With the 2024 Rolex Middle Sea Race more than 24 hours old, the story so far has been dominated by dramatic fluctuations in the wind conditions and sea state.
At 16:00 on Sunday, the bulk of the fleet was sailing in generally light airs, spread between Capo Murro di Porco in the south and midway between the islands of Alicudi and Ustica, off the north coast of Sicily.
Remon Vos’ Black Jack 100 held a slim advantage over Huang-Seng Lee’s Scallywag 100 from Hong Kong and the United States entry, Bryon Ehrhardt’s 88ft Lucky, with the Maxi72 Balthasar still in the frame, just.
Some12 yachts have passed Stromboli, and the course mark of Strombolicchio.
Times at this transit point put the German Botin 56 Black Pearl of Stefan Jentszch in the lead overall under IRC time correction by a handful of minutes from Balthasar and Eric de Turckheim’s 2022 French winner, Teasing Machine.
With plenty of yachts still to round the volcanic outpost, the contest for the Rolex Middle Sea Race trophy is far from over.
A total of 112 yachts set off from Grand Harbour, Valletta on Saturday in a reasonable southerly breeze that propelled the fleet towards Capo Passero.
Circumstances were not straightforward as the dominant low pressure system continued to disrupt the prevailing wind strength and direction.
The unstable and unseasonably warm weather was also generating squalls and water spouts, interspersed with thunder and lightning, and short, steep potentially boat-breaking waves.
As the yachts approached the south-east corner of Sicily, the skies darkened earlier than the expected sunset.
Within minutes the wind rose from 12-15 knots to a sustained 40 plus, gusting even higher, as a violent squall thumped into the main body of the fleet.
The sudden change showed no respect for experience, size or status. Several yachts suffered torn sails and worse, including three dismastings.
In total, 29 boats have been forced out of the race following this extreme episode. The most high-profile entrant affected was last year’s winner Bullitt.
The highly experienced John Ripard Jr, on his 30th Rolex Middle Sea Race and sailing double-handed with his son Tommy on the Maltese Swan 47 Lazy Duck, reported yesterday morning.
“It has been a very difficult 24 hours so far,” said Ripard.
“A harrowing 30-minute squall of quite some intensity caught as we were with full main and code zero. We emerged from that bruised but not beaten – the only downside apart from wear and tear on our bodies and minds – was the failure of our wind instruments, which we have not managed to recover as yet.”
Christoph Podesta, co-skipper of the First 45 Elusive 2 also from Malta and another competitor well versed in the vagaries of Mediterranean sailing, was another to send in a report that captured the flavour of the previous night.
“Very strong wind yesterday afternoon with a very dramatic, big thunderstorm forming very close to us,” he advised.
“Heavy-duty, squally gusts with a lot of lightning. We saw multiple water spouts forming around us and we managed to carefully dodge the dangerous parts.”
Yesterday morning and for much of the day, the situation has been the complete antithesis, as the pair explained, Ripard first.
“First 12 hours of this morning were painful in zero wind and a very lumpy residual south easterly swell. Apart from all that and spending some time up the rig sorting stuff we are still smiling!”
Podesta added: “Overall had quite a good night with fast progress. But now unfortunately, we are in very little wind, and we are becalmed east of Etna. We are trying to work our way up to the Strait of Messina, but the wind has not played ball.”
At 16:00 on Sunday, some 24 boats had passed through and entered the Tyrrhenian Sea.
French entry Long Courrier, a Sydney 43, is armed with Géry Trentesaux and Alexis Loisin, both winners of this race and the Rolex Fastnet Race, and with other potent weapons in the crew.
“After an interesting night we are approaching the Strait of Messina in this fantastic race. We tore some sails during a squall, which lasted 30 minutes. Everyone is well and we are looking forward to a good day,” commented Trentesaux.
Loisin joined in: “24 hours into the race we are nearing Messina. A lot has happened already, and we have had a bit of everything in terms of conditions. We are in good form, at the head of our class, and we are ripping it up.”
Long Courrier eventually exited the narrow strait at 11:35 CEST and by late afternoon was 11nm from Stromboli.
Another to escape the Messina Strait yesterday morning was the British Carkeek 45 Ino Noir of James Neville, past Commodore of the Royal Ocean Racing Club.
“Just coming to Stromboli turning mark now,” advised Neville.
“We had a clean trip through Messina with tide behind. This leg up to Stromboli has been fickle with lots of sail changes and gybes to stay in the breeze. The wind died and picked up from the east. It is now dry on board after the hosing yesterday and a warm day, the sea is even relatively flat.”
Ino Noir passed through the Stromboli transit at 15:37.
At the head of the fleet, it has not been plain sailing despite the size of the lead.
Following a fast passage to Capo Passero, arriving just as the sky turned black, the fastest four initially made good progress towards the toe of mainland Italy.
Black Jack arrived at the entrance to the 20nm Strait of Messina at about 22:30, with a five mile lead over Scallywag, while Lucky and Balthasar were a further 8 miles in arrears.
The Strait proved a bottle neck.
The four compressed during a difficult dance up the mainland shore, popping out between 02:00 and 03:00.
None could achieve any significant separation on the leg to Stromboli, which they reached at day break.
As we go to press, the quartet is at a standstill, with the considerably smaller Black Pearl seemingly bringing the wind with her as she closes in.
