|
The
two remaining Class40s in the RORC Caribbean 600 finally found some breeze late
on Thursday as Michael Boyd, Niall Dowling, John Patrick Cunningham and Miranda
Merron on 40 Degrees closed up with Willy Bissainte on the double-handed
Tradition Guadeloupe. As the two Class40s met just north of
Marie-Galante island, both teams opted to head towards the south-eastern tip of
Guadeloupe, followed by the First 40.7 Coyote,
and picked up speed to seven knots.
“We
had another long day today, the bulk of it spent in French territorial waters
on the south coast of Guadeloupe,” reports
Boyd this morning from 40 Degrees. “We left you yesterday morning after
doing our four pirouettes in the vortex currents off Les Saintes in Guadeloupe's south-west corner,” he continues. “Two more
360s and 24 hours later we have left the south coast at the island of La Désirade
and are heading for our penultimate corner, the second rounding of the North
Sails inflatable mark, just south of Antigua's sister island, Barbuda,
90 miles to the North. Thence, it will be to Redonda and the finish at
Antigua's Fort Charlotte.”
Leaving
La Désirade to port, both 40 Degrees and Tradition Guadeloupe
headed north-west along the direct route to the next mark with Bissainte
pulling away to a seven mile lead. “We have had more challenging light airs, a
mixture of beating, running and plain doing nothing,” explains Boyd. “Just
waiting for wind to relieve us from the merciless sun and the pain of watching
the boats catch us from behind, including our Class40 sole remaining rival, the
two-man Tradition Guadeloupe. At one stage, we had been 22 miles ahead
of her,” recalls the Irish skipper. “She has a formidable reputation and her
crew and autopilot have clearly been working hard.”
The
RORC Caribbean 600 position poll at 0900 GMT this morning (26/02) indicates
that 40 Degrees has headed west away from the direct route while
Bissainte on Tradition Guadeloupe has stuck the direct route north.
“We’re beating at six knots in a lifting breeze that, we hope, will allow us to
free sheets for Redonda and to catch our close rival,” explains the Irish
skipper. “Our track shows a pretty chain bracket to record a significant wind
shift and tack,” he adds. Deviating from the direct route in the search for
breeze has meant a dramatic increase in DTF for 40 Degrees with 271
miles currently showing on the RORC Caribbean 600 Race Tracker. “The
calculation of an estimated time to finish is 12 March - a fortnight hence!”
says Boyd, studying the GPS extrapolation. “This has triggered a discussion
about our food and drink supplies, on the fate of the prize giving party and
our rum punches, on the obligations awaiting us on our originally scheduled
returns home and on whether we should join our other rival, Ocean Warrior,
as one of a number of retirals.”
|