25:51.945N 17:42.730W

Sunday Evening: We left an hour or so after the Fanfare of the ARC start. Our leaving was slightly hampered by a number of ARC boats returning for repairs. A couple of hours later we caught the tail enders and have since been wading through the fleet. One ARC boat radioed the port for help as they had lost their steering , managed to wrap a sheet around the prop and wanted to be towed back the 10 miles or so they had made. Another had done a crash jibe and injured a crew member’s hand. Others had engine and rigging failures and wanted return for repairs and start again.We had a great run through the acceleration zone with a lot of 11 knot plus sailing, but now after sunset the wind has veered NE and dropped to a mere force 3. So we’re testing the engine for a bit. We’ve been treated to a spectacular moon rise. With four of us the watch system is two hours on and six hours off. However as Nik is new to the boat I will stay up an extra hour and Steve will get up an hour early until he is ready to do a solo watch. We’re zipping along at 8 knots and two dorados take both the fishing lines, the second one 20 seconds after the first. We turn into the wind and drop the Yankee reducing boat speed to a crawl. Not we’re travelling in the opposite direction. After much wrestling Steve and Sotiris manage to gaff the larger dorado but when Sotiris put him on the aft deck he leapt about and escaped. The second one which was of a more managable size was landed by Nik and was not so lucky as his friend. During all this, Scorpione Del Mari who had been lagging 4 miles behind us gained a couple, as did Heartbeat, another large ARC Yacht which has been shadowing us for some hours. We have long since passed the slower members of the fleet and there are only these two yachts close by. |