Day 28, Friday May 7, 1999

Bvaracci.jpg (15273 bytes)
© Photo Richard Konkolski

By the end of the day Giovanni Soldini was only 80 miles from the finish line fighting through a line of thunderstorms. It was expected, that Giovanni would cut down the Around Alone race record of 120 days, 22 hours, 36 minutes and 35 seconds. In the meantime Marc Thiercelin could shake off the light winds and get very good conditions for his finishing.

FolGarsideSteerinDet.jpg (26234 bytes) Michael Garside

In the Class II fight, Mouligne lost more miles to Garside during the last 24 hours. Garside moved west and found a narrow band of wind, extending his lead over JP to 280 miles. Despite 911 miles left to Mouligne to finish the race, he was getting ready for another week at sea. He reported: "I am moving extremely slowly toward Charleston and at that speed I am looking at another week at sea! A big high-pressure system is moving in next, and will act as a giant cushion between us and the finish line. Sometimes the wind gets to about 12- to 14-knots and the speed jumps to 9 knots but most of the time six- or seven-knots is all we get and we are creeping along downwind at 4 knots... [I have] a very simple strategy: how the hell can I get to Charleston before Mike does?"

Victor Yazykov © Photo Billy Black BBYazykovPortret.jpg (23622 bytes)

In fourth place, Viktor Yazykov today was 1,313 miles from the finish. He was sailing without self-steering gear and spending 18 to 20 hours a day at the tiller. He was very creative in developing methods to keep his boat moving. For the duration of his short cooking time or navigation, he was attaching a shock chord back from the tiller to one side and some rope through a turning block into the cabin. That way he could somehow steer from inside, but during that time he was always loosing speed and miles. Victor was already feeling tired, but still not complaining. Unfortunately he had a high chance of getting caught in a high pressure system very soon as he hasn’t moved further to west some days ago. He could be stuck in very light conditions for up to three days.

Neal Petersen, Minoru Saito and Neil Hunter, who were sailing behind Yazykov, still had time to change course further west through the Caribbean and avoid the large light wind area, but this would add about 300 miles to their course.

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© Photo Richard Konkolski

Positions:

Class 1

Place Skipper Boat Latitude Longitude Dist. to go Speed Dist. to first Time
1 Soldini Fila 31 26N 079 08W 80 14.8 0 2140
2 Thiercelin Somewhere 28 35N 074 20W 373 7.7 293 2140

Class 2

Place Skipper Boat Latitude Longitude Dist. to go Speed Dist. to first Time
1 Garside Magellan Alpha 23 55N 073 06W 631 10.6 0 2144
2 Mouligne Cray Valley 21 48N 067 48W 911 12 280.1 2144
3 Yazykov Wind of Change 19 59N 059 47W 1313 6.3 682 2144
4 Petersen No Barriers 10 48N 051 06W 2055 8.2 1423.8 2144
5 Saito Shuten-dohji II 09 24N 050 02W 2159 7.4 1572.3 2144
6 Hunte Paladin II 08 21N 045 53W 2380 5.1 1689.6 2144
7 Van Liewr Balance Bar 06 29N 047 18W 2397 10 1765.5 2144

Copyright © Richard Konkolski
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