The Results

No surprises – not a good year for getting round the island in daylight. Due to the late start (we were given a start time of 0810 instead of the usual 0630 or so) and light/non-existent winds less than a quarter of all boats finished and in our group 85% of boats had to retire, us included. Saffron Star is a 20 year old safe, seaworthy boat but is not a racer so perhaps we should not feel too bad.

I am sure Jerry was watching and I hope he wasn’t taking the Mickey too much. We did our best Jerry. I’m sure if you could have joined us in person, it would have made all the difference.

We still wouldn’t have finished, but we’d have had a laugh.

Jerry at a black tie do

Heading for Home

After two hours of sitting going nowhere one by one all the competitors are putting on their engines and going home. After seeing Ellen McCarthy’s cancer charity boat give up on the lack of wind we checked again the forecast (no wind) and it is clear we cannot get to the finish line by 22.30 when the race closes. After that time a competitor is classed as DNF and sadly we have concluded that we are DNF.

We are heading back to Gosport. We had some great moments along with the frustration but we have raised a lot of money for Pancreatic Cancer research. I will post the final tally next week but it is likely to be over £5k.

And one last thought. We decided unanimously that what Jerry would have done was say ‘Sod this. Let’s go for a beer.’

Floating with 20 miles to go

Doldrums

We are stuck in irons as they stay, becalmed. We are moving at least than two knots (2 mph). The forecast is for no wind until tomorrow so crew morale is a bit low. Buy, they, the Met gets things wrong just waiting for a Michael Fish moment.

Soon be time to get the swimming trunks out