BRUISED BUT NOT ENTIRELY BEATEN
With the 2024 Rolex Middle Sea Race more than 24 hours old, the story so far has been dominated by dramatic fluctuations in the wind conditions and sea state.
At 16:00 on Sunday, the bulk of the fleet was sailing in generally light airs, spread between Capo Murro di Porco in the south and midway between the islands of Alicudi and Ustica, off the north coast of Sicily.
Remon Vos’ Black Jack 100 held a slim advantage over Huang-Seng Lee’s Scallywag 100 from Hong Kong and the United States entry, Bryon Ehrhardt’s 88ft Lucky, with the Maxi72 Balthasar still in the frame, just.
Some12 yachts have passed Stromboli, and the course mark of Strombolicchio.
Times at this transit point put the German Botin 56 Black Pearl of Stefan Jentszch in the lead overall under IRC time correction by a handful of minutes from Balthasar and Eric de Turckheim’s 2022 French winner, Teasing Machine.
With plenty of yachts still to round the volcanic outpost, the contest for the Rolex Middle Sea Race trophy is far from over.
A total of 112 yachts set off from Grand Harbour, Valletta on Saturday in a reasonable southerly breeze that propelled the fleet towards Capo Passero.
Circumstances were not straightforward as the dominant low pressure system continued to disrupt the prevailing wind strength and direction.
The unstable and unseasonably warm weather was also generating squalls and water spouts, interspersed with thunder and lightning, and short, steep potentially boat-breaking waves.
As the yachts approached the south-east corner of Sicily, the skies darkened earlier than the expected sunset.
Within minutes the wind rose from 12-15 knots to a sustained 40 plus, gusting even higher, as a violent squall thumped into the main body of the fleet.
The sudden change showed no respect for experience, size or status. Several yachts suffered torn sails and worse, including three dismastings.
In total, 29 boats have been forced out of the race following this extreme episode. The most high-profile entrant affected was last year’s winner Bullitt.
The highly experienced John Ripard Jr, on his 30th Rolex Middle Sea Race and sailing double-handed with his son Tommy on the Maltese Swan 47 Lazy Duck, reported yesterday morning.
“It has been a very difficult 24 hours so far,” said Ripard.
“A harrowing 30-minute squall of quite some intensity caught as we were with full main and code zero. We emerged from that bruised but not beaten – the only downside apart from wear and tear on our bodies and minds – was the failure of our wind instruments, which we have not managed to recover as yet.”
Christoph Podesta, co-skipper of the First 45 Elusive 2 also from Malta and another competitor well versed in the vagaries of Mediterranean sailing, was another to send in a report that captured the flavour of the previous night.
“Very strong wind yesterday afternoon with a very dramatic, big thunderstorm forming very close to us,” he advised.
“Heavy-duty, squally gusts with a lot of lightning. We saw multiple water spouts forming around us and we managed to carefully dodge the dangerous parts.”
Yesterday morning and for much of the day, the situation has been the complete antithesis, as the pair explained, Ripard first.
“First 12 hours of this morning were painful in zero wind and a very lumpy residual south easterly swell. Apart from all that and spending some time up the rig sorting stuff we are still smiling!”
Podesta added: “Overall had quite a good night with fast progress. But now unfortunately, we are in very little wind, and we are becalmed east of Etna. We are trying to work our way up to the Strait of Messina, but the wind has not played ball.”
At 16:00 on Sunday, some 24 boats had passed through and entered the Tyrrhenian Sea.
French entry Long Courrier, a Sydney 43, is armed with Géry Trentesaux and Alexis Loisin, both winners of this race and the Rolex Fastnet Race, and with other potent weapons in the crew.
“After an interesting night we are approaching the Strait of Messina in this fantastic race. We tore some sails during a squall, which lasted 30 minutes. Everyone is well and we are looking forward to a good day,” commented Trentesaux.
Loisin joined in: “24 hours into the race we are nearing Messina. A lot has happened already, and we have had a bit of everything in terms of conditions. We are in good form, at the head of our class, and we are ripping it up.”
Long Courrier eventually exited the narrow strait at 11:35 CEST and by late afternoon was 11nm from Stromboli.
Another to escape the Messina Strait yesterday morning was the British Carkeek 45 Ino Noir of James Neville, past Commodore of the Royal Ocean Racing Club.
“Just coming to Stromboli turning mark now,” advised Neville.
“We had a clean trip through Messina with tide behind. This leg up to Stromboli has been fickle with lots of sail changes and gybes to stay in the breeze. The wind died and picked up from the east. It is now dry on board after the hosing yesterday and a warm day, the sea is even relatively flat.”
Ino Noir passed through the Stromboli transit at 15:37.
At the head of the fleet, it has not been plain sailing despite the size of the lead.
Following a fast passage to Capo Passero, arriving just as the sky turned black, the fastest four initially made good progress towards the toe of mainland Italy.
Black Jack arrived at the entrance to the 20nm Strait of Messina at about 22:30, with a five mile lead over Scallywag, while Lucky and Balthasar were a further 8 miles in arrears.
The Strait proved a bottle neck.
The four compressed during a difficult dance up the mainland shore, popping out between 02:00 and 03:00.
None could achieve any significant separation on the leg to Stromboli, which they reached at day break.
As we go to press, the quartet is at a standstill, with the considerably smaller Black Pearl seemingly bringing the wind with her as she closes in.
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