Moonrise: Ship's Log |

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After our big cruise round central America, J and Jenny of Gitane
landed a fantastic job as the captain and mate of a private yacht. This
means that their full-time job is shuttling the owner around the east
coast of the US in summer, and the Caribbean islands in winter. And,
of course, maintaining the boat, a huge job in itself.
So, twice a year the boat has to be moved between the east coast and the
Caribbean; and for this trip, J and Jenny take on extra crew. Of course,
they need people with good ocean sailing experience, and the great news is
that this includes Rachel and me!
The bad news is that, being a sailboat, their schedule usually isn't too
well fixed; and twice in a row that's scuppered my plans to join
them. It looked like it would be three in a row this year, when they first
asked me; the mid-November start date was an impossible conflict with my
plans to move back out to the US.
But on the 7th of December, Rachel emailed me to say that after some delays,
the departure date is now set for the 15th, aiming to
get to the British Virgin Islands by the
26th. Could I make it? I ummed and ahed for a couple of days, as well
as checking with my boss about vacation time and looking into shipping
options for all my worldly posessions; but after all that, it's still
tricky. Flying out on the 14th would mean leaving
Inverness on the 13th - which would give me about 3 days to pack up my
entire life for the trip to the US, instead of the 3 weeks I'd been
counting on. Still, my boss says the vacation is OK, and it would be
great to see J and Jenny again, quite apart from the sailing;
so I'm going for it!
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| The Kessock Bridge, Inverness. |
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Sun 10 Dec 2006 12:00:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 38° 41.644' N 76° 10.151' W -- Inverness, Scotland; docked; 0 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Sunday is not a good day to start the major packing -- you can't even
get cardboard boxes in Inverness on Sunday! Still, at least I can
make a start on sorting stuff out, figuring out what to send over to the
US by ship, and deciding what to take with me on the plane.
That latter part is a problem. Basically, I need:
- Everything I need to live in the US for one or two months
- Everything I need for my first month or two at work -- which includes
the company's laptop and associated stuff
- My own (huge, heavy) laptop
- My foul-weather gear -- a huge jacket, bib pants, and sea boots,
plus thermal underwear etc.
- Tropical gear, inc. hats, snorkel, mask, flippers, etc. And
shorts and T-shirts!
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| The boat at the dock |
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Not only that, but all of this has to be portable enough to take
from Inverness to London by train (this turned out to be cheaper,
much more comfortable, and almost as quick as flying),
then through the
Underground,
onto the express train to Heathrow, onto the bus to the hotel, then back into
the airport, then through Washington Dulles airport, and to the boat, and then
through various other airports back to California.
So, I decided to pack all of the above into my monster backpack, except
for my laptop and various carry-on bits and pieces which I would take
in my soft briefcase. It's awkward to carry the briefcase with the
rucksack, but easier than any other combination I can think of.
My rucksack has now been test-packed -- it works, but it weighs in at
over 27 kg (about 60 lbs)! Ouch! Fortunately, it's a great pack
which makes carrying huge loads pretty painless. But as an external-frame
pack, it's not exactly slimline.
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| Mounting the dinghy. |
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Mon 11 Dec 2006 12:00:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 38° 41.644' N 76° 10.151' W -- Inverness, Scotland; docked; 0 miles since Oxford, Maryland
The boxes are here, the packing has started... I'm looking to fill 3
boxes to send by ship, and try to keep them below 30 kg (66 lbs) each.
The dates for the trip itself seem to be pretty firm; we should
leave on Friday (!)
the 15th, or Saturday the 16th, according to Captain J, and we're still
looking to be in Tortola, British Virgin Islands, by the 26th. I've
got some doubts, though, given the state of the boat!
Any sailing trip will run into delays before leaving, but in this case
there's good reason. The boat was hauled out in September, and then
completely stripped of her masts and all deck hardware, and painted.
A paint job like this is a huge deal -- the boat is put in a shed,
then sprayed with 2-part linear polyurethane by people in space suits
with full breathing apparatus. Then, of course, the
boat is re-launched, and the tedious job of re-fitting all of that
hardware begins.
Well, the boat was just launched today -- right now, she has no masts
and is missing most of her hardware! I can only imagine that J and
Jenny are working like crazed beavers to get things done.
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| Matt, prepping and fitting the liferaft mounts |
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Tue 12 Dec 2006 12:00:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 38° 41.644' N 76° 10.151' W -- Inverness, Scotland; docked; 0 miles since Oxford, Maryland
The boxes are now packed, and ready for shipping, and my monster rucksack
is ready for tomorrow's journey. It's amazing to think how much stuff is
jammed in there -- my foul-weather gear is tightly rolled into a small
sack under the main pack, with the dismantled snorkel packed inside it;
the flippers are stuffed down the sides of the big bag; the company
laptop is in the very centre, surrounded by clothes; and the sea boots are
on top, held in place by the top flap.
Of course, when I get to the US I'll have no outdoor gear except for the
huge sailing jacket, but at least I'm heading to California!
Wed 13 Dec 2006 15:00:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 38° 41.644' N 76° 10.151' W -- Heathrow Airport; docked; 0 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Well, today got off to a bad start, when I got to the station and found that
the train was cancelled, and we were stuffed into busses for the leg
from Inverness to Edinburgh (about half the trip to London). This is
extremely vexing, given that I paid for a first class seat, with coffee
service, wireless internet, and all the perks.
Oh well, at least I got the nice seat from Edinburgh, and the trek across
London and out to Heathrow wasn't too bad. And I've used my air miles to
get an upgrade to premium economy on the flight to Washington, which
should be nice.
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| Rachel and Debbie relaxing on the bow. |
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The fun part of the day was co-ordinating with Rachel. She's moving
too, from
Duluth, Minnesota, to Virginia, not far from where we're leaving from;
so she's been frantically packing up her apartment, just as I was
packing my stuff. Now she's driving across country to meet me at
Washington, and we've been tracking each others' progress by email
and text messages as we converge on the US capital.
