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Global Ocean Race fleet face brutal conditions

by Oliver Dewar on 15 Dec 2011
Brutal conditions beating through the Roaring Forties - Global Ocean Race 2011-12 Phesheya Racing
Global Ocean Race 2011-12 (GOR) fleet are facing the Southern Ocean weather system during leg two from Cape Town to Wellington.

Over Tuesday night, fortunes changed for the leaders in the double-handed, Class40 GOR fleet as the windless isolation of Halvard Mabire and Miranda Merron on Campagne de France in third place ceased, while Conrad Colman and Sam Goodchild on Cessna Citation and Ross and Campbell Field on BSL hammered through exceptionally variable conditions on their climb to the GOR’s Australian Ice Limit at 45S with a race against the clock to avoid strong headwinds. Meanwhile, further west, Marco Nannini and Hugo Ramon on Financial Crisis had played closest to the low pressure system dominating the fleet’s attention as the Italian-Spanish duo and the South African team of Nick Leggatt and Phillippa Hutton-Squire with Phesheya-Racing continued their painful beat east at 44S.

Throughout Tuesday night and Wednesday morning, speed averages on both Cessna Citation and BSL fluctuated hourly between nine and 12 knots as the two Class40s climbed north-east from below 48S with the elastic band connecting the two boats expanding and contracting. Conrad Colman and Artemis Offshore Academy sailor, Sam Goodchild, have had minimal rest over the past 24 hours: 'We’d been sailing quite happily under big spinnaker in 20 knots when a gust of 28 knots blows hard for a few seconds,' says Colman. 'This was just long enough to wipe the boat out before dropping away to 15 knots instantly,' he reports. 'As such, Sam and I have been kept on our toes changing between our big runner kite, to the reacher, down to the little reaching gennaker, back to the big runner and so on and so on. At least it serves to keep the blood flowing through digits that would die and fall off if left unattended.' The relentless hardship, monochrome scenery and frequent sail changes are broken only by the twinkle of the position schedule download LED on the chart table: 'Blue fingers, grey sea, grey skies, a flash of light every three hours. Such is our routine for the moment,' continues Colman. 'Rest is short, and often not that sweet as every major lurch heralds a call from the cockpit and another sail change.'

The current weather focus for the fleet is the low pressure system that forced Financial Crisis and Phesheya-Racing to tack south-west and avoid the worst of the south-easterly breeze spinning from the system’s trailing edge. However, with the system heading towards the leaders, it is vital to reach the western end of the Australian Ice Limit 170 miles to the north-east and turn the corner before headwinds arrive. 'We should be thankful for our constant progress, as we send groans of sympathy towards our compatriots further west when we watch their tortured tracks crawl over the sea,' says Colman. 'The system that promises to wallop the fleet should present us with strong northerlies when we are reaching across the top of the next gate, but we need to get there before it strikes otherwise we’ll be in for a rough ride too.' Celebrating the fourth uninterrupted day of leadership by Cessna Citation, Sam Goodchild is having problems getting to grips with the concept: 'We’re 15 days into leg two of the Global Ocean Race and we have just passed the half way stage,' commented Goodchild at midday GMT on Wednesday. 'When I was offered to do this leg three weeks ago, I never imagined that we would have been in the lead at this stage,' he continues. 'The aim was to try and give the leaders a run for their money and so far, so good, and with BSL just 58 miles behind us, that is the biggest lead so far and this close racing has made for an intense two weeks.'

In the 15:00 GMT position poll on Wednesday, BSL had reclaimed ten miles from Colman and Goodchild, but on BSL, Ross Field was watching the three-hourly schedules closely: 'We’re constantly loosing miles to Cessna at the moment,' he confirms. 'We know why this is happening and expect a few more lost miles in the next 24 hours, but there isn’t much we can do about it – sorry about that - but there’s still a lot sailing and passing lanes.' On Wednesday afternoon, the Fields were to windward of Cessna Citation, 224 miles from the western end of the ice limit located 960 miles from the south-western tip of Australia: 'We’re reaching up to the mark at 45 South and apparently this mark is one imposed by the Aussie Search and Rescue and will have an inflatable kangaroo as a rounding buoy!' continues Ross Field. 'We then reach along for 800 miles and then dive south again it seems from the weather we’ll go to about 50 South.' The leaders will spend approximately three days sailing above the virtual barrier before they are free to drop back down into the Southern Ocean. 'I’m looking forward to the next two weeks of reaching and running and hope that it’s not too cold,' he adds.

In third place, trailing the Fields by 261 miles at 15:00 GMT, Halvard Mabire and Miranda Merron finally began to pick up speed early on Wednesday morning, bringing a frustrating, 24-hour drift to an end: 'After our enforced ‘holiday’ in the glassy calms of the Roaring Forties yesterday, the wind has returned,' Merron reports as averages on Campagne de France rose throughout Wednesday to over ten knots in north-westerly breeze in front of the low pressure system centred 500 miles off their port quarter. 'We are back to the many shades of Southern grey,' she continues. 'Not a scrap of blue in sight.' With the ice limit just over 500 miles due east of Campagne de France, Mabire and Merron are looking over their left shoulders: 'We’re heading for the western end of the next ice limit and keeping an eye on the evil low pressure which is chasing us,' adds Merron.

While Mabire and Merron hope to out run the worst of the strong winds, the gap between the leading trio and Financial Crisis and Phesheya-Racing in fourth and fifth place has increased dramatically by 300 miles as the two Class40s took avoiding action. On Financial Crisis, Hugo Ramon was quickly adapting to the violent conditions as he and Marco Nannini followed Leggatt and Hutton-Squire’s tack to the south on Tuesday: 'It’s really hard to watch the Distance To Finish miles increase as we start heading backwards,' he wrote in an email before Financial Crisis tacked back onto starboard. Pounding into around 25-30 knots of wind on Tuesday night with three reefs in the main, the four year-old Akilaria Class40 was thrown around wildly: 'The boat is already turning into a cross between a cocktail shaker, a washing machine and a fairground ride,' he explains. 'Typing at the chart table I can’t hit a single letter on the keyboard accurately – if I head-butted the keyboard the effect would be just about the same!' Mid-afternoon GMT on Wednesday, the breeze finally moved aft and speeds picked-up for both boats as the low pressure moved east. In the 15:00 GMT position poll on Wednesday, Phesheya-Racing trailed Financial Crisis by just under 50 miles with the two Class40s now slightly under 600 miles behind Campagne de France.

GOR leg two leaderboard at 15:00 GMT 14/12/2011:
1. Cessna Citation: DTF 3,399 9.3kts
2. BSL: DTL 48 10.3kts
3. Campagne de France: DTL 261 10.4kts
4. Financial Crisis: DTL 847 7kts
5. Phesheya-Racing: DTL 894 Global Ocean Race website
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