VENDÉE GLOBE
After Cape Horn the South Atlantic should feel like the ‘home’ ocean, the progressive return home. After the constant stress of the Big South it should, by all accounts, feel a little more straightforward.
But that is not the case on this 10th Vendée Globe, neither for the the two leaders – Charlie Dalin (MACIF Santé Prévoyance) and Yoann Richomme (PAPREC ARKÉA) – nor for the chasing pack, from fourth placed Thomas Ruyant (VULNERABLE) to 11th positioned Justine Mettraux (TeamWork- Team Snef.
If Dalin and Richomme are still mired in an extended zone of high pressure whilst the second group are being forced to fight for every mile, upwind for days in an increasingly unsettled wind and big, slamming seas. And now they are facing a stormy low with winds to 40kts which is potentially damaging, considering the boats are weary.
Ruyant was already caught out yesterday by a squall of 50 knots plus which knocked his VULNERABLE flat and shredded his J2, his essential workhorse headsail. And he is now only 120 miles clear of Meilhat in fifth and will certainly be compromised by the loss of his J2 between now and the finish.
If the two leaders have any solace it is that they are both still together. Dalin has crept away to be about 40 miles ahead of Richomme who seems to have had a very light, wobbly period. The numbers make painful reading. Over 24 hours Richomme has only made 109 nautical miles and Dalin 149 miles, but they are expecting to accelerate now the breeze has settled more in direction. But yesterday was challenging in the extreme in a very unsettled breeze, says the race leader this morning,
UPWIND, UPWIND, UPWIND
Back in the chasing peloton Boris Herrmann is trying to stay objective in ninth place,
“ We have had upwind conditions since the Falklands and it’s not very pleasant, especially now with the sea building, it’s slamming hard, sometimes we’re a bit scared for the boat! We’re all looking forward to it being over because it feels very much eternal, what’s also really a bit annoying is that the weather models change a lot from one session to the next, so we don’t really know what to think! What’s good is that we’re a bit grouped together. Paul (Meilhat) dropped us, he did a great job, he followed the routing a bit more, and we were all, well me anyway, skeptical about the routing, that’s why I didn’t do this route! But it was a mistake when you think about it! The night when we were next to the Falklands I was in front of him, so there he has a built big advantage.”
Herrmann adds,
“