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| J at the dock. |
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Thu 14 Dec 2006 23:50:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 38° 41.644' N 76° 10.151' W -- Oxford Boatyard, Oxford, Maryland; docked; 0 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Today's travelling went pretty well. Thanks to our continuous tracking,
Rachel was able to keep me posted about her arrival at Washington;
she was delayed a couple of hours, so I just retired to the Starbucks and
played computer games for a while. When she got to the pickup area, I
was at the kerb waiting for her.
When we got to Oxford at about 10:00 p.m., our first task was to find
J and Jenny. Rachel thought they might be at the house they've been
renting; but given that the boat was only launched on Monday, I had a
feeling they'd still be working on her. Sure enough, the house was empty,
but when we found the boat it was a hive of activity. First, we met
Matt and Debbie on the boat; friends of J and Jenny, these are the other
2 crew for the trip. They walked us up to the spar shed, where
J and Jenny were busy making up the running rigging (the large
collection of ropes that control the sails). Rachel and I were immediately
pressed into service whipping lines.
After working pretty late, Rachel and I moved straight on to the boat.
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| Rachel and Debbie cleaning some of the teak fittings. |
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Fri 15 Dec 2006 23:50:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 38° 41.644' N 76° 10.151' W -- Oxford Boatyard, Oxford, Maryland; docked; 0 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Despite the late night, J was back on the boat bright and early;
there was certainly no shortage of things to do. Pretty soon we were
all back on the case; cleaning and re-fitting seats, liferaft mounts,
and various other deck fittings that had been taken off for the painting;
getting the booms back on; and dozens of other little tasks. One job
I tackled was to replace the tackles of both the running backstays with
complete new kit -- new blocks and ropes.
While we
were doing this, the yard crew were finishing off the standing rigging,
some of which hadn't been completed when we arrived. The yard's riggers
were great folks, generously showing us amateurs the best way to
fit rigging terminals.
Once it was too dark to work on, Matt, Debbie and I drove up to Baltimore
airport -- Matt to return their rental car, and Debbie (she's also British)
and I to check out of the country, backed up by letters from the captain
(J) certifying that were were leaving the country on Saturday. This done,
we treated ourselves to a generous dinner, and headed back. Meanwhile
Rachel had been taking an on-line exam for her one of her degree courses
(which she passed easily, of course!).
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| Jenny, J, and Jimmy (from OBY) |
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So Saturday is officially set as the day of departure... but there's
still plenty to do, such as fitting the headsails to the roller
furlers in the dark. I have to say I'm sceptical.
Sat 16 Dec 2006 19:30:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 38° 41.644' N 76° 10.151' W -- Oxford Boatyard, Oxford, Maryland; motoring; 4.1 kt 246 T; 0 miles since Oxford, Maryland
The day was spent in yet more preparation.
We mounted the liferaft, the dinghy, the spinnaker
pole, the mizzen sail, and much more. J took a couple of trips up the
mast, fixing various things.
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| J up the main mast. |
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The day dragged on, but the list of projects got smaller and smaller;
and by mid-afternoon, we were able to contemplate getting to the fuel
dock before it closed at 4:30 pm. We actually ended up waiting for
the previous boat to finish fuelling, but we finally got there about
5:00 or so.
Fuelling was laborious, with 400 gallons to take on (our tanks weren't
empty, fortunately!) through a tediously slow fuel pump. Eventually
it was done, though, and we were finally ready for the off.
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| The boat all ready (by Matt). |
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Getting away wasn't to be so easy, however. As J started pushng us
away from the dock using the two main engines and the bow thruster
(luxury!), we suddenly rebounded, as if there was still a line
attached to the dock. After several attempts, we realised that
there must have been a snag on the bottom just a few feet out from the
dock. J finally reversed us out the way we came in, and we are off
at last!
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| Rachel at the wheel. |
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Sat 16 Dec 2006 23:30:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 38° 20.995' N 76° 20.578' W -- The Chesapeake Bay; motoring; 8.3 kt 164 T; 26 miles since Oxford, Maryland
The first leg of the journey is from Oxford, down the Chesapeake bay,
to the ocean; a trip of about 120 miles, or a day's sailing for a
typical cruising boat. Having a schedule to keep, we're motoring
through the bay, which is rather noisy but fast.

Leaving Oxford, Maryland, and into the Chesapeake Bay
Around the first part
of the trip, near Oxford, there were a number of posts and fish traps in
the water, so a bow lookout was needed; I foolishly volunteered for this job,
and discovered that it was absolutely freezing in the wind on the foredeck.
The job of lookout was made considerably easier by the boat's night
vision scope, a mini-telescope which magically turns night (almost)
to day. The only snag is that everything is green, so it's no use for
differentiating a vessel's navigation lights.
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| The spacious cockpit. By Matt. |
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Soon we were out in the open bay, and I was able to retreat to the
sheltered comfort of the cockpit. J and Jenny gave us a briefing on
the boat's safety systems and procedures, and introduced the watch
schedule. This part is absolute luxury -- with 6 people on board, we
can keep two on watch at any time, give each person a relatively short
watch, and still have time for plenty of sleep.
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| Matt on secondary watch. |
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The plan is to have
each person stand primary watch for 1½ hours, during which they have to
stay alert at all times; then secondary watch for another 1½ hours,
during which they have to be in the cockpit, but can read or sleep;
and then we get a glorious 6 hours off. With the time needed to
change out of foulies and de-salt after each watch, this still means
spending a good part of our off time in bed, but it's a lot better
than managing with just two people.
So, with my first watch at 4:30 a.m., it was swiftly off to bed for me.
