Behind, the war for positions continues
The anticyclonic ridge that separates the three leaders from the rest of the fleet is clearly visible on the weather map. This large blue area still acts as an "impassable barrier", as described by Jérémie Beyou (Charal, 6th). But Beyou and his immediate cohorts will have to cling on their last vestiges of patience as the anticyclone will move back North and finally allow the freshly re-established big group of nine skippers to all continue at speed.
Boris Herrmann (Malizia-Seaexplorer, 10th), Justine Mettraux (TeamWork-Team Snef, 11th), Clarisse Crémer (L’Occitane en Provence, 12th) and Samantha Davies (Initiatives Cœur, 13th) are riding this big depression eastwards. "I hope I'm wrong but the sea state is going to make the next 24 hours very complicated," grimaced Clarisse this morning. "There are 40 to 45 knots of cross winds to negotiate. If I don't manage to maintain good average speeds, I'm going to see this bus (the front) leave without me!"
Pip Hare, shattered dreams
News of Pip Hare's (Medallia, 16th) dismasting last night is a raw reminder of what can happen and is on everyone's minds. "I felt so sad, it brought tears to my eyes, it's really hard," confided Isabelle Joschke (MACSF, 18th). "Pip is a great girl, always smiling, always on the ball," added Arnaud Boissière (La Mie Câline, 29th).
“My heart goes out to her!” Conrad Colman (MS Amlin, 27th) had the same misfortune in 2016 albeit off the coast of Portugal and he managed to finish: "Every mast down is like a knife in the heart. It brings back a lot of emotions for me. When it happens to you, you feel like your whole world is falling apart". Many sailors have written to Pip to show their support.
The British sailor is still in shock. "I'm fine," she said in a video, trying to find the words through the disappointment and pain. "I don't know what happened. Medallia took off and when it landed, the mast fell in two pieces. I don't think I can explain what I'm feeling right now".
But she pledged, “It is not the end. It never is the end. And I hope that by the time I get to the shore I will have a really good plan, how to get Medaliia sailing again, how to get back to Europe, and then get back on the race track in 2025.”
“I want to thank you all for your incredible support, for following our races. And to all the other competitors out there, stay safe, I am really, really going to miss the other half of the world with you guys….”
Hare worked hard to set up a makeshift jury rig that allowed her to make progress at around 4 knots throughout the day. She is 700 miles from the Australian coast, which she should reach in about ten days.
On his fourth round the world race Kiwi Colman himself is finding the Indian Ocean harder than ever and today was pleased to have an interlude of lighter airs,
“I have 15 knots today and it is the first time I have seen less than 25kts for a week or so. And so it feels amazing to have shaken out the reefs and have the ability to go round the deck and feel safer. And so I am enjoying a small moment of respite.” Said Colman, “It’s been bloody horrible, I will be happy to have the Indian Ocean behind me. I have been a little bit taken aback by the frequency of the systems we have been confronted by. This is my fourth race around the world and my memory is not of having been whipped with quite such frequency as we have this time. I like it when the systems move a little bit slower and the ridges between the lows are a little bit more established. Here it is like being locked into a roller coaster and going round and round at full speed all the time. I don’t know that the Pacific will be better, in my experience typically it is. I can’t wait to be in the Pacific.”
Colman added, “The challenge of the Vendée Globe is to deal with each daily challenge as it comes, sometimes ‘Christmas comes early’ and I have two challenges on one day. And so it is a bit difficult to know which technical problem to deal with first, I have a few pots on the boil at the moment. But I am happy to have arrived at the end of my J3 repair and now with this calmer wind I am going to attack my lazy bag repair because sailing through the Southern Ocean without a lazybag is no fun.”