Race 12 Day 2: Atlantic Ocean delivers baptism of fire as wind shift provides challenge
22 June 2016
The luxury of New York is now a fading memory after a wind shift in the Atlantic Ocean delivered an early challenge for the Clipper Race fleet. Team focus and concentration is being put to the test in fruity conditions as an exhausting number of spinnaker drops, hoists and peels have been required to keep up with the changing weather and try to stay with the pack.
In his blog today Olivier Cardin, the Skipper of now third place LMAX Exchange, reports what happened as
he says: “After easy
sailing from the race start, the Atlantic Ocean gave us his first low with the
front associated. It came in the morning with a black scary massive cloud
coming to us from behind.
“We all expected strong wind inside and adapted our sail plan for that. In
fact, there was only rain and lighter wind. The strong wind came just after as
the sky was less cloudy. We now sail under white sails with 30 plus knots of
wind in a difficult sea state.”
Many of the fleet suffered unfortunate kite and spinnaker mishaps in the
changeable conditions and difficult sea state yesterday. As the fleet remains
tightly packed, with just 17 NM separating the top ten teams, which remain split
on a wide north to south heading, this has meant that leaderboard positions are
changing all the time.
Homeward bound team Derry~Londonderry~Doire
has taken the lead and now has almost 10NM lead over second place Garmin, which has climbed positions despite
having some challenges yesterday, and LMAX
Exchange which is less than half a mile behind in third.
Skipper Daniel Smith
reports: “Towards the end of the night spinnakers popped up on the other
Clipper 70s and we lost a few miles not getting ours up first. After light I
sat on the rail wondering whether to swap our medium weight spinnaker for the
heavyweight. I then watched the closest yacht flog theirs and it explode into
tatters so we quickly swapped ours over. The swaps continued throughout the morning
until the wind finally settled this afternoon and remained windy.
“We raced side by side other yachts equally matched
until a mistake or a rip would cause their spinnaker to come down. In our local
group we held ours for longest finally dropping it when a sheet failed. We are
now back under white sails reaching towards the ice marks. Top speeds and
averages so far have been good.”
Mission Performance is now fourth
after ripping its medium weight kite, with GREAT
Britain fifth. Qingdao is in a
much improved sixth position after clawing all the way back from twelfth place
and 15NM behind the entire fleet yesterday. Da
Nang – Viet Nam has dropped to seventh place after a kite wrap, and IchorCoal is eighth at the time of
reporting.
ClipperTelemed+, in ninth, has
selected the most southerly position of the fleet, hoping its course will pay
off in the long run.Unicef and PSP Logistics have dropped to tenth and eleventh place after also suffering
a couple of unfortunate kite mishaps while racing each other for the podium
positions yesterday, and Visit Seattle
is twelfth.
Huw Fernie, Skipper of twelfth place Visit
Seattle which is approximately 30NM behind the leader, is refusing to feel
grumpy about his team’s position at the back of the fleet. In his report today
he states positively: “It's
been a great start to the race and we're really ticking off the miles out here,
so far it looks like the next couple of days will bring more of the same, there
is a little more wind coming and that could see the fleet separate a little
depending on how we all deal with it.
“So for now we keep chasing back those 10 nautical miles or so from earlier and
try not to lose any more as we settle into the offshore routine that will carry
us all the way to Northern Ireland.”
Despite these early challenges, the miles continue to fall away as the fleet
continues its eventful drag race to the Scoring Gate, knowing that it is all
very much still to play for but that the smallest of mistakes can cost dearly.
What challenges will the Atlantic Ocean throw up next, and will the weather
systems benefit the north or southerly positioned teams?
The Clipper Race fleet is due to arrive in Derry Londonderry, Northern Ireland
between July 7 to 11.
Click here to find out more about the stopover, which will mark the third and final time the Clipper Race fleet will visit the city.
If you are inspired by our crew and would like to take part in the 2017-18 or 2019-20 editions of the Clipper Race, contact our recruitment team to find out more.
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