It Was a Beautiful Day

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Leg 5, Day 8 blog from Amory

LOCATION: Middle of nowhere, deep south, day 4
BOATSPEED: 18 KTS
WINDSPEED: 21 KTS
HEADING: 120-degrees
DISTANCE TO CAPE HORN: 1,800 miles

Today was a great day among good ones, and for no reason in particular. Sometimes a bunch of little things add up and you find yourself riding a high of the likes you haven’t felt in far too long. We’ve had an intense week of fairly constant abuse and it’s always nice when someone turns down the volume for a short while.

A few contributing factors:

- Casey’s up and running. I told him he was getting a first-hand experience for what the MCM’s have to live like: look but don’t touch. Everyone’s happy to see he and Thomas on their way to full recoveries, only just in time for another hard few days of 30-40 knots on the approach towards the Cape.

- It was a beautiful day. The weather eased up just enough to actually enjoy being outside. The sun was out all day and I wore my sunglasses for the first time since Auckland. While tearing through the Southern Ocean at 30 knots is fun and fast, it’s exhausting, and today’s down speed lulls were refreshingly quiet and uneventful. There was plenty of story telling on the tanning deck behind the wheels.

- The beef stroganoff has been found! One of the onboard favorites, we packed a bunch for this leg but up until this afternoon, it had gone missing. Better late than never…

- Telefónica and CAMPER’s problems have given us some much-needed breathing room. Our “take the foot off the gas” mentality has gotten us this far, but it’s not always the quickest and there’s no comfort in seeing everyone else around you going faster. We’re extremely happy everyone’s safe and well, but there’s no hiding the fact that their absence has taken the pressure off and lightened the mood considerably.

- We’re closer to Cape Horn than we are New Zealand. Progress has been slow to realize this leg given the hard conditions and lack of sleep, but with less than 2,000 miles to a major milestone – maybe the milestone – we have something to look forward to!

So that’s it, or at least all I can think of at this time. A great day onboard PUMA’s Mar Mostro.

- Amory

Amory Ross

Media Crew Member

PUMA Ocean Racing powered by BERG

“Brushing my teeth for the first time…I’m going to use twice the amount of toothpaste to cover me the rest of the way.” – Casey Smith
 

Sailing

Comments

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Bobbie Bode

From Cincinnati, OH
I am so glad Casey is doing better. I was very concerned about him and Thomas. Best of luck, guys! Be safe!
Mar 26 2012

Oriana Townley

From Spain
Tell Kenny to keep topping up with the peanut butter and jelly as you`ve gained a few nm on Groupama,so it must be some good fuelling stuff. Stay safe all of you,we`re all cheering you on all the way around the Globe.Saludos de Alicante!!
Mar 26 2012

Thorsten

From Berlin
Every team is totally exhausted. It is hard to push on, taking off the reef hoisting the gennaker when wind is dropping. I've done it once across the north atlantic - please no more change of sails, 4 spinnaker blown apart. This is crucial. If you're able to ignite the extra force, you will increase pressure on Groupama and may and up winning this leg.
Mar 26 2012

Andy Ledins

From United States
I think Casey brushed his teeth so he could taste the beef stroganoff whereas the other stuff....... Good work guys, keep it up !
Mar 27 2012