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| Matt and Debbie in the cockpit. |
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Sun 17 Dec 2006 06:00:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 37° 28.409' N 76° 10.409' W -- The Chesapeake Bay; motoring; 7.5 kt 179 T; 81 miles since Oxford, Maryland
The alarm went off way too soon, and it was time to get dressed and get
on the bridge. At this point, still in the bay, the boat was still
reasonably level, so getting dressed didn't require too many athletics;
however, it still took a full 15 minutes to put on all the layers:
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| Rachel wearing about 20 layers at the helm. |
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- Underwear
- Thermal pants
- Shirt(s)
- Foulie pants
- Jumper (for Americans: pullover)
- Huge socks
- Sea boots
- Fleece jacket (optional)
- Foulie jacket (by this time, your movement is gettinfg restricted)
- Lifejacket / harness
- Hat
- Whistle and tether
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| Debbie at the wheel, kitted out against the weather. |
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All of this while manoeuvring in a tiny area of pitching and rolling
floor space. There's more space out in the saloon, in fact too much;
an unexpected roll would send you crashing ten or fifteen feet into
the sides.
At least with all this kit on, and in the shelter of the huge dodger
and bimini, the watch was comfortable. Rachel, who was on secondary
watch when I was on primary, kept me well supplied with hot drinks and
snacks, so the hour and a half fairly flew by.
Sun 17 Dec 2006 15:01:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 36° 30.256' N 75° 30.508' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 8.0 kt 139 T; 152 miles since Oxford, Maryland
After retiring at 7:30 a.m., leaving J and Jenny on the bridge, my next
watch wasn't 'til 1:30 p.m., so I turned in for a good long sleep.
The noise of the engines made this a bit trying at first, but somehow
sleeping at sea is never very difficult -- you always have enough
tiredness banked up to send you off.
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| The view ahead. |
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When I came up at 1:30, I found that
I'd missed one of our major milestones -- the boat's impressive speed had
already knocked off the 120 miles of the Chesapeake Bay, and we were
out in the ocean. Land is still visible astern and to starboard,
and will be for a while longer, as our course is almost parallel to
the coast until beyond Cape Hatteras. One pleasant surprise is that
the weather
is somewhat warmer; with the south-west wind, we're no longer in the
wintry climate of the US north-east, but in warmer air blowing up from
the Bahamas. With the mainsail up, to give us a slight speed boost but also
to reduce the rolling, the journey is already much more pleasant than
I'd expected for the Atlantic in December.
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| The freighter passing us. |
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We had one bit of excitement on my watch; there were several ships passing,
but with the aid of the radar (and ably assisted by Rachel) we calculated
that one was on a dead collision course. The key to handling this is to
turn hard and early, so while it was still several miles away we
turned hard to starboard, miles off our course, and the ship was left
well to our port side. After half an hour or so we were able to get
back on course.
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| Jenny at the wheel. |
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Sun 17 Dec 2006 18:00:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 36° 11.581' N 75° 11.482' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 8.7 kt 141 T; 176 miles since Oxford, Maryland
With the beautiful conditions it was too nice to go below, so I spent
the rest of the day up in the cockpit. It's amazing how I never get
bored at sea --
just watching the water go by is infintely entertaining. And, of course,
with 6 people on board there's plenty of company -- when double-handing
you tend to never see the other person, as one of you is always sleeping.
To further enhance the social aspect of the trip, we've
decided that every evening will feature a crew dinner in the
cockpit at 5:00 p.m.; the person who would have been on watch at
4:30 will skip their watch to cook. This skipped watch also means that
the whole watch schedule rotates by one person each day. J made our
Sunday dinner tonight, and very nice it was too.
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| The ensign at night, lit up by the stern light. |
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Sun 17 Dec 2006 22:33:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 35° 41.450' N 74° 41.290' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 8.1 kt 138 T; 215 miles since Oxford, Maryland
By the time I came up for my 9 o'clock watch, the weather was
slightly warmer again,
a very nice change. There were still some ships around, but no more
head-ons.
The temperature has continued rising through my watch, as we are now
just entering the main flow of the gulf stream, so both the air and
water are being channelled up from the Gulf of Mexico. However, the
approaching Gulf Stream is also making for much more rolly sea
conditions.
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| The captain and mate, J and Jenny. |
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Mon 18 Dec 2006 07:36:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 34° 55.712' N 73° 25.895' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 8.6 kt 142 T; 293 miles since Oxford, Maryland
As it happened, I slept through the main part of the gulf stream,
and by the time of my 6 a.m. watch we were just about leaving it;
however, the weather is a lot warmer, so there
are fewer layers under the foulies this morning.
The dressing and undressing process,
however, is taking longer than ever due to the rolling. With the wind
from starboard, our cabin on the port side has the bed "downhill" from
the narrow strip of floor beside it. This means that the person changing
has absolutely nothing to hold or lean against while doing all the layers.
Hence the 25 minutes I spent getting ready for my watch today.
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| Matt in the cockpit. |
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To make matters worse, there's a lee board (a big strip of wood) at
the side of the bed to keep people from rolling out, but it's so
fragile that it's more a liability than an asset, as none of us want
to damage the boat! At one point, as I was changing, a sudden lurch sent
me flying into the lee board; to avoid breaking it, I just managed to
leap over, landing heavily on the bed. A nice manoeuvre, for which Rachel,
who was in the bed, sadly paid the price. Oh well, she wasn't too
badly bruised.
Now, at the end of my watch, I've got my jacket off, and there's a definite
tropical feel to the weather, despite the fact that we're were still
about on the latitude of Cape Hatteras.
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| J checking over the sails and rig. |
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Mon 18 Dec 2006 08:30:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 34° 49.246' N 73° 20.587' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, staysail, jib; 8.9 kt 143 T; 301 miles since Oxford, Maryland
It's now Jenny's watch (with me on secondary), and J and Jenny
have decided that
the wind is good enough for sailing; so up went the jib and staysail
(well, not "up" really, as they're both on roller furlers), and off
with the engines. The quiet after so much time motoring is glorious.
The only fly in the ointment is that the mizzen sail is out of action --
we tried hoisting it the previous evening, but it refused to go up
the last few inches, perhaps because of a problem with the sail track
near the masthead.
