Dueling Duos in Vendée Globe

Published on January 27th, 2017

(January 27, 2017; Day 83, 16:47 FR) – After 82 days of racing there are two intense duels still playing out in the Vendée Globe non stop solo round the world race. Racing in sight of each other today, at the latitude of Buenos Aires, Argentina, Didac Costa (One Planet One Ocean) and Romain Attanasio (La Famille Mary-Etamine du Lys) spoke to each other by VHF and have been no more than three miles apart as they climb the Atlantic.

Attanasio reported: “It’s funny because in the previous rankings, Didac (Costa) was ahead. This morning, I went outside to take some photos and he was there. I called him on the VHF and we chatted. I have been chasing him for three weeks. It’s a bit annoying having another boat alongside, as it’s hard to get the right trajectory. I wanted to bear away slightly, but he was there downwind of me. On the other hand it’s nice to be near someone. The last boat I saw was CommeUnSeulHomme. Now we have Rich Wilson in our sights.”

And at the latitude of Sao Paolo, Brazil the head to head scrap over 11th and 12th places sees Arnaud Boissières (La Mie Câline) some 20 miles ahead of Fabrice Amedeo (Newrest-Matmut). Boissières from Les Sables d’Olonne is racing his third consecutive Vendée Globe but is well behind his personal record time of 2012-13 when he finished ninth in 91 days. In 2008-9 he went round in 105 days. Of the duel between the two 2007 Farr designs, Amedeo’s, the former Paprec-Virbac 2, and Boissière’s more recently Jean Le Cam’s Synerciel, Amedeo said today: “This duel with Arnaud (Boissières) means I feel some pressure to keep pushing. I’ve also been able to discuss things with Arnaud by e-mail. I’d like to continue sailing in the IMOCA class and would like to do the 2020 Vendée Globe. So we’ have been talking about that together and so gradually we have become friends. I have about twenty days of sailing left and hope to finish on 14th February.”

This weekend should see the final competitor Sébastien Destremau lock the doors on the exit door from Southern Ocean. He is due to round Cape Horn late Saturday or Sunday on his evergreen TechnoFirst faceOcean. In typically effusive mood today, Destremau laughed: “The Race Director Jacques Caraës told me to close the door behind me and lock up.” He added: “I don’t have any regrets about stopping in Tasmania, even though I didn’t find the problem and if it cost me a lot in terms of time and distance. In the first part of the race, I was worried about what was going to hold out, but in Tasmania I was reassured. There really wasn’t that much wear. It was hard setting off again from Tasmania, but I don’t regret that. When the boat was doing 25 knots early on, I thought about furling the gennaker, but now I get 45 knots and don’t worry about it. It’s crazy how you get used to it.”

One big success on this eighth edition of the Vendée Globe solo round the world race has been the education programme disseminated by Rich Wilson, skipper of Great American IV. The former teacher who completed the 2008-9 race in 121 days is reaching between 750,000 and 1 million young students each week with his sitesALIVE education programme in 66 different countries. Young people from 46 nations are using the curriculum and have engaged with Wilson or his team of SitesALIVE experts and are receiving weekly email updates. One hundred thousand students in Taiwan are engaged, 250,000 through newspapers in the USA and 250,000 through a new news delivering application. All content is translated into French, Basic and Traditional Chinese. Asked today on Vendée LIVE! about his commitment to deliver his educational content from the race course, Wilson agreed: “It is hard for me. Sure it is. But that is the point of being out here. We know we are not going to be up at the front of the fleet, so that the reason I am out here. So far I have been very good at delivering on time, answering questions. I know we have 66 countries participating, that makes me so happy. I am going to start crying in a minute. It is very satisfying.”

Joining Wilson today on the Vendée LIVE! show, hosted from Les Sables d’Olonne, Lauren Zike who coordinates the program, explained: “I think that as this race wears on and the days stretch ahead of Rich, it is the education programme which will get Rich through the days, we continue to ask for question from all those kids who are following along, send us more questions and tell us what you are learning about. That really makes a huge impact for Rich. We have the patronage of the French Ministry of Education and all of our programme has been distributed throughout France and it has been wonderful to have the French website and so we are able to receive questions in French and respond to them. Rich even responded to one French girl who asked about his asthma, he posted a video for her replying in French. We have a great dialogue with the students.”

