
Ocean Planet Vendée
Globe Update:
Wednesday, December 1, 2004
Brian
Hancock - Race Report
On a Southbound Train
The lyrics of the song
Southbound Train, popularized by Nanci Griffith a decade ago, must
be rolling through Bruce Schwab's head as he makes his way down
the South Atlantic. In fact, if I know Bruce, he may already have
picked up his guitar and, in a quieter moment on board, strummed
the song to himself. He is indeed on a southbound train skirting
under the St. Helena High and keeping an eye on both the barometer
and the sky for a change that will signal his entrance into the
deep south.
It's been a good week
for Ocean Planet and Bruce has sailed tactically better than the
other skippers that make up the chasing pack. While they battled
with frustrating weather in an attempt to get through the ridge
of high pressure that had formed in their path, Bruce made a bold
decision to sail around the western edge of the High. His strategy
worked. Ocean Planet may have had to sail extra miles, but the speed
was good and the conditions perfect for the narrow Open 60. The
result was that Bruce claimed back the miles he lost when the conditions
favored the beamier, more powerful 60s, and he has not lost touch
with the chasing pack.
At
the front of the fleet, the leaders have already picked up the strong
westerly winds and are romping along at breakneck speeds. British
sailor Mike Golding aboard Ecover recorded his top speed of 31 knots
shortly after finding the new wind, while Jean le Cam, currently
in first place on Bonduelle, is finding the seas large and unpredictable.
In the next day or so Bruce will finally enter the roughest and
most exhilarating part of the race; the infamous Southern Ocean.
In truth, the Southern
Ocean is that body of water that surrounds Antarctica between the
land mass of the Antarctic continent and 60 degrees south. Technically,
Ocean Planet may never reach the Southern Ocean, but, for decades,
sailors have referred to the area below 40 degrees south, where
the big seas and strong westerly winds constantly blow, as the Southern
Ocean. In any event, it's the deep south where the sailing is along
a razors edge between pure pleasure and pure terror.
Once below 40 degrees
south, the weather is dominated by a series of continual low pressure
systems. These troughs of low pressure roam around Antarctica in
a west-to-east direction, at times disintegrating before reforming
again and gaining strength as they march ever onwards. The wind
rotates clockwise around what's usually a tight center, meaning
that it's important for the skippers to remain above the center
of each system. If they remain vigilant and the low passes below
them, they will experience a strong westerly air flow; if they miscalculate
the system's path, or if it makes an unexpected turn to the north,
the sailors will discover their own personal hell. The wind will
be from the east blowing against a following sea state, and the
boats will be pounding upwind into indescribable seas.
Because the low pressure
systems rotate around Antarctica, and because the only land mass
that interrupts their path is Cape Horn, they build up a huge seaway.
These massive waves, often measuring over 100 feet from crest to
trough, are what give the skippers their incredible speeds as they
surf down the wave fronts. Fortunately the peaks are quite far apart
and the swells are usually fairly even and predictable. However,
other factors often play into it and the seas can become nasty ship
killers. As the Southern Ocean waves approach the African coast,
the continental shelf causes the leading swells to slow down. This
results in the peaks being much closer together and the waves become
steep and dangerous. Many ships have been swallowed up and either
disappeared completely, or broken in two after being caught in the
wrong place at the wrong time.
These dangers are squarely
on Bruce's mind as he and the tight group of nine boats he is sailing
in company with close in on the Cape of Good Hope. A low pressure
system that formed off South America has brought favorable winds
to the group, but the system is forecast to stall as it approaches
the African coast and could disintegrate into an unpredictable area
of calm winds. For now, the chasing pack that includes Ocean Planet
is still more than 10 degrees above the latitude of the leaders.
They need to get south to intercept with the next low pressure system
heading their way, but it's going to be tricky. If they slow down
due to the low stalling out, the next system could conceivably slam
into them just as they approach the shallow waters of the continental
shelf. It's going to be interesting to see what happens. Whatever
takes place will only be the first of many tactical and challenging
situations the skippers will find themselves in as they circumnavigate
Antarctica.
Brian Hancock
great.circle@verizon.net
Bruce Schwab, Skipper
USA 05/Ocean Planet
Web: www.bruceschwab.com
Education: www.oceanplanet.org
Email: bruce@bruceschwab.com
Phone: 843-670-6582
This American team for the Vendee Globe is made possible by your
donations to The Made in America Foundation (www.bruceschwab.com/support.cfm),
and our supplier sponsors:
Coast-Line International: www.coast-lineintl.com
Doyle Sailmakers: www.doylesails.com
Equiplite lightweight connectors: www.equiplite.com
Infomatrix: www.infomatrix-usa.com
MAS Epoxies: www.masepoxies.com
Nobeltec navigation software: www.nobeltec.com
Portland Yacht Services: www.portlandyacht.com
Samson rope technologies: www.samsonrope.com
Solara Energy Systems: www.solaraenergy.com
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