Now this is sailing! In fact, despite being pretty badly in need of sleep,
I can't possibly bring myself to go below.
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| Ian and the mizzen. |
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Mon 18 Dec 2006 09:30:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 34° 42.640' N 73° 13.908' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, staysail, jib, mizzen; 8.9 kt 150 T; 310 miles since Oxford, Maryland
We had another stab at the mizzen, thinking that we should be able to
fix the problem in the daylight -- or at least figure it out. But when
J tried hoisting it it went straight up with no problem. The only
clue was a bang as it got tensioned -- probably the shackle at the
head of the sail had been caught the wrong way round, and it had finally
fixed itself. So now we have all our plain sail set!
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| Debbie at the helm. By Matt. |
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Mon 18 Dec 2006 12:30:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 34° 21.821' N 72° 53.161' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, staysail, jib, mizzen; 8.6 kt 140 T; 337 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Wow, it's getting warmer! And a major milestone has been passed,
much sooner than I would have guessed -- I'm in shorts and T-shirt!
Now this is sailing!
In fact, it got so hot that we've rolled up the side windows of the bimini to
get some much-needed ventilation. It would have been nice to open the
dodger's front panel, but in the rough conditions there was enough spray
to make this a bad idea. Still, there was plenty of breeze; in fact,
we're sailing at 9.4 knots, which is pretty amazing!
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| Sailing. By Matt. |
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Our speed is measured by the GPS, of course, but there's also a "paddlewheel"
speed sensor under the hull which measures our speed through the
water. This is useful for judging the current, but unfortunately
ours was reading way too low. After several hours with the manuals
for the boat's incredibly sophisticated system of instruments, I figured
out how to calibrate it, and now I've got
it reading closer to the correct speed.
The ocean was pretty quiet during the day -- in fact, it was deserted, there
was just us and the sea. But it has started getting cloudy
and somewhat colder -- the effect of the gulf stream is apparently
wearing off, and the foulie pants are back on.
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| Matt and Debbie dolphin watching. |
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Mon 18 Dec 2006 16:09:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 33° 58.769' N 72° 31.744' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, staysail, jib, mizzen; 7.9 kt 144 T; 366 miles since Oxford, Maryland
At about 4 p.m. -- it had warmed up again, which was nice -- we were
discussing cruising with Debbie. This was her
first offshore trip, so seeing the land slip over the horizon was quite
an experience for her.
I was remarking that we'd had a fantastic trip so far, when I thought I
should comment on the fact that cruising has other things in store; so I
mentioned that boats are quite often visited by dolphins. Debbie made a
comment to the effect that she'd love to see dolphins; then, just seconds
later, jumped up shouting "there's a fin!".
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| A dolphin in the sunset. By Matt. |
|
Sure enough, the dolphins had chosen that exact time to visit us. There were
about 15 or 20 of them, smallish bottle-nosed dolphins, about 3-4 feet long.
Debbie and Matt had a great time observing them from the side deck,
and snapped some good pictures. And what timing!
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| Rachel watching the sunset. |
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Tue 19 Dec 2006 00:09:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 33° 13.118' N 71° 49.064' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, staysail, jib, mizzen; 6.6 kt 141 T; 424 miles since Oxford, Maryland
After another great dinner -- Jenny's turn this time -- I went below
to grab some sleep before my watch at 10:30 p.m. Sleeping with the
engines off, and with the water gurgling by the hull, was fantastic.
Although it's a little cooler now,
and the wind has slackened off a bit, we're still having a great sail,
and making 7 knots. The sky is clear, with incredible numbers of stars;
and best of all, we still have the ocean to ourselves.
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| Debbie getting ready for her watch. By Matt. |
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Tue 19 Dec 2006 08:59:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 32° 24.077' N 71° 04.844' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 8.2 kt 140 T; 485 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Sometime during the night the wind slackened off enough that the
engines were started -- got to keep to the schedule! We still had all
the sail up, though, so the engines weren't flat-out, which made for
a quieter ride, and didn't upset the sleep too much.
When I came on watch at 7:30 a.m., we were cruising along in a gentle
breeze on a beautiful morning.
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| Jenny and the giant winch (electric, of course!) |
|
By now we're 268 miles south-east of Cape Hatteras, and
326 miles west of Bermuda -- well inside the
Bermuda Triangle!
(According to some authors -- since each writer on the subject
redefines the boundaries to fit his/her personal theory.) Anyway, we
haven't seen any UFOs yet, though they'd be welcome to do a flyby so
we can get some photos. We now have over 900 miles to go, and have run
about 470 miles
since Oxford; and the nearest solid land is 3 miles away -- straight
down.
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| Debbie on lookout. By Matt. |
|
The weather is once again shorts-and-T-shirt, at least for me, which is
great, and it's already looking like it might be staying this way for
the rest of the trip. This is amazing for this time of year in the
Atlantic, but we're not complaining! Now that we're well out of
the gulf stream the sea is very calm, and still deserted apart from
ourselves.
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| Ian and the bandana. By Rachel. |
|
Tue 19 Dec 2006 14:36:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 31° 48.490' N 70° 33.173' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 7.9 kt 141 T; 530 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Another great day for hanging out in the cockpit! I passed some time by
trying out various banadana configurations; including the "sheikh",
to keep the sun off my neck (a great success).
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| Rachel enjoying a book by Walter Cronkite. |
|
Another pleasant diversion was sorting out the pictures to date; I have
the laptop set up in the saloon (no shortage of power here!) and showing
a slideshow of the voyage to date.
Now I'm listening
to Koyaanisqatsi
on my birthday iPod (thanks Rachel!) as we cruis along at a pleasant 8 knots
in light winds. One engine is running; the starboard engine was
making some possible rattling noises, and J & Jenny have shut it down
just in case something was loose on the shaft.
