed it feels like we’ll be able to smell the finish line when we pass the famous rock. Maybe it’s just that our families will be able to smell us from there, so we’d better not forget to have a good salt water scrub before the final approach to the finish!

“Now that we have found solid trade winds, our days are ruled by a simple mechanical repetitiveness. Small changes to the sail’s trim in response to variations in the wind’s strength and direction. Backing down the boat to clear the rudders and keel from continued attacks from the Sargasso weed. Bailing out the small leaks from the ballast system that’s so crucial in reducing the teeth shattering bangs and crashes when sailing against the wind. These are the rhythms that shape our life.

“While a week of sailing upwind on starboard tack risks to become boring, I love being out here with the thrust of the boat beneath my feet and the birds and bright blue sky over my head. The birds are providing particular amusement lately, as we seem to be providing a valuable service to our escort of gannets. These streamlined speedsters hover in our updraft just in front of the spray from the bow until we disturb a flock of flying fish, at which point they put on a spurt of speed and the chase is on.

“I wish them happy hunting as I got pegged in the back by one of these foul smelling winged missiles last night when I was checking the sail trim . We generally try to help them back into the water but several don’t make it back as we either don’t find them fast enough or they are knocked stone cold by their initial impact that there’s little to do for them. I for one am not going to risk smelling like the Tokyo fish market by attempting mouth to mouth with a dizzy fish with a death wish!”
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