Boris Herrmann (Malizia – Seaexplorer, 6th) has also been negotiating very virulent storms in this area, including two nearby lightning strikes that damaged the electronics and gave him a real fright. “Those who say that lightning never strikes twice in the same place are wrong,” he says. “It was one of the craziest days I have ever experienced at sea, a day I will never forget.
“All the alarms coming on and the boat gybing instantly, lying flat on the water, with the wind increasing, more thunder and more lightning. I don't have many things left working: The radar is broken, the screen here doesn't work anymore. I have no load cells whatsoever and I don't have foil rake or keel angle data. The keel system doesn't work as normal, but I can charge the batteries. I have power, I have the watermaker, I have the Oscar unit, I have wind instruments and one pilot.”
Alan Roura makes a comeback
The trio of Benjamin Dutreux (Guyot Environnement – Water Family, 11th), Clarisse Crémer (L’Occitane en Provence, 12th) and Samantha Davies (Initiatives Cœur, 13th) will also have to face similarly disturbed winds. Sam seems to be gaining a slight advantage over Clarisse by getting a little more wind from a depression that is deepening on their path.
Behind, Alan Roura (Hublot, 17th) is celebrating. By skirting the ice exclusion zone, the Swiss skipper managed to claw back to within 30 miles of Jean Le Cam (Tout Commence en Finistère – Armor Lux, 16th). Also within this group, Romain Attanasio (Fortinet - Best Western, 14th) and Damien Seguin (Groupe APICIL, 15th) are progressing to the east to climb north at the same time as the anticyclone.
Facing the depression
Part of the fleet has been subjected to a strong depression for several days that’s funnelling winds down from the Andes mountains as it sweeps across the bottom of South America. Isabelle Joschke (MACSF, 18th), Giancarlo Pedote (Prysmian, 19th) and Benjamin Ferré (Monnoyeur - DUO for a JOB, 20th) look well placed to get through, sailing fast ahead of the storm. But they must not hang around: “Now, it's courage, let's flee,” says Benjamin. “It's a race against time to protect ourselves as much as possible.”
By contrast the following group of six boats, including Tanguy Le Turquais (Lazare, 21st) and Kojiro Shiraishi (DMG Mori Global One, 26th), will have to slow down and wait for it to pass. During the passage of the depression from Thursday to Friday, average winds of 35-40 knots, with gusts of 50 knots, along with 6 metre waves are expected.