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| J tending to the engine. |
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Tue 19 Dec 2006 18:55:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 31° 21.239' N 70° 09.457' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 7.8 kt 143 T; 564 miles since Oxford, Maryland
I've just got into bed, and I'm exhausted from the effort! It's got
rolly again, so changing and cleaning up for bed (the idea is to keep
the bed as salt-free as possible) is quite an effort.
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| Sailing in the sunset. By Rachel. |
|
Tonight was my turn at dinner, so instead of a watch I made cheeseburgers
with chips (American: fries), a nice easy option, specially with oven
chips. However, as the first "visiting" crewmember to cook I had to
figure out the vagaries of the stove; such as only one of the burners
being able to stay lit. I asked J for help, and he said yup, it's
busted. Of course, after cooking, when I mentioned the "broken"
burners to Jenny, she told us both how to get them going!
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| Jenny. By Rachel. |
|
After dinner we watched a film on pioneering sailor
Irving Johnson,
courtesy of the boat's entertainment system, then did some stargazing
under the beautiful, crystal-clear sky.
Right now we're still cruising on at 8 knots, with the port engine
running -- unfortunately the one under our cabin!
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| The cockpit, under sail. |
|
Wed 20 Dec 2006 03:23:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 30° 33.885' N 69° 29.147' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 7.0 kt 155 T; 623 miles since Oxford, Maryland
I got the midnight watch tonight, and what a beautiful night. The wind is
shifting astern, which is making the sails restless, and we're still
using the port engine; but the conditions are lovely.
We had our first traffic for ages on my watch when a huge cruise ship
passed our port side. Other than that, though, it's been as quiet as ever.
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| Matt at the helm. |
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Wed 20 Dec 2006 09:15:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 30° 01.972' N 69° 00.490' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, jib with 2 reefs, mizzen; 7.2 kt 156 T; 663 miles since Oxford, Maryland
The wind has continued shifting, and we've gybed, which is to say that we're
now sailing with the wind coming over
the port side, instead of the starboard. In fact, at about 8:30 a.m. the
wind shifted quite quickly, so the good news is that we now have a good
beam wind instead of the awkward stern wind we've been dealing with.
 |
| Debbie on watch, and J. |
|
Unfortunately, this has brought some disadvantages. The new waves pushed
up by this northwest wind are contesting with the old swell left over from
the southwest wind, so we have an awkward sea which is making the ride
very rolly indeed. Also, with the wind now being northerly, it's
noticeably cooler; the bimini side curtains are back down for shelter.
And we're also seeing squalls around.
But the really good news is that we're sailing again! The engine's off
at long last, and the boat is once more quiet.
 |
| Matt and J. |
|
Wed 20 Dec 2006 10:25:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 29° 53.736' N 68° 55.813' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under mainsail with 1 reef, jib with 2 reefs, mizzen; 6.7 kt 90 T; 673 miles since Oxford, Maryland
A little earlier J had the idea of lowering the centreboard. The boat
is built with quite a shallow draught for her size -- just 6 feet --
but has a retractable centreboard, which should improve her sailing
performance when the wind is abeam or ahead. Of course, the board
is a monster, and so there's a motor to raise and lower it; but the
connections to the motor are lost in the maze of wiring that is the
boat's electrical system. So, the backup hand-cranking system has to be
used; this involves 110 full turns on the bolt at the top of the motor,
and there's only room for a quarter turn at a time.
 |
| J cranking the centreboard down. |
|
So J valiantly got into the bilge and started cranking. Unfortunately,
the board doesn't seem to behave well in rough seas; sure enough, with the
board partly down, it could be heard knocking against the sides of its case.
So up it came again. Poor J.
The squalls are getting to be a problem. I was tracking one on radar,
about a mile off to port, and astern; then another one suddenly appeared
a mile to starboard and astern. As they moved towards us, it looked
like they might pass to either side; but things got more worrying whtn
the port-side one suddenly sprouted 2 or 3 friends.
 |
| J reefing the mainsail (see the gritted teeth!). |
|
As they passed over us, the wind blew up all of a sudden, and the boat
turned sharply and heeled well over -- a mild knockdown. J handled the
situation very calmly, and soon we were back upright and sailing
normally with no harm done -- or almost none. As we heeled over,
everyone had mustered on deck pretty smartly -- except Debbie. When
she fially appeared on deck, it turned out she'd been in the head
at the time, and found herself in a very awkward situation!
Anyway, now we're sailing with a reef in the mainsail, in case of any
further squalls.
 |
| The crew watching the orcas. By Jenny. |
|
Wed 20 Dec 2006 12:53:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 29° 37.757' N 68° 44.842' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under mainsail with 1 reef, jib with 2 reefs, mizzen; 7.4 kt 141 T; 692 miles since Oxford, Maryland
We've spent the last few hours barrelling along in rough seas, rolling hard.
Several more squalls have passed by, but no more direct hits as yet.
All of a sudden whales were spotted alongside the boat -- what seemed to
be 4 orcas (killer whales)!
 |
| An orca fin. By Matt. |
|
All hands were on deck pretty sharply, but the whales, about 15 to 20 feet
long, were hard to spot.
They seemed to be swimming south, about parallel with the boat; every so
often one would break through the face of a wave, and then the distinctive
black and while markings could be seen.
Unfortunately, photos were hard to come by; but Matt did manage to
capture a fin on camera.
 |
| Jenny snoozing in the cockpit. |
|
Wed 20 Dec 2006 18:05:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 29° 06.264' N 68° 23.867' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under mainsail with 1 reef, jib with 2 reefs, mizzen; 7.5 kt 157 T; 729 miles since Oxford, Maryland
By the time of my 4:30 watch we were about half way to Tortola. It's
warm and sunny, but still very rolly in an awkward cross sea.
Still, we're making 7.5 knots under sail, which is excellent. Rachel
was on dinner duty tonight, and made an excellent lasagne with salad, which I ate
(since it was my watch) sitting in the captain's chair overlooking
the rest of the crew. Ah, luxury!
 |
| Ian and J on the side deck. By Rachel. |
|
Thu 21 Dec 2006 03:05:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 28° 13.210' N 67° 48.172' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under mainsail with 1 reef, jib with 2 reefs, mizzen; 6.8 kt 149 T; 790 miles since Oxford, Maryland
It was very rolly during the night, which made sleeping very
difficult; a problem I've never had under sail before.
