Please select your home edition
Edition
McDYachts_Pyewacket-for-Sale_1456x180 TOP

Saves Our Seas Ocean Racing - Day 3

by SOS Media on 7 May 2010
Save Our Seas Ocean Racing Ian Thomson
Life onboard SOS Ocean Racing has, to put it in the words of Jessica Watson, 'Become a little interesting.'

It is day three into Ian Thomson's solo sailing world record attempt. Save Our Seas Ocean Racing departed Airlie Beach on the fifth of May at 1030 in an effort to break the world record for sailing non-stop solo around Australia.


Ian's mission is about raising awareness of what the damage plastic bags do to our environment. He aims is to raise an understanding in everyday Australian to think before they use plastic bags, to reduce the usage if they can; and if they can't, to reuse and eventually recycle them.

He reported in this morning at 0810 with the following 'It is the morning of the third day and it was an entertaining evening to say the least. I had a few visitors last night in the form of sea birds, not up to sped on what type they are but 5 of them flying around and 2 landed. One of them on the stern of the boat. I then decided to jibe and rather than take off he headed straight downstairs into the cabin, proceeded to throw up the days catch of fish all over the place and now the cabin stinks of fish. After the sea bird adventures I was settling back in and right on the stroke of midnight, a crash jibe. I have been running so square and the autopilot got it wrong. Way over on the side and it took about 30 minutes to clean up. Not that anything went anywhere except the battery box which I have now secured better. Just ropes in the cockpit etc.

Then I decided that once the wind hit 28 knots it was time to put a reef in the main. This is a tiring job and it takes a while and after the jibe, it meant a fair workout for one evening. Went without hitch though and now I am cruising under first reef main only in 4m seas and surfing consistently. I think I am averaging about 10 knots this morning. The tracker states I have now averages 8.7 knots so I picked that up 0.2 knots overnight. Can't imagine keeping up this speed for the rest of the journey but an eta of June 6th would be unbelievable. That is what the tracker is predicting at present.

A few drops of water found their way into the boat last night as well. I had my bean bag set up next to the companionway where a nice breeze was coming in and at one stage got a nice shower so a few wet pillows to dry out today. Other than that I slept really well, I am sleeping so well considering the conditions but the boat is loving it.

Good news is that I am 200nm from the entrance to the reef. The sailing has been smooth now that I am under first reef and will take it easy today as the sailing tomorrow to get through the reef will need me on my game. I am entering at Raine Island and will wind my way back to the main shipping channel to go around Wednesday Island which is a mark of the official World Sailing Speed Record course.

So breakfast this morning is nutri-grain and fresh milk. Hopefully I can keep it in the bowl, it is a little rocky'.

You can track Ian's progress on his website through the OceanTracker.net system and there will also be live streaming video footage from approximately 0930 EST through to 1030 EST.
Visit www.sosoceanracing.com for all the latest news, videos and galleries.
Cyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERLloyd Stevenson - AC Alinghi 1456x180px BOTTOMAllen Sailing

Related Articles

Pivot on this
I despise the way ‘pivot' got used as many times as those wretched QR codes... Yes indeed. As much as I would hate to take people back to the COVID era, that's exactly what I've just done. Making that problematic trip back in time look good, is how much I despise the way ‘pivot' got used as many times as those wretched QR codes.
Posted on 2 Nov
A Night Round the Mull
When Preparation Meets the Unexpected When the weather turns and the sea tests every decision, preparation becomes more than a plan, it becomes an instinct.
Posted on 2 Nov
17th Transat Café L'or Day 8
Not getting any easier - Nothing is clear for any of the four classes The ambition to have all four racing classes on the TRANSAT CAFÉ L'OR finish in Martinique is very much under threat because of the unusually complicated weather patterns on the Atlantic.
Posted on 2 Nov
Transat Café L'Or ULTIM course shortened
Ascension Island is out! The ULTIMs have received an amendment from the Race Committee concerning a course modification. To ensure grouped arrivals in Fort-de-France, the ULTIM course will be shortened. Ascension Island is therefore out!
Posted on 2 Nov
Argo & Zoulou prepare for RORC Transatlantic Race
The MOD70 trimarans are capable of sustaining speeds of more than 35 knots When the start gun fires in Lanzarote for the 2026 RORC Transatlantic Race on January 11, two of the most extraordinary offshore racing machines will once again go head-to-head across the Atlantic.
Posted on 2 Nov
Transat Cafe L'Or - The Dramatic First Week
Video update with the Class40 Leg 2 start, tracking the fleets, Ocean50 rescue and 11th Hour Racing What has become the second leg for the Class 40 fleet started at 1300 hours local time on Saturday. The teams had taken an enforced break from racing in Spain after the organisers decided the conditions were set to be too rough for the smaller boats.
Posted on 2 Nov
18ft Skiff SIXT Spring Championship Race 4
A history-making day for the Australian 18 Footers League on Sydney Harbour It was a history-making day for the Australian 18 Footers League on Sydney Harbour today when Tash Bryant became the first female skipper in the club's 90-year history to skipper the winner of a Club Championship race.
Posted on 2 Nov
McIntyre Mini Globe Race 2025 Update
Tough test, Serious Challenges, Struggling to Cape Town! Man Overboard, Serious Storms, Crazy Currents and a Grueling Sprint to Durban, before a struggle in the Agulhas current and Southern Ocean depressions.
Posted on 2 Nov
2025 J/70 World Championship overall
History made at J/70 World Championship After ten races over five days, shifting tides and reshuffled leaderboards, the 2025 J/70 World Championship came to a dramatic close at Yacht Club Argentino.
Posted on 2 Nov
Globe40 Leg 2 Finish
Belgium Ocean Racing - Curium wins the record-breaking stage 9 minutes between the top 3 after 29 days and 22 hours of racing: who could have imagined this breathtaking finish on October 2nd at the start in Cape Verde? Yet that's precisely what happened today in St. Paul Bay, Reunion Island.
Posted on 1 Nov