As the first transatlantic race exclusively for Class40 yachts, the inaugural La Solidaire du Chocolat double-handed race is turning into a gruelling, 5,000 mile marathon for the teams involved.
Starting from St. Nazaire in the northern quarter of the Bay of Biscay and running across the North Atlantic and through the Caribbean to Progresso, Mexico, on the northern limit of the Yucatán Peninsular, the race became a battle for survival within 24 hours of the start on Sunday 18th October for all the 24 entries: teams that include Felipe Cubillos and Desafio Cabo de Hornos who took second place in the 2008-09 Portimão Global Ocean Race and two boats already entered in the Global Ocean Race 2011-12; Vendée Globe and Whitbread-Round-the-World Race veteran, Patrice Carpentier on Crédit Maritime and the Class40 President, Jacques Fournier sailing Groupe Picoty with the Class40 Treasurer, Jean-Edouard Criquioche.
After a deceptively benign start off St. Nazaire in a very light north-easterly breeze, the second night at sea was brutal with a fast-moving cold front sweeping through the fleet delivering gusts of 50 knots and building huge seas. As the teams went into survival mode, some casualties were inevitable during the Biscay maelstrom. Pushing hard in the top half of the fleet and separated by a handful of miles, Entreprendre En Coopératives of Benoît Parnaudeau and Stanislas Maslard and Les Conquérants de Normandie-Caen la Mer of Marc Lepesqueux and Jean-Charles Monnet retired almost simultaneously. Parneaudeau and Maslard pulling out of the race due to delamination forward of the mast sustained when their three year-old Nacira Class40 flew off a wave and slammed into a trough, while Lepesquex and Monnet suffered electrical failure and muscle injury during the storm.
As the front passed, leaving steep and confused seas in its path, the leading trio of yachts began to separate from the bulk of the fleet with the race leaders, Bruno Jourdren and Bernard Stamm on Cheminées Poujoulat heading almost due west and chased hard by Thierry Bouchard and Oliver Krauss on Pole Sante Elior-Mistral Loisirs in second place and Initiatives-Novedia of Tanguy de Lamotte and Adrien Hardy in third with just a handful of miles separating the three boats. Meanwhile, the formidable Italian team of Giovanni Soldini and Pietro d’Ali on Telecom Italia split from the fleet heading south-west, directly for Cape Finisterre.
In the aftermath of the gale, more damage was revealed with Yvan Noblet and Damien Guillou on Appart City forced to retire with the mainsail torn below the second reef and rudder problems. Soon afterwards, the American duo of MacKenzie Davis and Brian Harris on Amhas informed the race office that they were retiring with electrical and pilot problems and the British team of Richard Tolkien and Neal Brewer on Orca pulled out of the race with severe structural problems around the foot of the mast.
Early on the morning of the third day at sea, the front pack of the fleet rounded Cape Finisterre with Jourdren and Stamm holding first place furthest offshore on Cheminées Poujoulat still chased hard by Pole Sante Elior-Mistral Loisirs and Initiatives-Novedia with the trio spread by just 22 miles. Before setting off across the Atlantic, two boats opted to make pit stops for vital repairs: Vale Inco Nouvelle Calédonie of Yves Eclaret and Lionel Regnier pulled into La Coruña on the Spanish coast before dawn on Wednesday for sail repairs and Patrice Carpentier sailing with a Mexican co-skipper, Victor Maldonado, took Crédit Maritime into the small fishing port of Camarinas, just north of Cape Finisterre, to make vital autopilot repairs.
With the first storm denying the double-handed teams any opportunity to slip into an offshore rhythm, a second storm promised headwinds as the fleet sailed south along the coast of Spain and Portugal. A few hours before the heavy weather arrived, a sixth boat, PHR of Pascal Doin and Laurent Mermod, retired with autopilot problems and headed north-east to Quiberon.