In a proper sea-berth it's no problem, but with 2 people in a double bed,
it's hard. On the uphill side, I'm clinging to the mattress with my
fingernails, trying not to be knocked loose by the big lurches; while
on the downhill side, Rachel is permanently cringing against me crashing
down on her (which sometimes happens). The flimsy lee board that she's
leaning on doesn't help, and creaks ominously when I knock her into it.
This isn't terribly conducive to a relaxing sleep. A good sea berth
is narrow enough to wedge yourself in (with the aid of pillows) so you
don't move even when it's rolly.
 |
| Sailing. |
|
By the time of my 1:30 a.m. watch, the rolling had abated somewhat,
but there was still plenty of wind, so we were making over 7 knots.
The sky had cleared somewhat, and the air was cooler with the wind
now in the north-east.
 |
| The crew in the cockpit. |
|
Thu 21 Dec 2006 09:34:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 27° 34.406' N 67° 23.690' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under mainsail with 1 reef, jib with 2 reefs, mizzen; 6.1 kt 149 T; 835 miles since Oxford, Maryland
The sea has calmed down a bit now, which is nice, as it's noticeably
less rolly; and the air has warmed up again. In fact, the conditions
are so nice that all six of us are hanging out in the cockpit.
 |
| The offwatch crew avidly studying... |
|
Thu 21 Dec 2006 11:34:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 27° 24.082' N 67° 16.528' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under mainsail with 1 reef, jib with 1 reef, staysail, mizzen; 6.7 kt 147 T; 847 miles since Oxford, Maryland
As the wind is lightening we've set the staysail again, although it's
still rather gusty, between 15 and 18 knots. The staysail has lifted
our speed from 6.4 to around 7 knots, which is nice.
Since it's my watch,
I'm keeping a lookout in the cockpit while the offwatch crew watch
The Office down below. The British Office, I'm glad to say, which is
a surprising cult hit in the US.
 |
| The Office. |
|
Thu 21 Dec 2006 12:30:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 27° 18.974' N 67° 13.059' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, jib with 1 reef, staysail, mizzen; 6.5 kt 149 T; 853 miles since Oxford, Maryland
With the wind still easing we've now unreefed the main, and the boat is
now balanced out beautifully with all sail set. It's hot and sunny
again up above, but still rolly, though less bad than before.
 |
| J and Debbie in the cockpit. |
|
Thu 21 Dec 2006 19:35:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 26° 30.559' N 66° 50.065' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, jib with 1 reef, staysail, mizzen; 7.3 kt 167 T; 906 miles since Oxford, Maryland
We had a beautiful evening on the boat, with our anticipation
of dinner heightened by the mouthwatering smells wafting up from the
galley; and at 5 p.m. we sat down to a delicious stir-fry, prepared
by Matt.
Now, though, the weather has turned cloudy and windy again, and the
boat is still rolling nastily in the persistent cross sea.
 |
| Sunrise on the 22nd. By Jenny. |
|
Fri 22 Dec 2006 04:35:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 25° 36.235' N 66° 31.205' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 6.9 kt 167 T; 963 miles since Oxford, Maryland
It's windy and rolly, and getting cold -- altogether a miserable 3 a.m.
watch (at least by the standards to which we'd like to
become accustomed)! With the gusty wind we're motorsailing to keep
the boat moving smoothly.
At some point while I was asleep we passed our farthest
point from land, around 365 nautical miles. At 3:00 we were 394
miles from Bermuda, and 350 from the Turk and Caicos islands; with 454
miles to go to Tortola.
 |
| Jenny at sunrise. By J. |
|
Fri 22 Dec 2006 11:45:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 24° 48.668' N 66° 15.185' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, jib with 1 reef, staysail, mizzen; 6.2 kt 168 T; 1013 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Trying to get to sleep last night was absolutely insane. The boat was
bouncing around and heeling in huge crazy lurches. Rachel was trying
to avoid leaning too hard on the lee board, which was still bending
like mad, and I was digging my nails into the mattress to try to avoid
crashing down on Rachel. Every so often the boat would settle down,
and with the aid of pillows and rolled-up blankets I could wedge myself in
place; but then another lurch would send me thumping into Rachel. At
least the engine was eventually shut off, so it was quiet.
Now I'm up on deck, getting ready for my watch (but really just giving up
on sleep). The good news is that the boat is roaring along under sail,
albeit still rolling and bouncing on the crazy seas. Hanging out in the
cockpit is a lot more relaxing than staying in bed!
 |
| A tether hook. By Jenny. |
|
Fri 22 Dec 2006 13:51:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 24° 35.783' N 66° 09.033' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, jib with 1 reef, staysail, mizzen; 7.1 kt 155 T; 1027 miles since Oxford, Maryland
The steering system seems to have gone a bit wonky, potentially an
awkward problem (though the boat has a backup steering tiller).
The wheel is connected to the rudder by a hydraulic linkage, and
it may be that there is some air in the system; anyway, the autopilot
is having trouble keeping us on course, and the wheel feels rather
"jittery". So for now we're hand steering; something of a chore, but
not too bad for a 1½-hour shift. It means that the secondary watch
person has to stand lookout duty, though, as the primary watch is too
busy steering.
Easing the mizzen sail balanced the boat out a little better and seems
to have helped, but meantime J and Jenny are having a go at greasing
the mechanism on the rudder.
The problem is made worse by the awkward sea state -- there are still
two distinct wave trains hitting the boat, so it's still very rolly.
