Outimage Publications ocean yacht racing coverage of
the VOR 2008-2009.
Ericsson 4 Crew Email
Leg Two Day 15 - 15:47 GMT Saturday, November 29, 2008.
We are currently approaching Cochin in very light winds, 2 miles offshore of the sub-continent, trying to find some night breeze to get us to the finish line.
The air smells damp, earthy and of wood smoke which is generally a good sign that we may get a few zephyrs to move us on our way. The day has been frustrating and we have been slowed by clouds rain and a peak of 5.6 knots of wind speed.
Skipper Torben Grael looking for
wind, onboard Ericsson 4, on leg 2 of the Volvo Ocean
Race, from Cape Town, South Africa to Cochin, India.
This leg has ended like the lamb rather than the first week of lion-like conditions. We have seen the fleet strung out over
600 miles yet still to me, the final outcome is unsure as the weather is so variable and light, and the factor that these
boats are capable of such high speeds.
This time last night I couldn’t type as the boat was bouncing around sitting on 26 knots in 30 knots of wind and I was watching us take 40nm a 3 hour sched out of boats... tonight we are doing 3 knots and losing 40nm a sched.
The tension is mounting amongst the crew that all our hard work on the leg will end with us being overtaken at the
finishing post, so some hard night hours ahead, trimming the sails and the boat.
The Volvo Ocean Race 2008-09 will be the 10th
running of this ocean marathon. Starting from Alicante in Spain,
on 4 October 2008 with in-port racing, it will, for the first
time, take in Cochin, India, Singapore and Qingdao, China before
finishing in St Petersburg, Russia for the first time in the
history of the race.
Spanning some 37,000 nautical miles, stopping
at 11 ports and taking nine months to complete,
the Volvo Ocean Race is the world's premier
yacht race for professional racing crews.