Having left Horta (Azores) yesterday mid-afternoon, the "Ilha de Sao Luis" tugboat chartered to try and salvage the BT yacht is currently attempting to tow the stricken monohull back to the Azores… but difficult weather conditions and the sheer weight of the IMOCA 60' full of water make for a very tricky operation.
The 26-metre long "Ilha de Sao Luis" tugboat, with BT Team members Charles Darbyshire, Rhys Mellor and Pierre-Emmenuel Hérissé on board, reched BT's position at approximately 12:00 GMT today. The stricken monohull was drifting in rough seas some 115 miles North of Terceira (Azores). The yacht is listing on her port side, due to the keel being canted, the cockpit, the coachroof and the area aft of the mast are underwater… As Sébastien Josse explained on Friday night after he was rescued, "Right after the wave impact, we canted the keel to port to avoid more water coming in the boat, because I was afraid we'd take a second wave and sink in a matter of minutes."

The BT yacht as seen from a Portuguese Air Force plane minutes before rescue
© Portuguese Air Force
© Portuguese Air Force
When the salvage crew arrived this morning, the bow was still up but given the sea state it was impossible to send someone on board. Enventually, and after quickly considering various options - time being a major factor since another fierce gale will hit the region tomorrow evening - the men managed to take the yacht in tow. Yet the weight of the water filling up BT means that progress is extremely slow, and for the moment things cannot be taken for granted as the rough seas put a lot of added strain on the already heavily loaded tow line.
The "special convoy" is crawling its way towards the Azores, not expecting to be able to exceed 4 knots of speed at best. The BT Technical Team is expecting to spend long and difficult hours at sea, but everyone is fully determined and focused on that mission.

the bt yacht as seen from a portuguese air force plane minutes before rescue
© Portuguese Air Force
© Portuguese Air Force
Sébastien and Jean-François live from Paris tomorrow
Sébastien Joss and Jean-François Cuzon will be with the Transat Jacques Vabre comms team and race organisers tomorrow, livre from the Paris race HQ for the daily chat sessions with the skippers at sea. Don't miss that special appearance, during which the BT duo will tell the story of their accident and their subsequent rescue.
Log on to http://www.jacques-vabre.com/en/s01_home/s01p01_home.php at 11h30 GMT tomorrow.
News from the fleet - and then they were 10
After hitting an unidentified object in the water yesterday afternoon, Alex Thomson and Ross Daniel have confirmed they will head for the Azores and retire from the Transat Jacques Vabre. After a week at sea, only 10 of the 14 IMOCA entrants are still competing and most crews have had to cope with various degrees of gear failure following the brutal conditions encountered.

Jean-François Cuzon and Sébastien Josse, BT Open 60 skipper, during training day for the 2009 Transat Jacques Vabre.
© Thierry Martinez / Sea&Co / BT Team Ellen
© Thierry Martinez / Sea&Co / BT Team Ellen







