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Jules Verne Trophy 2009
www.cammas-groupama.com - Übersicht

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0ß5.11.2009
They’re off!
15h 50’ 22’’: Groupama 3 set off from off the Créac’h lighthouse (Ushant
Finistère) in a good NW’ly breeze and big seas. Franck Cammas and his nine
crew will have to be back from their circumnavigation of the globe spanning
over 24,000 miles, prior to the morning of 26th December…
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Foto: Yvan Zedda
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A granulated sky, gusts, intermittent showers, setting sun, big Atlantic
swell, squalls, breaking waves: here we have the setting for this latest
departure to gain a new reference time in the Jules Verne Trophy, the round
the world record held by Bruno Peyron and his crew since 2005 (50d 16h 20m).
Groupama 3 left the pontoon of the port of Le Château in Brest, NW France
this Thursday 5th November at 1300 hours before a warm crowd of locals and
the crew’s families, which came out as far as the Petit Minou lighthouse to
bid them farewell. Under two-reefed mainsail and a small jib, Groupama 3
then released her tow at 1400 hours and headed out to sea in a building
swell… As such the giant trimaran had to put in a few tacks to get to the
North of Ushant before setting the clock running at 15h 50’ 22’’ UT.
A muscly introduction
The NW’ly wind associated with the low, which passed over Brittany on
Wednesday, was still very active: the stormy sky with its cumulonimbus was
generating a twenty to twenty-five knot breeze, gusting to over thirty-five
knots… Above all though, the seas were hard at the exit from the English
Channel with waves of nearly seven metres offshore! As such conditions
weren’t ideal for the start, but the next stage in the programme is highly
favourable, once the crew reaches the Portuguese coast. As a result, for
half a day, Franck Cammas and his nine crew are likely to be tackling beam
winds and may even have to sail close-hauled for a few hours…
“We’re going to set off under reduced sail to get free of the continental
shelf. After that this NW’ly wind will shift round to the West for three
hours at which point we’ll have to sail close-hauled. It’s not the ideal
scenario for starting out, however the weather window is pretty favourable
after that. In fact, from tomorrow lunchtime, Friday, Groupama 3 should
already be sailing along the coast of Portugal. At that stage we’ll hit some
N’ly and then NE’ly winds, which are set to accompany us to the archipelago
of Cape Verde” indicated Franck Cammas a few minutes after leaving the
pontoon.
The crew didn’t appear to be concerned about this choppy introduction to
proceedings: being in a position to head out early in the season, not to
have to hang around waiting for a favourable “firing window”, just after a
preparation session in the mountains at the end of October, and knowing that
the aim of the record is for the crew to be back before Christmas, all makes
for a serene departure. “We’re going to be shaken about at the exit from the
English Channel because the seas are big, but that makes for a good
introduction before we slip southwards. It’ll be hot from this weekend,
we’ll be at the equator in the middle of next week and the Southern Atlantic
appears to be willing to enable us a swift passage” explained Lionel
Lemonchois.
As such Groupama 3 must cross the finish line off Ushant before 26th
December at 08h 09’ 26’’ (UT)…
A tour of the weather
“Groupama 3 is setting off as the NW’ly wind is easing slightly to 25 knots
with gusts at 35 knots and a reduction in the number of squalls: the storms
have dissipated. Nevertheless, it is important to remain prudent as the big
seas are set to last for a few more hours yet, due largely to a big NW’ly
swell. The crew will have to deal with these tricky conditions right the way
across the Bay of Biscay, because although the wind will continue to ease
and it will be less gusty, there will still be big seas until Friday
morning. As such the exit from the Bay of Biscay will be all the trickier as
a result of a cold front moving in from the West, which will come face to
face with Franck Cammas and his crew in the second part of the night. The
approach of this front will cause the wind to shift round to the West as it
becomes less steady, before clocking back round to the NW again on Friday
morning. The main reason that Franck Cammas and his crew have opted to
tackle such conditions is in order to be in a position to exploit some much
more favourable conditions further along the track, in particular those
level with the NE’ly tradewinds off Portugal and further to the South”.
Sylvain Mondon from Météo France.
Translated by Kate Jennings – Expression
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