Coville round Cape Horn, Le Cléac'h peaks at 47kts
Coville round Cape Horn, Le Cléac'h peaks at 47kts
Very early Monday morning, at 00:40hrs UTC, Thomas Coville, skipper of Sodebo Ultim 3 passed Cape Horn in third place on the ARKÉA ULTIM CHALLENGE-Brest. Coville crossed almost five days after race leader Charles Caudrelier and less than 24 hours after second placed Armel Le Cléac'h. His elapsed time to the Cape since the start is 35 days, 12 hours and 10 minutes of racing. All three top skippers are now racing in in the Atlantic.
"I think Cape Horn one of the most fascinating places for a sailor". Said Coville yesterday, a few hours before rounding Cape Horn. He spoke of a huge level of relief and described Ferdinand Magellan as "the greatest sailor of all time".
"There were too many clouds for me to see the snow-capped mountains," Coville said this morning. "But it's a pretty fantastic place, it marks something very strong. It's the tipping point."
The skipper of Sodebo Ultim 3 had to manoeuvre a lot in order to get quite close to the rocks," reported Guillaume Evrard from Race Direction. " He was forecast to have 25 to 30 knots with 3.5 meters of swell and that will build during the day with a second very substantial depression which will catch up with him this evening."
Le Cléac'h and Caudrelier, each dealing with their own realities.
More than 200 miles further north, second placed Armel Le Cléac'h is closing the Argentinian coast. Looking to avoid this same depression as threatens Coville, he chose to sail along Tierra del Fuego. "Even though he had a lot of winds (up to 45 knots, top speeds of more than 40 knots), that route allowed him to have conditions that were a little less strong and a little more manageable," explains Evrard. "In the last few hours, he had 42 knots of wind and was 'speed gunned' at 47 knots!
Leader Charles Caudrelier is making progress not far from the Brazilian coast. "He's continuing his upwind climb and looking for the strongest vein of wind. As soon as it gets light he tacks to take advantage of the coastal effects. He will continue upwind until this evening when he will start a tack, the end of the manoeuvres for a long climb up the coast of Brazil towards the north before heading a bit more east."
Marchand adapts, Péron progresses
Anthony Marchand continues to make progress in the Pacific Ocean. The skipper of Actual Ultim 3 is at the back of a small depression. "He's making an average of 25 knots with 25 knots of wind, which shows that the boat is far from being at 100% of its capacity," says Evrard. "He is in southwesterly winds and is expected to remain in this flow until Wednesday."
And Éric Péron runs along the AEZ and has passed the longitude of Tasmania.
"He will benefit from winds that will strengthen from the northwest and a depression will accompany it to the middle of the Pacific. The skipper of ULTIM ADAGIO could enjoy some nice straight line speed which he ca maintain without maneuvers until next Thursday."