GAETANO MURA - SOLO ROUND THE GLOBE RECORD

Übersicht
December 7th, 2016
Past the Cape of Good Hope

Gaetano Mura on his Class40 Italia has sailed past the Cape of Good Hope, the first of the three great capes of the southern oceans
The blog, the pictures and and videos Mura sent back ashore

Gaetano Mura is not totally alone as at least two boats from the Vendée Globe are in the same area, one being the unfortunate Japanese flagged boat skippered by Kojiro Shiraishi that dismasted and was forced to retire
The first of the three great capes is already in the transom of Italia, the Class40 Gaetano Mura is pushing hard to try and set a reference time for the single-handed round-the-world circumnavigation. The Italian boat and skipper have rounded the Cape of Good Hope, on the southern tip of the African continent during the night of December 4 in very tough weather conditions, right in the mid of low-pressure system. Showing the Italian flag, the skipper from Sardinia granted himself a toast with a glass of wine from his native island.

The Roaring Forties are not easy, for anybody. In the area where Gaetano is sailing are at least another two skippers from the famous Vendée Globe race, one being the unfortunate Japanese skipper Kojiro Shiraishi, on board Spirit of Yukoh, who has been forced to retire after dismasting and is trying to reach Cape Town.

From Gaetano's blog
"After two very tough days, I've managed to get back to the keyboard and write. We were well prepared for this low pressure. When it got here, myself and the boat were ready to tackle it. The wind increased and the waves got higher, fed by some 40 knots of wind, with gusts at 45 knots. We managed to get going, with two reed and a small jib. Later we entered an even stronger low, very active and fast, with heavy rain and 55 knots of wind. We opted for another reef to the mainsail and an even smaller jib. We sailed through it, topping 22/23 knots of speed down the huge waves. The worst lasted some three hours and when the wind veered, we needed to gibe in 40 knots. It is very dangerous to manoeuvre in these conditions. We let some time pass but then the wind direction wasn't manageable anymore and the heel was too strong.”

Gibing in 40 knots
"I've told myself and the boat that we had to do it, we had to keep strong. I went inside, emptied the ballast, I moved two sails on deck and, totally drenched, I went back to the cockpit and with my heart beating fast I gibed when we were going down a wave fast . It all went well, thank goodness, except the leeward stay that got stuck in the mainsail. But I cleared that at dawn. One we were on the other tack the boat accelerated through the waves, the keel and the rudders making loud noises. And so went the night. I'm a bit tired and I feel for Italia that is rolling with the punches for hours. But some dried bread and cheese from my Sardinia made my day look brighter...”

To dowload the videos from onboard:
https://s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/mura.solo.record.cloud/04_12_title.mp4 (with graphics)
https://s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/mura.solo.record.cloud/04_12_clean.mp4 (no graphics)

Gaetano's route can be followed on his official website at: http://www.gaetanomurarecord.com/la-rotta/
For more info: Gian Basilio Nieddu - Mob +39 331 801 8531 – email gbasilionieddu@gmail.com Fabio Colivicchi (Yachting Media) Mob +39 335 5730 361 - email fabio.colivicchi@gmail.com Carla Anselmi (International media liason) Mob +39 347 4632 757 – email carlanselmi2@gmail.com

Carla Anselmi Via S. Andrea di Rovereto, 46/2 16043 Chiavari (Ge) - Italy Ph. 0039/347/4632757 - skypename carlasusky

Copyright © 1996-2016 - SEGEL.DE




Segeln blindes gif