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May 30, 2005

Rolex Transatlantic 2005: Thunder Road, Mid-Atlantic

Aboard Sariyah May 30, 41 degrees 34 N, 42 degrees 33 W 1,635 miles 072 degrees to the finish off the Lizard, 1,414 miles at 267 degrees from the starting line.
by Tony Bessinger

Sariyah is on course and at speed.
The crew work is becoming smoother all the  time and our sailmaker
is hard at work down below. All's well and we're enjoying  warm,
sunny weather.  It's another beautiful day in the North Atlantic,
windspeeds up around 25 knots with gusts to 30 with boatspeeds up to 12
knots.

Yesterday afternoon Dave Guinan set a race record speed of 15.4 knots
while steering the boat with a poled out  genoa, yankee, full main
and half mizzen and wind speeds up to 35 knots. Ever since he set that
record the guys on my watch, particularly Blair, have been  trying
to beat it. It will be hard, because soon after Dave set the record we
figured we had too much sail up for the big breeze. It won't stop us
from trying  though.  

Another boat has dropped out, the Spanish entry Ocean Phoenix, which
has been steadily dropping behind the fleet. That makes three so far.
We've also had a  report that one of the crew on Sojana has been
hurt. We don't know the extent of  his injuries, but we hope he's
OK. Aside from some knocks on the head, a few rope burns, and a
slightly sprained hand, we've managed to avoid any major boat 
bites.

Although we're not quite halfway to the finish we're starting to smell the barn.
A pool has been started which will be rewarded to the watch that makes
the best VMG to the finish between now and then. In my mind it'll be my
B watch that wins, but we'll get some good competition from the other
two watches, especially  Tim and Kevin's. It'll be hard to beat a
gold medalist and the skipper with 11 years of experience driving
Sariyah.  

We just completed a bit of important maintenance. During a walk
around  inspection one of the crew discovered that the pin that
holds the main boom to the mainmast had worked its way out after three
solid days of downwind sailing in big breeze. There were only about
two-and-a-half threads left holding the nut on, so it required
immediate attention. Even though the boom is made of carbon fiber, it'd
be hard, if not impossible, to re-attach it, even if it survived the
fall to the deck. Crusty, our engineer, and Dave, along with a few
other guys, took care of the problem with a big hammer and a large
crescent wrench. Nothing is small on this boat, from the bulbs that go
into the running lights to the shackles that hold the sails tacked
down.   

For the first time in many days we saw another vessel
late yesterday afternoon. The closest it got to us was about two miles
away, and it looked like a large offshore fishing vessel of European
heritage. We tried raising them on VHF channel 16, but they weren't
monitoring their radio, a common occurrence on commercial vessels
offshore. By the time we get closer to England, the ship  traffic
should increase a great deal. We'll spend a lot of time on the radio
and  monitoring the radio, especially when we reach the crowded
waters of the English  Channel.

Unfortunately time ran out before the guys at Custom Navigation
could  install our Automatic Identification System, which is one
of the more interesting technologies on the market today. AIS is a
transmitter hooked up to  a ship's GPS, which sends out
information to other vessels equipped with the  system. It will
tell you the name of the vessel, as well as it's speed and heading. As
I've written before in SW, it's not a replacement for radar, but 
it's a great tool for traffic management. Navigation programs such as
Nobeltec and GPSNavX have updates their software to allow AIS
information to be displayed directly on the screen. The technology
aboard has made us feel much more connected to the real world 
than sailors were only ten years ago.

Our Fleet 33 MiniM satellite receiver/transmitter has allowed us to
browse the Internet (albeit slowly) send  and receive emails, and
access the New York YC website for position reports from  the rest
of the fleet. We take the positions of our closest competition every
six hours and plot them on Nobeltec, which gives us a good idea of the
other  boat's intentions and ways of thinking, a must for our
tactical planning. Every boat in the fleet is equipped with a
transceiver which sends speed, heading, and  position to the race
office, which posts the information to its website. We watched as
Mari-Cha IV drifted for twelve hours while effecting repairs to
what  we guessed was their headboards.

"The sailmakers design these headboards to be  light," says Peter
Harken. "They just don't allow for the massive loads they're 
under. Sometimes we get these specifications from them and just shake
our  heads."

We also saw that Stad Amsterdam wasn't going to finish the race in the
month of June, which probably explains why they dropped out.  

We just put the mizzen staysail back up. It's interesting to see how
smooth the crew work has become. What took us 15 minutes to do six days
ago now only takes  five. By the time we get to England we'll be
able to do sail evolutions even  faster.

Carol's down below fixing one of the other mizzen staysails, which we
put some small holes in last night. She's got a Bruce Springsteen DVD
on the big screen, and Bruce is singing about Thunder Road. We'll continue to thunder down the  rhumbline to England.        

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