The third group, Sam Goodchild (VULNERABLE), Paul Meilhat (Biotherm) and Yannick Bestaven (Maitre Coq V) are in taking a SE’ly route to set up for the next system but have modest conditions, unlike the quartet to their west led by Justine Mettraux (TeamWork-Team Snef). Clarisse Crémer (L’Occitaine en Provence) 130 miles behind her reports this morning,
“I’m a bit better now, I managed to sleep, I dropped in a reef, we do what we can! What do I look like? that's a very good question, I can't answer it myself. I was a bit physically done in after a night spent taking care of the foil the night before, I was burnt out, and even if I wasn't in the worst conditions in the Indian Ocean at the moment, it's never easy and I had between 25 and 30 knots and a rather short sea, nothing catastrophic but hey, I wasn't in great shape. Now I managed to sleep two big naps of an hour and a half, it feels so good, I woke up with a smile! And now I'm going to go back to a nap after taking a reef, so great. It wasn't great, but it's better!”
Explaining the damage and repair to her foil arm head, she says, “I simply wanted to adjust my foil, and I heard a loud crack, so you don't need to be an expert to understand that something is wrong! And I saw that the foil cylinder support had given way, so the foil in the front-back direction, it's not held. It's not repaired, because I can't start repairing the foil support, well maybe one day but not now, on the other hand it's blocked thanks to wooden wedges that had been provided for this purpose. It's not easy to put in place but normally everything is fine, I check from time to time that it's still there and it seems to be fine. It's just that it adds something extra so my foil is not adjusted as I would like. As I had a little too much power at one point, now I can't keep it laterally, so I have to retract it, except that here for example I would need a little more power, but to send it back you would have to bear away... In short, it's an extra hassle! It's not a disaster, but you have to monitor it so that it doesn't get any bigger, and you have to check that the shims are holding well, are we going to change the shims to adjust the foil differently? We will see what we do in the future.”
She continues, “Now it is a bit lighter before strengthening later in maybe 2-3 hours, that's why I'm a little slow, I dropped a reef but it would have to be a little under power for the J2... That's what's hard, is that one time the file says 20 knots and in fact there are 25-30, and another time it tells you 20 knots and in fact there are 18. So sometimes you need more sail area often it's lighter than forecast. But right now, the conditions are fine.”