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Cape Horn, Ocean UFO's, Merry Christmas




 
    Snow Pack lookin' good, 139% 

What a Christmas Present!

Vendee Globe leaders may be poised for a sailors dream
On or close to December 25.
Sailing around the Horn!


The "Cathedrals" make a sobering statement at the  southern tip of the Horn.
“In the evening 25 January 1616 the winde was South West, and that night wee went South with great waves or billowes out of the southwest, and very blew water, whereby wee judged, and held for certaine that ... it was the great South Sea, whereat we were exceeding glad to thinke that wee had discovered a way, which until that time, was unknowne to men, as afterward wee found it to be true.”
“... on 29 January 1616 we saw land againe lying north west and north northwest from us, which was the land that lay South from the straights of Magelan which reacheth Southward, all high hillie lande covered over with snow, ending with a sharpe point which wee called Cape Horne [Kaap Hoorn]" Willem Schouten, Captain, Dutch East India Company.


Use measurement tool to guesstimate what boat rounds the Horn closest to Christmas Day.


Well that's embarrassing.
Vendee Globe world map appears to have the Kerguelen Archipelago  in the wrong ocean.


All other resources place the Kerguelen Islands in the southern Indian Ocean.
Any K.I. experts out there?

Background:
The eighth Vendée Globe, which began November 6 from Les Sables d’Olonn, France, is the only non-stop solo round the world race without assistance. Twenty-nine skippers representing four continents and ten nations set sail on IMOCA 60s in pursuit of the record time set by François Gabart in the 2012-13 race of 78 days, 2 hours and 16 minutes.

For the first time in the history of the event, seven skippers will set sail on IMOCA 60s fitted with foils: six new boats (Banque Populaire VIII, Edmond de Rothschild, Hugo Boss, No Way Back, Safran, and StMichel-Virbac) and one older generation boat (Maitre Coq). The foils allow the boat to reduce displacement for speed gains in certain conditions. It will be a test to see if the gains can topple the traditional daggerboard configuration during the long and demanding race.

Retirements:
November 12, Day 7 – Tanguy de Lamotte, Initiatives Coeur, masthead crane failure
November 19, Day 14 – Bertrand de Broc, MACSF, UFO collision
November 22, Day 17 – Vincent Riou, PRB, UFO collision
November 24, Day 19 – Morgan Lagravière, Safran, UFO collision
December 4, Day 29 – Kojiro Shiraishi, Spirit of Yukoh, dismasted
December 6, Day 31 – Kito de Pavant, Bastide Otio, UFO collision
December 7, Day 32 – Sébastien Josse, Edmond de Rothschild, foil damage


UFO collision at sea.
a small look at what's floating around out there.

Winter Solstice.
Summer Sailstice.



Merry Christmas to all.



Bonneville School of Sailing
www.bonnevillesailing.com
801.636.5204

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Bonneville School of Sailing!

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