Charlie Dalin, previous leader on MACIF Santé Prevoyance, has spent periods nearly rooted to the spot, as have the skippers around him. Dalin notes this morning, I'm in pretty good shape today, I managed to sleep well the night before last , and we had a whole day of light wind, so I'm in good shape. And the boat is in great shape, touch wood! I've just fixed a furling line which had torn off because of too much tension, but that's exactly what is supposed to happen. What happened is still a mystery, but it's all glued back together! I put a patch on the Masthead Zero (biggest downwind sail, the clew or back bottom corner of which extends well back and so rubs on the outrigger deck spreader, ed note) the first night, a little worn in the outrigger, not pierced, but that's about it! For now, I'm pretty well sorted.
Overall it is a slightly easier mission than what we saw four years ago. Four years ago we had two fairly violent fronts plus a tropical storm, now we clearly won't have anything like that on the menu! I am happy to do this round the world passage again on this new boat which is really adapted to the course, I was really surprised by the comfort of the boat at high speed on the downwind phases. Sometimes I woke up and opened my eyes and said to myself "the boat has stopped, I'm not going fast enough" and I was at 20-25 knots, it's pretty cool! It's tight in the fleet, I have Thomas Ruyant racing not far away, I'm side by side with Jérémie and Louis, Yoann is right next to us too, we're trying to get away.
Right now I'm in the light and for the West it is too late to change my mind! We're going to try to cross as this sticky stuff quickly as possible in the next few hours, before leaving this zone, and find speed again to go cross the Doldrums
The fleet is very grouped, they are coming back from behind like four years ago, I hope it won't be like that all the time! It stretched out a first time, it regrouped in Madeira, there it had managed to move a little and I had caught up, and there it is recompressing but it is dense, it is good, at least there is a fight, and that is only going to carry on so much the better! The challenge is really to get out of this zone quickly, there I only have between 0.5 knots and 1.5 knots of wind, it is really soft, so I hope it will start soon, on our side compared to the others, not so on the South East side! Normally we should have already finished this phase a little, but it is clearly not the case!”