KellysEye
Well-Known Member
One other thought is that the trade winds are viewed as reliable, in 2004 we had lots of light winds and were praying for squalls to get the speed up. Be careful what you ask for, the middle one 50 miles across squall, measured by radar, stopped right on top of us, we tried steering but the wind was going round in circles. We put a white strobe on and went to bed.
2007 was a different matter and we did the ARC finish line. This is an extract from our web site:
Many boats that came in had taken a pasting during the crossing, in one report a yacht was sailing in steady forty knot winds gusting fifty nine. Fleet damage included: broken booms; rigging failures; broken spinnaker poles; torn sails; damaged stanchions; safety gear torn off deck; broken goose necks (attaches boom to mast); steering failures and much more. In one dreadful incident a skipper was hit by the boom during an uncontrolled gybe and knocked unconscious. He was taken off the yacht by a cruise ship but subsequently died in hospital in Barbados. Very sad.
Light winds and strong winds don't happen very often but are something that have to be handled if they come along.
2007 was a different matter and we did the ARC finish line. This is an extract from our web site:
Many boats that came in had taken a pasting during the crossing, in one report a yacht was sailing in steady forty knot winds gusting fifty nine. Fleet damage included: broken booms; rigging failures; broken spinnaker poles; torn sails; damaged stanchions; safety gear torn off deck; broken goose necks (attaches boom to mast); steering failures and much more. In one dreadful incident a skipper was hit by the boom during an uncontrolled gybe and knocked unconscious. He was taken off the yacht by a cruise ship but subsequently died in hospital in Barbados. Very sad.
Light winds and strong winds don't happen very often but are something that have to be handled if they come along.