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Challenger 3 - CF416 ARC 2016 CH3 - Blog 2016-11-27



Dear All

 

What a great performance I Witnesses last night. It all looked like a well-tuned orchestra! You all certainly tried to get the best from your instruments!

And then there was the conductor high above you, balancing on the pulpit, hair blowing wildly around her face, both arms lifted, baton in hand!

All of you illuminated by the decklight, setting a dramatic scenery. It looked fantastic!

And then there was the director, looking on from the side curtain, making sure all went smoothly - untethered mind - shouting "I declare this bazaar open!"

To enhance the dramatic scenario, he chucked a few buckets of water on you!

What a show! I'm so happy to be part of such a brilliant team, although I can only watch the drama!

A helmsmans view.

Ralf

 

Saturday 26th

An action packed couple of days.  The crew are honing their helming skills well, ranging from relaxed and on course to wide eyes and zig zagging, but all are improving massively and doing amazingly well, especially in the dark nights with rolling waves.

Challenger 2 loomed out of the darkness last night, cutting in front of us and taking the lead for the first time.  Helming fever hit a new high as people tried their best to helm well and chase Ch2. 
Having our Yankee 3 up instead of 2 (a tear forced us to drop it just before dark), we were under-canvased compared to CH 2, but Ricky, unable to settle, took the helm and managed to stop a wide gap opening up, ably assisted by Andrew and a couple of others.  A sleepy but happy skipper this morning.

Sail stitched and patched we re-hoisted our Yankee 2 and saw our boat speed improve.  During the day we did several more gybes due to a change of plan on getting more up to date wind/weather information.  A crucial decision to avoid potentially getting becalmed over the next few days.  The last of these came after I treated myself to a shower and a couple of hours sleep on my off watch – it has been a tiring few days!  We dropped the Yankee 2 again for a few more repairs before re-hoisting and continuing the gybe….needless to say my salt-free cleanliness was short lived as a wave or two soaked me once again.

A pleasant start to the night watch with an amazing beef curry and starry sky.  The crew are chatting loudly and excitedly behind me in the saloon, the Skipper is catching up on some sleep and I am looking forward to mine.  It looks like some interesting and varied sailing ahead…there’s no sign of the typical ARC trade winds yet! 

Kirstie (slightly tired, salty Mate)

Todays 00:00 to 06:00 watch for me holds the faint hope of a sunrise as we have adjusted the boat clock by an hour and will do so again today and tomorrow. This will bring the sun back in line with our normal expectations of being up during the day and not during the night. It will however, undoubtedly bring confusion to myself as we stick to UT for all the boat communications and the Skipper and Mate’s watch times. 

Although it has not been typical ARC Trade Wind sailing; by being further North than normal we have kept some fast and at times testing downwind sailing conditions. Today we will finally be enveloped by the edge of the sluggish Low Pressure south of the Azores which has been so disruptive. We made a last minute gybe and dash to get a bit further North after some updated weather information earlier and I think Challenger 2 kept to the Southern gybe. So it will be interesting today to see how it unfolds. If the information we are working from is correct we should have a day or so of light to very light conditions and by midnight today (Sunday) we will hopefully just have made our way to better winds. If Challenger 2 is 30 or so miles South, they may find the lighter winds last a bit more into Monday morning, but then forecasts are just forecasts.

Thursday is looking like a very interesting day weather wise, as a deep unseasonal low heads our way and will give us strong to very strong Southerly winds followed rather quickly by strong to very strong Northerly winds.  We plan to be as South as possible as soon as possible after we have skirted past this current low, but I am not sure on the strategy for the next low. We may just blast through it in typical Challenger fashion.

Our boat equipment is all faring well. We have patched various small holes in our Yankee 2, including a small tear in the leech which could easily have developed into a catastrophic rip. At the moment we have been quite conservative with our sail plan, preserving our larger sails for the light winds which we expect soon. And, apart from a few hours earlier in the race, our spinnaker has been safely in its bag.

The crew have gelled into a really excellent lot and the shifting mother watch system which sees movement of crew from one watch to another has meant that they are all getting to know one another and we have no inter watch rivalry but rather people willingly helping each other above and below decks which is excellent. At times it is difficult to discern who is on and who is off watch as the gybes seem to attract most of the crew to help out.

We are rapidly approaching half way, with currently 1225 miles done and 1609 miles to go. Just a measure on miles to go vs miles to go at the start, we will be halfway  when we have 1351 miles to go, but traditionally when our miles done exceeds our miles to go, it is party time ! The ETA for the finish has moved on to 5 December, but the GPS calculation has no way of telling that today will be a light and frustrating day with little progress towards the Rum Punch, or that we will be heading almost everywhere except on a course of 251 on Thursday as we deal with the strange weather on that day.

 

Sunday 27th, morning 4:30am

So far so good, the forecast wind shift happened pretty much bang on time, just the strength is a little more than forecast, but I’m not complaining about that. So we gybed at about 3:30. I naively thought I could be quiet about it and leave Kirstie and the other two watch leaders asleep, but at the first sign of noise, and in Kirsties case the deck flood light  shining into her cabin, both Andrew and Kirstie were up like jack rabbits willing and eager to help.

The gybe is well practiced now, and went smoothly and with the wind shifting almost as we gybed, we were left on a beam reach on the Port Gybe heading directly to Rodney Bay, St Lucia.

Hopefully the rest of the forecast is as accurate or with a little bit more wind and we can get through the lighter stuff today with minimal pain.

Ricky (Slightly Sleepy Skipper)

 

Bikini weather has finally arrived for the ARC 2016, with just a splattering of showers to keep us all on our toes. The crew have been enjoying a respite from the bouncy sea state as it calms down in the lighter winds.

We seem to be escaping from the dreaded light winds forecast for today, hopefully it will continue through the afternoon and we will be able to dive South for some warmer weather and to find the traditional trade route winds. We have a full suite of sails available to us, all in good condition, and are currently making excellent progress using our Yankee 1 and the Staysail as well as a full mainsail.

 

Ricky (Skipper)

 

 


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