Foto copyright Rolex/Carlo Borlenghi
Alegre, primero en llegar a Génova en tiempo real
Foto copyright Rolex/Carlo Borlenghi
Bel, primero en virar la isla
Fuente info www.regattanews.com
St.Tropez, France / Genoa, Italy
June 18, 2009
If patience is a virtue, than the 190-boat Giraglia fleet had it in spades early this morning as the boats seemingly crept towards La Giraglia rock and the turn towards the finish in Genoa, 90 miles away.
After Wednesday's start of the 243-nautical mile race in St Tropez, the breeze slowly built and once the fleet rounded La Fourmigue to head for La Giraglia a northeasterly of 8 - 10 knots settled in, and backed enough to let the boats enjoy a close reach on the rhumbline to the rock. Through Wednesday night the fleet made slow but steady progress, but just before sunrise, the wind died out.
Near the front of the fleet, Bella Mente navigator Robert Hopkins emailed, “As of 0500, we have been becalmed for an hour. Container has coasted to a stop to our north and Alegre appears to be less than a .5 mile behind us. We still have 21.9 mi to go to the rock. At this rate, assuming our current boat speed of 0.2 knots, it will take 100 hours or a little more than 4 days to get there. Hope the wind fills in before then.” An hour later he added, “At 0600, we're ghosting along under our windseeker. Boatspeed 4.3 kts, windspeed 3.7 kts. The sea is like a mirror.” Finally, at 1015 local time, the Open 60 Group Bel (FRA), with skipper Kito de Pavant rounded La Giraglia first, followed Andres Soriano's Mills 68 Alegre (GBR) - the first of the Mini Maxis - then Hap Fauth's Bella Mente (USA). Then came a slow, but steady parade and by 1215, 32 boats had rounded.
With the breeze so light, the fleet is fairly compacted which gives the smaller boats have an excellent chance to do well on corrected time. In fact, the TP52 Paprec (FRA) rounded only 22 minutes after Group Bel, and the first Swan 45, Fever (GBR), rounded only seven minutes later. By 1330, Bella Mente was only 11 miles down the track from La Giraglia, and Hopkins offered, “We're parked again. The weak NE'ly that carried us this far has died. In theory, it will be replaced by a WSW in a couple of hours, which will build to as much as 8 kts and back to the SSW, but that too will die with the sun, leaving us parked outside of Genoa once again. Three parking lots in one regatta! ETA is 45 minutes after midnight, but honestly, who can say? Sailboats need wind.”
With the current weather conditions, an estimated finish is still anyone's guess. Steve Hayles, navigator on Ran emailed midday to say, “Very light and variable forecast. Probably less than 5 knots most of the time. ETA will be very difficult to get anywhere near right. Probably around day break tomorrow (Friday). It's a small boat race so far and the little guys will be close behind us.”
The elapsed time race record of 18 hours, 3 minutes, 15 seconds set in 2008 by Neville Crichton on Alfa Romeo, the 100-foot (30.4m) super-maxi, remains safe for another year. By 1630, 64 yachts had rounded the La Giraglia rock. The finish line for the Giraglia distance race is just off Sturla in Genoa. The fleet will dock at the Yacht Club Italiano.
Information on the Giraglia Rolex Cup, including full race results from the inshore racing can be found at the Yacht Club Italiano's website at Italiano www.yci.it.