Das Wetter ist immer noch hervorragend und der Wind hat über Nacht von Amwind auf Halbwind gedreht. Auf einem Katamaran heißt das, das wir etwa alle drei bis vier Sekunden unsanft von der Seite angelupft werden, before the wave then crashes between the hulls against the leeward hull. “When you lie in the bunk it feels like this, as if someone was constantly hitting the hull with a big sledgehammer”, Jens said yesterday. His last crossing of the Atlantic was on the same route on a Swan 65 made and so the difference could hardly be greater. Michi and Sammy had both been on board with us twice and already knew the ship a bit. A routine is slowly becoming established here on board. Last night there was labskaus for the poor (2 Cans of corned beef in two bags of instant mashed potatoes) and then it went against 22 Clock starts with the watch cycle. We'll do another three hours: 22 to 1 Clock, 1 to 4 clock and 4 to 7 Clock. The advantage is, that you then have to go out twice one night and only once the next. Jens and I took over the first and third yesterday and had a quiet night. It's almost a new moon and therefore pitch black, but we had a great starry sky above us, could even see the Milky Way. Sammy and Michi had some variety, when a flying fish collided with the main and splashed at their feet in the cockpit. At midday we had brief radio contact with a German vehicle, which has probably been sailing alongside us since Eleuthera. Yesterday we overtook a Dane on a small ten meter boat. Feels a bit, like on the Baltic Sea … The etmal was 139 NM. Now it's calming down a bit and we still have a good time until Bermuda 500 Nautical miles to go before.