The Race: Angus Phillips article in the Washington Post 6/20/2004
    
    
    
    Air Mail in the Hole
    
    After Bout With Gulf Stream, Air Mail Languishes in the 'Hole' 
    By Angus Phillips Sunday, June 20, 2004; Page E04 
    SOMEWHERE IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC 
    Imbedded with the crew of the sailing vessel Air Mail, I write this from 
    the cluttered navigation station below deck while ghosting along on a sea so 
    windless and still, we recently were passed by a small gob of Sargasso weed 
    riding a half-knot current. 
    
    This long lull in the breeze offers no comfort to the seven weary sailors 
    with me who have diligently stood watch on and off for six days, through 
    wild winds and dispiriting calms. They and 39-foot Air Mail, a sturdy, 
    20-year-old racing sloop, are part of a 36-boat expeditionary force 
    dispatched from the Chesapeake Bay on June 11, bound for Bermuda, 750 miles 
    away. 
    The fleet travels quietly under sail in mandated radio silence except for 
    twice-daily contact via satellite phone with mission overseers in Annapolis 
    operating under the code name "Grog & Gruel Bermuda Ocean Race," who track 
    their daily progress. Ashore in Bermuda, friendlies wait to greet the 
    mariners should the tedious calm ever break. Some were flown over from the 
    United States to ease the adventurers' reentry, and they already have been 
    waiting longer than expected. Still, 80 miles remain, and where is the wind?
    
    The sailors had plenty of it at first, weathering a stormy run out the 
    Chesapeake in northeast winds before plunging in inky blackness into the 
    rough and windy Atlantic. The leading boats slammed into blocky, six-foot 
    seas 12 hours later as they reached the west wall of the Gulf Stream, the 
    river within the sea where tropical, 80-degree current rushes north, then 
    east, at speeds up to four knots. 
    The mariners had been briefed beforehand on the difficulties of 
    navigating the Gulf Stream, but nothing they heard prepared their stomachs 
    for the combination of strong northeast winds bashing up against the 
    north-flowing Gulf Stream, which produced a confused, whitecapped sea. Steep 
    waves drove onto each other from every quarter in the blackest part of 
    night, tossing Air Mail around like styrofoam. 
    In hard times everyone is called to service. I stood the long night 
    watches with Bob Murphy and Ian Newman, graybeards in their fifties, and 
    23-year-old Kevin Sherwood. Meantime, skipper Tom Carrico and his navigator, 
    Coast Guard Capt. Kip Louttit, crashed below with their watch-mates, Rick 
    Yent and Peter Ljunqvist. 
    What a night! At the worst, Sherwood, Murphy and I were seasick, racing 
    to the gunwales every 10 or 15 minutes to feed the fishes, and Newman was so 
    far gone he disappeared below without a word. We found him two hours later 
    when the watch ended, sprawled in full foul-weather gear, passed out on the 
    sail bags beneath a steadily leaking hatch. 
    "I wasn't feeling so good," said the burly Baltimore businessman by way 
    of explanation. "I figured I couldn't do anything else, I might as well get 
    some sleep." 
    The Gulf Stream is 60 to 80 miles wide and none of it was anything you'd 
    want to see again, at least in those conditions. But the wind at least was 
    off the beam, perpendicular to the course to Bermuda, and strong enough to 
    keep us all barreling along. At one point Sherwood and I sat either side of 
    the tiller watching the wind-meter thrash out readings in the high twenties. 
    We barfed sequentially, one letting fly while the other held the boat on 
    track, then shifting the tiller over to the other to return the favor. 
    Air Mail made 194 miles the first 24 hours out of the bay, a spectacular 
    run, then 162 the next day, then 132 under brighter skies and softer winds 
    on the far side of the Stream. Ahead loomed the engine that fuels summer 
    weather in the Washington area -- the huge, all but stationary Bermuda High 
    around which breezes spin in a clockwise direction, pumping muggy air into 
    the nation's capital for weeks on end. 
    At the center of the Bermuda High lies, unfortunately, a Bermuda Hole, 
    the airless middle of the great spinning disc of weather that dictates East 
    Coast conditions, where very little wind blows at all. None, in fact, at 
    times. 
    It's what makes Bermuda such a fine place to visit in summer, all sunny 
    days with gentle sea breezes as the high sits overhead, unmoving. Golf 
    weather. But if you're heading there by sailboat, you only hope the center 
    of the high lies somewhere off the island proper or you're sailing smack-dab 
    into it. 
    In the old days you had the benefit of ignorance, not knowing for sure 
    what lay ahead. But for this race Sherwood brought his laptop and Carrico 
    rented a satellite phone. Twice a day they lug all the gear on deck to ring 
    up some main frame in the cosmos and download the latest weather maps, all 
    of which show the Bermuda High lying languorously over downtown Hamilton and 
    Air Mail sitting bound and gagged in the middle of the Bermuda Hole. 
    You wonder as sailors have forever what the friendlies, the wives and 
    girlfriends and children, are up to, having flown in a day ago on a jet that 
    took 1 hour 10 minutes direct, Baltimore to Bermuda. And us out here six 
    days already, and not a breath of breeze to lift our heavy hearts. 
    Last night Murphy and I sat on the deck, with his stargazer chart on our 
    laps, and picked out the Big Dipper, Cassiopeia, Scorpio and Cygnus the Swan 
    in the firmament. It was darkest night, with a slim crescent of moon not set 
    to rise till almost dawn, and almost impossible to detect where black sky 
    ended and black sea began. 
    Air Mail rocked and swayed in the light zephyrs of breeze. "It's almost 
    as if we're just floating along in the sky," said Murphy, as phosphorescence 
    from the sea twinkled below and stars and planets twinkled above. 
    And so it was, exactly. 
    Nice, but now the food is running out. Will we ever get there? 
    The breeze finally returned to the Atlantic early Friday and Air Mail 
    rode it in to Bermuda, where skipper Carrico learned to his dismay that 
    while the 39-footer had held a solid lead on the entire fleet with 121 miles 
    to go, the two-day wait for wind allowed the others to catch up. Air Mail 
    wound up fifth in class. 
    Overall winner was Free Spirit, a 36-foot Pearson from Moselle, Miss., 
    skippered by Tom Stokes. The U.S. Naval Academy won in classes 1 and 2 with 
    the entries Patriot and Swift; class 3 was won by Mental Floss of 
    Alexandria, and class 4 by Sanderling, a C&C 35 skippered by Jerry Ormsby of 
    Annapolis. 
    © 2004 The Washington Post Company
    
    
    
    
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