Quotes

Rich Wilson (Great American IV): “We have been producing these kind of live programmes since 1993. This is our 76th programme and of the 76, six have been voyages I have done, but otherwise the vast majority have been with other in the field resources, marine biology labs, rainforest research stations, other sailing ships, my career has been education much more than it has been sailing. Many years ago I was a school teacher, you need to be able to excite students before they will learn. And so we figured the best way is expeditions and adventures but with a very formal curriculum. It is correlated to common core standards in the USA, it is not an add on. It is to a formal curriculum which is being used in schools. And that is the point on my participation out here. I certainly would not be out here doing this if it were not for this big programme.”

Conrad Colman (Foresight Natural Energy): “Who better then to welcome this zero emissions circumnavigator back in to the modern era than a very empty oil tanker heading due west to Brazil to fill up at the pump! Cabo Frio, the point just up the coast from Rio, is home to one of the biggest Brazilian oil field with miles of densely packed oil extraction platforms. Rich Wilson recently quipped that his diverse renewable sources of renewable energy had allowed him to use so little diesel to charge that he felt he was a tanker carrying hydrocarbons around the world. As you know, I have taken the principle a step further and renewable sources of energy have provided 100% of my energy requirements. I have done this primarily due to the double functionality of my electric propulsion system. Going electric did mean that I went without heat in the Southern Ocean and had to be careful with my energy use. My solar panels are now also making a significant contribution to my energy production as well. I hope to cross the finish line in a couple of weeks time to become the first to finish the race around the world without ever using fossil fuels to charge the boat.”

Fabrice Amedeo (Newrest Matmut): “I had two choices. Either strong headwinds in difficult seas off Cape Frio, then a poor angle to get the trade winds. Or an eastern option on the edge of the St.Helena high enabling me to head north afterwards. I went for the latter option, even though it meant a few hours of light winds. The wind should strengthen later today and then I’ll be in the trade winds. And then, it’s straight on to the Azores high.”

Sébastien Destremau: (TechnoFirst-faceOcean): “For the moment the wind isn’t very strong but it’s strengthening and there should be gusts tomorrow of 60 knots at the Horn. But the sea state isn’t too bad, 6-8m, so that should be fine. And I have to go for it. So no more pictures of the Southern Ocean, as tomorrow I’ll be rounding the Horn.”

Ranking (Top 5 of 29)
1. Banque Populaire VIII, Armel Le Cléac’h (FRA), Finished, 74d 03h 35m 46s
2. Hugo Boss, Alex Thomson (GBR), Finished, 74d 19h 35m 15s (+15h 59m 29s)
3. Maître CoQ, Jérémie Beyou (FRA), Finished, 78d 06h 38m 40s (+4d 03h 02m 54s)
4. StMichel-Virbac, Jean-Pierre Dick (FRA), Finished, 80d 01h 45m 45s (+5d 22h 09m 59s)
5. Queguiner – Leucemie Espoir, Yann Elies, (FRA), Finished, 80d 03h 11m 09s (+5d 23h 35h 23s)

Race detailsTrackerRankingFacebookVendeeGlobe TV

Background:
The eighth Vendée Globe, which began November 6 from Les Sables d’Olonn, France, is the only non-stop solo round the world race without assistance. Twenty-nine skippers representing four continents and ten nations set sail on IMOCA 60s in pursuit of the record time set by François Gabart in the 2012-13 race of 78 days, 2 hours and 16 minutes.

For the first time in the history of the event, seven skippers will set sail on IMOCA 60s fitted with foils: six new boats (Banque Populaire VIII, Edmond de Rothschild, Hugo Boss, No Way Back, Safran, and StMichel-Virbac) and one older generation boat (Maitre Coq). The foils allow the boat to reduce displacement for speed gains in certain conditions. It will be a test to see if the gains can topple the traditional daggerboard configuration during the long and demanding race.

Retirements (11):
November 12, Day 7 – Tanguy de Lamotte, Initiatives Coeur, masthead crane failure
November 19, Day 14 – Bertrand de Broc, MACSF, UFO collision
November 22, Day 17 – Vincent Riou, PRB, UFO collision
November 24, Day 19 – Morgan Lagravière, Safran, UFO collision
December 4, Day 29 – Kojiro Shiraishi, Spirit of Yukoh, dismasted
December 6, Day 31 – Kito de Pavant, Bastide Otio, UFO collision
December 7, Day 32 – Sébastien Josse, Edmond de Rothschild, foil damage
December 18, Day 43 – Thomas Ruyant, Le Souffle du Nord, UFO collision
December 24, Day 49 – Stéphane Le Diraison, Compagnie du Lit – Boulogne Billancourt, dismasted
December 24, Day 49 – Paul Meilhat, SMA, keel ram failure
January 1, Day 57 – Enda O’Coineen, Kilcullen Voyager-Team Ireland, dismasted

2016-10-03_6-55-47

Source: Vendee Globe

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