We'll See What Happens

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Leg 4, Day 5 blog from Amory

LOCATION: 175 miles W of Okinawa, Japan
BOATSPEED: 12.5 KTS
WINDSPEED: 18 KTS
HEADING: 060 degrees
SAILS: Full main, small jib

It only gets stranger. We’re surrounded by Japanese islands, one of which we passed within a mile of last night, and being by ourselves is again a surprise. Nobody’s necessarily excited about it, and it was never part of our game plan to begin with, but we’re clearly sailing in a different weather system than the rest of the guys and it just sort of “happened.”

Our reasoning to go north was grounded: you have to go there to get east, and you have to go east to get south, and south is where we want to finish. So we followed our favorable breeze and trusted the computer models, all the time hoping the rest would follow. They didn’t – at least not yet – and they’ve all managed to survive an early easting.

Whether it was one cloud line or several, it doesn’t much matter. What matters is that we never had what everyone else did. To add insult to injury, when we finally found the penultimate shift to start our long trek east into, we had to wait for five miles to avoid tacking through a microscopic volcanic summit – only two years old! Hello Taisho To. Welcome to Earth.

By any measure we are still doing the right thing for our particular set of circumstances. Tom and Ken have worked tirelessly to decode the forecasts, and the computer models don’t tend to lie. So we, like you, will just have to wait this one out and see what happens.

What amazes me still though, is the ability of this team to work through continued adversity. It has been a sleepless couple of days, a tough leg, an even tougher race, and nobody has given up an inch of effort or enthusiasm. I’m happy to slug it out up here along with these 10 guys, even if it is in VOR solidarity.

- Amory

Amory Ross

Media Crew Member

PUMA Ocean Racing powered by BERG

Sailing

Comments

Add Your Voice 4

Bear

From NY
You guys are staying true to your competitive theme, taking the risk and staying on an edge. It isn't always the cards you are dealt, but how you play the hand. I love this about this team. Keep the sails tight ! ! ! !
Feb 24 2012

Bill

From Seattle
Can anybody but the Puma crew find this "microscopic volcanic summit called Taisho To -- only two years old” referenced by Puma MCM Ross? Lat/Lon please.
Feb 24 2012

Bear

From NY
WOWOWOWOW look at your speed tonight!!! 17 Go GO GO GO GO GO
Feb 25 2012

Gary Sargent

From Ireland
This race is all about guts and I hope the marketing men for PUMA or SANYA don't focus too much on the prize. PUMA lit up the last race simply by being the team they were and Ken Reid and the guys for me are the reason this race is so special - you find yourself asleep at night wishing them on, mile after mile, knot for knot. Sanya also have you wanting every once of boatspeed on deck flying in the face of all their adversity. Neither may win this race but they win over those who want something to believe in; more importantly they make the neutral observer sit up and take notice. That is brand recognition... Speed on boys - loving the racing.
Feb 25 2012