Making their way towards the North as fast as they can in order to catch the strong (25 knots) easterlies blowing west of the Canary Islands, the Franco-Irish team have been keeping busy at the chart table for the past four days, trying to figure out how to avoid their "invisible" enemy.
"We'll have a hard time determining how the high pressure system might move, and things will be difficult all the way to Gibraltar, basically", said Jean-Pierre. Weather models seem to contradict each other and tactical decisions will have to be made very cautiously - "It's not the right time to make a big mistake, so we're assessing various scenarios, examining all the options we have", added Paprec-Virbac 2's skipper, before concluding, "For the moment, it's a matter of catching those easterlies before they drop. that would certainly give us an edge."
Further back, for Hugo Boss it's still "painfully slow. but we're getting there", said Capey today. Grey weather, 15 knots of wind blowing from the North East. the song remains the same, and Gibraltar lies some 12 days ahead for the Men in Black.
Temenos II and Mutua Madrilena are both up to speed, with a similar average of 12 knots, their passage towards Gate 7 facilitated by steadier east north-easterly trade winds. Dominique and Michele are now just over 400 miles from Fernando de Noronha, with the Spanish boat just 91 miles behind both should cross the gate in the next 48 hours.
Currently benefiting from steady south-easterlies off the Brazilian coast, Educacion Sin Fronteras is this afternoon the fastest boat in the fleet, and should continue to gain miles on the leaders, helped by a low pressure system located off Rio de Janeiro.
1. Paprec-Virbac 2 - Jean Pierre Dick / Damian Foxall - 2164 To Finish
2. Hugo Boss - Alex Thomson / Andrew Cape - 459
3. Temenos 2 - Dominique Wavre / Michele Paret- 1454
4. Mutua Madrilena - Javier Sanso / Pachi Rivero - 1544
5. Educacion Sin Fronteras - Servane Escoffier / Albert Bargues - 2788
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