At least it's warm and sunny; and we only have about 300 miles to go.
 |
| J making the daily status report to the boss. |
|
Fri 22 Dec 2006 16:37:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 24° 15.892' N 66° 02.504' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, jib with 1 reef, staysail, mizzen; 7.4 kt 167 T; 1048 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Earlier on I noticed that the booms were moving quite a lot, which is
not the best thing for the efficiency of the sails. So (with the
capn's permission) I rigged running vangs -- tackles to pull the booms down
toward the side deck. Fortunately, having replaced both running backstay
tackles in Oxford, we had two complete tackles, with cam cleats, which were
easily rigged to the booms. Having said that the main boom was awkward --
getting to it means standing on the cabin top, normally not a big deal,
but this boat is so huge that getting to the cabin top, a good three feet
above deck level, means going well forwards, stepping up to the lower
front section of the cabin, and coming back again.
 |
| Debbie cooking. By Matt. |
|
All in all, it was hot work, even with the wind blowing 19 knots and
gusty. But the sails are better controlled now.
Now it's overcast and cooler, and becoming quite blustery. The good news
is that the steering is holding up OK, though we're still hand-steering
(Matt has the duty right now). The even better news is that Debbie is
cooking up a storm in the galley, while listening to Duran Duran on her
CD player, now attached to her back by a home-bade backpack consisting
of a plastic bag, some blue tape, and her headlamp as a strap.
 |
| Captain J. By Jenny. |
|
Fri 22 Dec 2006 20:55:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 23° 46.691' N 65° 56.678' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, jib with 1 reef, staysail, mizzen; 8.3 kt 171 T; 1078 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Debbie's chili was a huge success, absolutely delicious. The sea conditions,
unfortunately, are still bad, and hand-steering for the last hour and a
half through the nasty waves, punctuated by frequent squalls, was a little
trying.
Fri 22 Dec 2006 23:39:28 [US/Eastern]
Position: 23° 26.274' N 65° 51.330' W; sailing under full mainsail, jib with 1 reef, staysail, mizzen; 7.7 kt 167 T; 1099 miles since Oxford, Maryland
The Tropic of Cancer: we entered the tropics as we crossed the Tropic of Cancer southbound.
 |
| Ian and Rachel on watch. By Jenny. |
|
Sat 23 Dec 2006 06:21:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 22° 41.875' N 65° 43.200' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, jib with 1 reef, staysail, mizzen; 5.9 kt 164 T; 1144 miles since Oxford, Maryland
My 4:30 watch this morning was a lot easier than the previous one --
mainly because the autohelm is back on! Yay! It seems that J and Jenny's
lube job on the steering system did the trick, helped perhaps by
better balancing of the sails. There still seems to be some air in the
hydraulic system, but it doesn't seem to be causing major problems, just
a little jitteryness.
We officially entered the tropics last night, and this morning it certainly
feels like it! The weather's fantastic, and the wind is lighter; the only
snag being the continued unsettled seas, and consequent rolling. Attempts
at sleep last night were once again pretty hopeless.
 |
| Jenny at the helm. |
|
Sat 23 Dec 2006 09:26:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 22° 26.720' N 65° 39.547' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 6.8 kt 162 T; 1160 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Yup, it's hot!
A little more wear and tear on the boat today, as the jib halyard just
failed -- it parted from the head of the jib, where it apparently reeves
through a webbing strap, which looked to have chafed through.
J decided to have a go at climbing the mast to fix it -- quite a trip, up
a 60-foot mast in very rolly conditions! He spent some time getting
ready, including getting a crash-helmet on, then Jenny, Matt and I
hoisted him. It looked like he had quite a bumpy ride up there, specially
when he lost his hold and swung out from the mast and back in, but he
got up and got to work. Unfortunately, the webbing had indeed failed,
so there was no hope of repairing it; but he at least retreived the
heavy, steel-wire pendant before it did any major damage to the brand-new
paint job.
 |
| Matt's highly functional hat. |
|
On the way back from the foredeck we found a large flying fish -- proof
that we're really sailing in the tropics!
The bad news is that the engine is now on again, since
we can't make enough speed with no jib. And we still have that
awkward cross swell. And it's hot! But, luxury of luxuries, I cooled
off and cleaned up with a genuine shower this morning -- this boat has
so darned much water on board that you can just leave it running and
get clean. It's quite an exercise, showering in a very cramped closet
on a wildly-rolling boat, but well worth it; much more refreshing than
the usual sponge bath.
Our ETA is now sometime tomorrow evening... we'll see!
 |
| J the barber. By Jenny. |
|
Sat 23 Dec 2006 15:04:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 21° 50.593' N 65° 30.122' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 6.4 kt 166 T; 1198 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Even hotter!
I had another quiet watch; in fact, I haven't seen any traffic since that
cruise ship. Even better, the squalls seem to have gone. So, we're
just plugging along with the sails and one engine; although the wind has
oddly shifted around to the south-east, not what we're expecting.
J's shaggy locks (for which he's taken some comments!) have gone, courtesy
of a slightly bumpy clipper job. Definitely looks more suited to the
tropics, if a little uneven (a hazard of hairdressing at sea).
Meanwhile, Jenny made some superb cookies, which are going down very
well indeed.
 |
| Debbie and the sunset. |
|
Sat 23 Dec 2006 22:33:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 20° 58.034' N 65° 13.318' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 7.4 kt 161 T; 1253 miles since Oxford, Maryland
The weather is still great, clear with lots of stars; it's a shame we
still have that nasty lumpy swell, which is kicking up lots of spray.
The cookies are going down well, though.
We've now covered 1,239 miles on the GPS, and -- all being well -- we
should be moored at Tortola by this time tomorrow!
 |
| The ship on radar, 4 miles ahead. By Rachel. |
|
Sun 24 Dec 2006 09:00:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 19° 42.073' N 64° 52.398' W -- The Atlantic; sailing under full mainsail, staysail, mizzen; 7.0 kt 175 T; 1332 miles since Oxford, Maryland
We had a great sunrise this morning, probably our last one at sea --
in fact, we've got less than 100 miles to go, so it should be no
problem.
