11.02.2010
JULES VERNE TROPHY
(CREWED ROUND THE WORLD VIA THE THREE CAPES)
Time to beat: 50 days 16 hours 20 minutes and 4 seconds
Thursday 11th February – Press release
Groupama
Exit imminent
Snaking between cells of high pressure, Groupama 3 is seeking to avoid being
caught up in the anticyclones, which are positioned way down South… Franck
Cammas and his men know that they have to endure another 24 difficult hours
before they can hook onto a steadier, powerful W’ly breeze.
In the atmosphere there are plateaus and craters, anticyclones and
depressions... Between the two are cols and valleys. Currently approaching
the Roaring Forties, from Friday morning Franck Cammas and his nine crew are
likely to reach some very light, problematic conditions, however the
analysis remains very positive. Indeed Groupama 3 always manages to maintain
sufficient speed to get through the tricky zones before the small zones of
high pressure succeed in catching up with her.
“We should find wind ahead of our bows! I hope we’ve escaped the lightest
breezes now… This Thursday morning, we weren’t even making an average of six
knots, with less than three knots of breeze. Fortunately we’re in the
process of leaving these zones, which are closing up behind us. The end of
the tunnel lies at 37° South! However, in a few days time, we’ll have enough
wind to get the boat making good headway… And it’s beginning to cool off.
There are already some albatrosses in the sky, the sun is shining and the
sea is the purest of blues. However, we’re constantly having to trim the
sails in order to escape these zones of high pressure” explained Franck
Cammas to French celebrity Yann Queffélec, during the 1130 UTC
videoconference at Groupama’s Race HQ in Paris.
Hamlet or Othello?
To be or not to be? This is a question Franck Cammas is asking right now.
This is not in metaphysical terms but rather geographical ones, as current
sailing in the calms of the Forties is proving worthy of the surrealism of
the Doldrums… However the Southern summer can also be temperamental and the
extension of this high pressure across the whole of the Southern Atlantic is
nothing unusual. The difficulty for navigator Stan Honey and onshore router
Sylvain Mondon, lies in locating a coherent route, keeping the risk of
coming to a complete standstill at a minimum.
“We had to make a decision two days ago: we opted for the riskier route,
that’s to say traversing zones of flat calm, and we’re doing better than if
we’d taken a big detour to get around them! We’re fairly happy with our
decision because we’ve gone faster than the wind holes, which are forming
behind us…”
As such remaining on a trajectory close to that of the round the world
record holder was quite logical, and on a Jules Verne Trophy, it is an
established fact that leads or deficits fluctuate according to the weather
data: the main thing is to maintain your trust in your boat, in your crew
and in the weather forecasts, which run for another month, on as far as
Ushant!
Balancing out time
“We knew that our start was good and that the next stage wasn’t easy:
ultimately we’ll have less of a deficit on rounding the Cape of Good Hope
than we envisaged in Ushant! This only represents a quarter of the Jules
Verne Trophy. Even though we’re not in a good position for this entry into
the Indian Ocean, the latter is shaping up to be favourable… The boat hasn’t
suffered and we should only have a deficit of between five and eight hours
on the reference time.”
To follow, as soon as the giant trimaran has caught up with the low moving
along 60° South (sic!), the tempo will dramatically increase and Franck
Cammas and his men are likely to be just as fast as Bruno Peyron and his
crew along this section of the course. As such the deficit amassed over the
past few hours will stabilise and the passage around the Cape of Good Hope
just a few hours behind the reference time won’t prove too disadvantageous!
Groupama 3’s log (departure on 31st January at 13h 55’ 53’’ UTC)
(Number of miles covered in relation to the optimum course for the Jules
Verne Trophy)
Day 1 (1st February 1400 UTC): 500 miles (deficit = 94 miles)
Day 2 (2nd February 1400 UTC): 560 miles (lead = 3.5 miles)
Day 3 (3rd February 1400 UTC): 535 miles (lead = 170 miles)
Day 4 (4th February 1400 UTC): 565 miles (lead = 245 miles)
Day 5 (5th February 1400 UTC): 656 miles (lead = 562 miles)
Day 6 (6th February 1400 UTC): 456 miles (lead = 620 miles)
Day 7 (7th February 1400 UTC): 430 miles (lead = 539 miles)
Day 8 (8th February 1400 UTC): 305 miles (lead = 456 miles)
Day 9 (9th February 1400 UTC): 436 miles (lead = 393 miles)
Day 10 (10th February 1400 UTC): 355 miles (lead = 272 miles)
Day 11 (11th February 1400 UTC): 267 miles (deficit = 30 miles)
Best passage time to the equator from Ushant
Groupama 3: 5d 15h 23’ (November 2009)
Jules Verne Trophy reference time to the equator
Orange 2: 7d 02h 56’ (January 2005)
The crew aboard Groupama 3:
* Franck Cammas, Loïc Le Mignon, Jacques Caraës, Stève Ravussin,
Thomas Coville, Bruno Jeanjean, Fred Le Peutrec, Lionel Lemonchois, Ronan Le
Goff.
* Stan Honey, navigator, off watch
Find all the latest about the Groupama trimarans on:
www.cammas-groupama.com
Translated by Kate Jennings – Expression
|