Tuesday, March 3, 2009

VOR Approaching Scoring Gate

With the satellites all back up and working after their re-organisation in space, the Volvo Ocean Race fleet found itself approaching the Doldrums on their port reach south towards the islands of Fiji, an area where receiving satellite weather information is key to success.

Ericsson 4 (Torben Grael/BRA) was the first boat to ‘officially’ park as the wind died and the backmarkers started to make serious inroads in to the lead. The fleet was picking its way through the Marshall Islands, a group of 29 atolls and five islands and an area so interesting that most of the teams were absorbed in the digital version of the Pacific Pilot book. Ian Walker had elected to keep Green Dragon as far to the east as possible, a move that would take a week to play out. PUMA (Ken Read/USA) had closed to within 21 nm of Ericsson 4 and Ericsson 3 (Magnus Olsson/SWE) was just three miles further back. But the gap of over 200 nm separating Telefónica Blue (Bouwe Bekking/NED) who had started 19 hours after the rest of the fleet after a ‘rocky’ experience at the start had begun to close and both she and Green Dragon started to cash in.

The two islands of Fiji have split the pack of five as they race in leg five of the Volvo Ocean Race towards Rio de Janeiro. Telefónica Blue (Bouwe Bekking/NED) and PUMA (Ken Read/USA) opted to dodge reefs and atolls and sail between the two Polynesian islands, while the rest of the fleet went to the east. Luckily, for PUMA and Telefónica Blue, the job was completed during daylight hours, which made avoiding uncharted hazards less of a problem, and gave the two crews the chance to plan their next family holidays to these exotic islands. However, it did involve constant tacking and stacking, almost hourly, which was time consuming and costly.

After more than 5,000 miles of racing, PUMA (Ken Read/USA) takes the lead, but has both Ericsson 4 (Torben Grael/BRA) and Ericsson 3 (Magnus Olsson/SWE) in sight. Slightly further west, Telefónica Blue (Bouwe Bekking/NED) lurks just over the horizon, with Green Dragon (Ian Walker/GBR) close by. Sailing is no different from other sports in that when the competition is close, the pressure is on to up the game. The scoring gate at latitude 36 degrees south is just 433 nautical miles away, a tantalisingly close distance, but still more than a day’s sail at the current speeds of around 12.5 knots. Currently, the seas are calm and the wind moderate, and for the first time since the start in Qingdao, the Volvo Ocean Race fleet has spinnakers set. In fact, it all sounds perfect.

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