Two squadrons of the Fourth Armada—ten ships…
May 1502 CE
Two squadrons of the Fourth Armada—ten ships under admiral Vasco da Gama and five ships under vice-admiral Vicente Sodré—having set out from Lisbon on February 10, 1502, had anchored in late February in Senegal (either at Porto de Ale or Bezeguiche) to take water.
It is reported in one chronicle that Fernan d'Atouguia, captain of the Leitoa Nova, had fallen ill and died there.
Gama had transferred the experienced captain Pedro Afonso de Aguiar from the small nau Santa Elena to the large nau Leitoa Nova, and had elevated one of his own companions, Pêro de Mendonça, to captain Aguiar's old ship.
Sailing southwest from Africa, in early march, the fleet may have may made a brief watering stop at Cape St. Augustine (Brazil), before heading across the south Atlantic towards the Cape of Good Hope.
Violent storms at the Cape in late April and early May separate the fifteen ships of Vasco da Gama's fleet.
Each captain is forced to figure out his own passage around the Cape, and make his own way towards the prearranged rendezvous point on the other side.