STORMY NIGHT SEES MAXI-CAT ORANGE
AHEAD OF RECORD BY ONE HUNDRED MILES
The third day of the record attempt has been the most favourable
for Bruno Peyron's maxi-catamaran Orange. Since yesterday,
the maxi-cat is ahead of the schedule set by the American
Steve Fossett by one hundred miles.
At 1100 hours this morning Orange was
14.3 miles away from rounding Muckle Flugga, the Northern
most tip of the British Isles. Orange is humming along at
20-25 knots, and by the middle of last night had made up some
of the distance during yesterday's light winds. This morning,
after a fast sail through a stormy night of strong winds (35
to 40 knots) and an angry sea, the giant Orange was 12 hours
ahead of the record. The weather conditions remain difficult
for Bruno Peyron and his crew. Today they will be up against
strong southerly winds — precisely the heading on which
they have to sail, which will mean an uncomfortable day sailing
for all on board.
Skipper, Bruno Peyron said during an
audio call this morning, "An amazing early morning at
61° N. We are now close to the very Northern tip or Britain,
after a rather rough night in winds of 35-40 knots and a cross
sea over the plateaux to the north of Scotland. We sailed
very fast indeed last night and by this morning we were a
hundred miles ahead of Steve Fossett's record. For the moment,
we are at 25-35 knots. It's pretty wet and wild. We've been
pushing the boat hard since yesterday. Neal claims that we
even topped 42 knots at one point!. Neal Mac Donald, co skipper
added, "It's true. What an exciting but busy night —
lots of reefs in and out. The flat water however, has allowed
us to reach tremendous speeds that have eaten up the miles
lost."
When asked about the record, Bruno added,
"Nothing is decided yet as now we've got to head south
straight into southerly winds. This will mean beating upwind
in strong winds which unfortunately will increase the length
of our course two-fold. We'll no doubt lose a bit of our lead.
It'll all depend on how we come out of this system. This we
will find out in the next 12 hours or so. As things stand,
we are making the most of the incredible sunrise over the
Shetland Islands. 61° N, the same latitude north as the
Cape Horn is south — the light is very similar. Some
of the guys are busy up on deck manoeuvring. Donning their
foul weather gear, harnessed on and wearing ski goggles to
keep the spray (travelling at 25 — 30 knots) out of
their eyes. This is wild but brilliant sailing — rare
moments we are all making the most of."
Reminder : to beat Steve Fossett's 1994
record, Orange has to cross the finish line (Isle of Wight
- UK) before Sunday 18th August at 7h 4mn and 46 s.
Download high-definition copyright free
images on from on board Orange on: http://ocftp.com/images/orange/
Listen to or download the day's radio
chat session: http://ocftp.com/audio/orange_uk_1508a.mp3
Press Office Maxi-Catamaran Orange : Mer & Média
Bénédicte Etienne : Mob : +33/(0)6 07 08 24
57 - be.mer.media@wanadoo.fr
Copyright free Images TV:
APP / Richard Simmonds : +44 (0) 776 886 6371 - rsimmonds@appbroadcast.com
2P2L / Gérard Supau : +33/(0)6 07 42 57 92 - gsupau@wanadoo.fr