On the fourth night, the second, north-westerly storm ripped through the fleet, but the toughened teams survived intact despite the horrific conditions. As daylight broke on Thursday, the Solidaire du Chocolat fleet were heading south, waiting for the first boat to tack west towards the Azores and the first turning mark in the course: the island of Flores. In the mid-afternoon, the three lead boats - Cheminées Poujoulat, Pole Sante Elior-Mistral Loisirs and Initiatives-Novedia – made the break westwards and by midnight the majority of the fleet had followed, leaving a handful of boats to continue south.
Friday night delivered a third storm for the group heading west with winds reaching 32 knots while the five Class40s taking the southern option were stalled by light headwinds. Following the storm, the first leadership change in the race was at 0800 GMT as Tanguy de Lamotte and Adrien Hardy on Initiatives-Novedia heading the southern pack of westward boats overhauled Bruno Jourdren and Bernard Stamm on Cheminées Poujoulat and Thierry Bouchard and Oliver Krauss on Pole Sante Elior-Mistral Loisirs as Jourdren and Bouchard’s Class40s stalled in light airs and the southern pack piled on towards the Azores at eight knots.
On Sunday morning, there was one clear focus for the fleet heading towards the Azores: a deep Low Pressure system centred 500 miles north-west of the islands. Currently just 15 miles east of Santa Maria – the most southerly island in the group – at 0800 GMT this morning, Tanguy de Lamotte and Adrien Hard on Initiatives-Novedia and the more southern group should miss the brunt of the headwinds while Thierry Bouchard and Oliver Krauss in second place on Pole Sante Elior-Mistral Loisirs and the pack further north will have stronger headwinds as they approach the archipelago. Furthest north in the fleet, Stephen Card and Shaun Murphy in ninth place on ORBIS have to drop almost 400 miles south-west to reach the mandatory waypoint of Flores in the Azores and will encounter the strongest, upwind breeze in the fleet.
Quotes from the boats:
Miranda Merron (co-skipper 40 Degrees): “Naturally, we are yet again gently slamming into waves, upwind to the next low. The Musto drysuit remains in use for the foreseeable future. It's time to read the tea leaves, and make offerings to the gods regarding the lack of Trade Winds to the south.”
Felipe Cubillos (skipper Desafio Cabo de Hornos): “My head injury? My head is still crazy after all these years! Nothing serious. I’m just wondering what we are doing here. I’m dreaming of being in a house, with a TV, with my dog, living by internet and watching these crazy guys sailing!”
Yves Ecarlat (skipper Vale Inco Nouvelle Calédonie): “During the pre-race medical briefing, the doctor advised us that prehistoric man survived on 1,600 calories/day. This deprivation enabled him to roam the ancient plains in a constant state of alertness and avoid any encounters with sabre-toothed tigers or other ravenous wild beasts. Well, I conclude that our ancestors were deranged! Last night I ate a tartiflette (thank you SuperU!) and this morning I can report that there wasn’t a drooling carnivore prowling around the cabin. I tell you this in the name of advancing science…”
Erik Nigon (skipper Axa Atout Coeur Pour Aides):“Let the professionals go north while we take the southern route.”
Tim Wright (skipper Sail4Cancer): “We’re going to try and get some kip as there’s some more weather coming ahead. We’re still stonking through about 20-25 knots at the moment, up to 30 in the squalls. You really have to wonder what you’ve done wrong!”
Denis Lazat (skipper Plan): “The boat’s been slamming about for three days now and it rained all day today: tropical rain in terms of intensity, but Nordic rain for its temperature! I’d signed-up for downwind sailing south, not upwind boat-breaking seas in the cold! Message for Jacques Fournier our class President: I want my Class40 subs back!”
Bernard Stamm (co-skipper Cheminées Poujoulat): “So, the third storm has passed through with the unstable breeze topping out at 32 knots and big seas. We now have a short break with less wind before the next big blow. I hope this is the last one as I think we have all earned a change in the weather.”