Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing's Nick Dana's latest blog Finally!! Azzam has just poked into the solid northerly trades. The wind direction has now headed enough that we are rattling southeast at pace. The latest sched should show us doing around 60 miles, a massive departure from the majority of scheds for the entire race so far. Not to mention the sailing is sensational. 18-20 knots of consistent northeasterly wind while we rip along with a full main and fractional zero averaging around 20 knots of boat speed. "About as good as it gets" Jules Salter explains. "Soak it in and rest up fellas, it won't be like this for forever. It looks like it will be a tight finish with more upwind." No matter though, right now we are all just focusing on the sailing at hand and getting south. It's now roughly 1,600 miles to the equator and we are smashing them off quickly. Azzam is now in "super-stack" mode with everything that is not tied down jammed in the back corner of the boat and as far outboard as physically possible. Our 'snow plow' bow has been chucking up ten-foot solid walls of white water for the better part of day. As Justin Slattery put it:"You almost feel weightless when doing a sail change on the bow. The wave it puts over the deck is insanely powerful. You can't see a thing, you're basically working from memory at that point." Looks like we are in for a wild night. We have just peeled from the fractional zero and are opting for our smaller G2. As the breeze continues to go right, we will be forced to sail tighter angles and cannot afford to have too much sail area up. Photo by Nick Dana / Volvo Ocean Race