CAMPER with Australian Chris Nicholson in charge

At 1900 UTC it was all about CAMPER with Australian Chris Nicholson in charge as he takes on the two boats ahead of him, cruising nicely at 23 knots plus in a strong north-westerly breeze.

 

Leg 1
Report: 11/11/2011 19:00:49 UTC
DTL DTLC BS DTF
1 GPMA 0.00 0.0 12.4 5155.0
2 PUMA 212.60 18.0 19.6 5367.6
3 TELE 215.20 2.0 14.3 5370.2
4 CMPR 279.10 28.0 23 5434.1
ADOR Retired from Leg 1
SNYA Retired from Leg 1

Nicholson has elected to take inside track 41 nautical miles (nm) to leeward of her two opponents in the west. PUMA’s Mar Mostro has upped her performance and taken 18 nm out of the leader, relegating Telefónica (Iker Martinez/ESP) to third place, three miles astern.

Tonight, CAMPER gained 28 nm in the period 1600 – 1900 and snatched back another 28 nm in the three hours leading up to the 2200 UTC report.

But it’s not looking quite so sweet for Franck Cammas and his team on Groupama 4 as they continue creeping along the shore towards the Cape Verde Islands at around 12 knots, sailing dead downwind. However, they are still 212 nm ahead of the chasing pack, 28 nm off the southernmost tip of Western Sahara and 486 nm from the Cape Verde Islands, which they will leave to port. Beyond the Cape Verdes is a vast windless zone, which they will need to avoid at all costs.

For the first time in this 6,500 nautical mile to Cape Town, we are starting to see some improved 24-hour runs after days of light airs and very little progress. Groupama 4 has achieved the highest 24-hour run of 272 nm, followed by PUMA’s Mar Mostro (268), Telefónica (246) and CAMPER (246).

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