At 6:30 a.m. we had to dodge another freighter on a collision course --
our second of the trip, and both on my watch! So once again I benefitted
from Rachel's help. It was the same drill as before -- turn way
off to starboard while it was still miles ahead of us. The ship seemed
to be pretty much crossing our course, so we guessed it was heading from
Puerto Rico or the Dominican Republic to Europe.
 |
| J's off watch, but always on call. By Rachel. |
|
Now we've just turned the engine off, since the wind is up; and
we're making 7 knots under sail, on a fine, hot morning. It's great
to have the motor off again; lovely and peaceful. Oddly, despite the
fact that we're getting close to land, we're passing over the deepest
point on the trip: the water here is 25,000 feet (4¾ miles, or 7,620
metres) deep here. Strange to think that we're cruising so far above the
solid ground below, and there's absolutely nothing to show for it here.
Sun 24 Dec 2006 13:55:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 19° 14.949' N 64° 49.201' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 6.3 kt 174 T; 1359 miles since Oxford, Maryland
The wind's lightening, so the motor's back on -- boo.
 |
| Is that land? By Jenny. |
|
Sun 24 Dec 2006 19:30:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 18° 35.174' N 64° 46.905' W -- The Atlantic; motoring; 7.5 kt 180 T; 1399 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Excitement reigned at 4:17 p.m. as Matt claimed the prize for the first sighting
of land and for having correctly guessed that the sighting would
happen on my watch. (I'd guessed Debbie's watch.) Most of us couldn't
see it, though; the southern horizon just looked hazy to me. So some of
us were regarding this as an unconfirmed sighting.
 |
| J's lassoo attempt. |
|
Just as we were staring forward, straining for a sight, I noticed that the
spotlight had come loose from the port spreader, and was swinging around
at the end of its wire. This meant another trip up the mast for poor
old J, once again helmetted and hoisted up by Jenny and me. Well,
first, he had a go at lassoing it, to see if he could stabilise it that way;
but that was a pretty far-fetched plan, although he gave it a good try.
So up he went, and after some careful work -- making sure to fasten the
light to himself rather than drop it -- he came down with the lamp safely
in tow. And he was able to confirm the sighting of land -- so Matt won
after all.
 |
| J working on the spotlight. By Rachel. |
|
That Jenny was able to help with this was pretty amazing considering the
meal she was working up -- basically a full Christmas diner with
tofurkey and all the
trimmings, including stuffing. It was absolutely fantastic, though
I wasn't really able to do it justice.
After dinner I decided to grab a couple of hours sleep, in preparation
for the anticipated mooring...

Tortola!
 |
| The sunset. |
|
Sun 24 Dec 2006 21:45:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 18° 23.057' N 64° 42.356' W -- Sopers Hole, Tortola; moored; 1415 miles since Oxford, Maryland
We're here! We've successfully tied up at the owner's private mooring
(fortunately vacant), after a careful entrance through the islands
around Sopers Hole. J posted lookouts all around the boat, just in
case -- it was pitch dark by this time, and of course there's a lot
of vessel traffic between the islands.
 |
| Sopers hole. |
|
We had a surprise when Jenny picked up the pendant from the mooring
buoy. The first the rest of us knew was an exclamation from the bow --
"What the..." -- followed by laughter. It turns out that Remar,
a friend of the owner (and of J and Jenny),
had attached a bottle of fine champagne
to the pendant as a welcoming gift -- very nice!
So we're here, having run 1,396 nautical miles by the GPS, at an
average of 7.3 knots.
 |
| Pelicans by the boat in Sopers Hole. |
|
Mon 25 Dec 2006 21:00:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 18° 23.055' N 64° 42.356' W -- Sopers Hole, Tortola; moored; 1415 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Merry Christmas!
We had a fantastic awakening on Christmas Morning -- on going out, we
found pelicans diving all around the boat, hunting the huge school of fish
that had taken up residence under the hull. It wasn't long before
I was in the water, checking out the fish; some huge tarpon, as well
as a host of smaller fish.
 |
| Pelican on the bow. |
|
The pelicans, unfortunately, had to be chased off the boat, as they
have a habit of making a terrible mess of anything they perch on;
so we rigged up some fluttery plastic bags as bird-scarers, which did the
trick pretty well.
Tortola is beautiful. the islands rise steeply out of the water, in
contrast to much of the Caribbean, and are covered in green; a contrast
to the nearby US Virgin Islands, which seem to be very heavily developed.
Sopers Hole is a great little harbour -- just a little too popular --
whose main attractions are the
Jolly Roger and
Pusser's, two
restaurants that serve great food and great (mainly rum-based)
cocktails.
 |
| Looking west from Sopers Hole. |
|
Our Christmas Day was mostly taken up with work, though. First and
foremost was cleaning the boat -- getting all the salt off before the
marine-grade stainless steel started rusting (which doesn't take long in
the tropics). Even my swim was partly work, as I gave the bottom a
good check over (unsurprisingly, given the speed we'd been keeping up,
it was clean as a whistle) and checking the starboard propeller and
shaft for any odd rattles -- no sigh of problems, though.
 |
| The crew eating at the Jolly Roger. |
|
It wasn't all work, though, as we got over to the Jolly Roger for lunch,
and were entertained by Matt's endless pirate stories -- including the one
of how Blackbeard sank a persuing ship right here in Soper's Hole, firing
the fatal shot from a cannon secreted at the very spot where we were
sitting.
For the evening, we were invited up to Remar's house (a beautiful place,
hanging over the cliff, with fantastic views and the sound of the surf
directly below) for mimosas, then back to the Jolly Roger for Christmas
Dinner -- I had the wild boar, which was fantastic. Back on the boat, the
evening wasn't over, with a round of presents under the Christmas stocking.
 |
| Trellis Bay, by the Beef Island airport. |
|
Mon 01 Jan 2007 04:00:00 [US/Eastern]
Position: 18° 23.055' N 64° 42.356' W -- Oakland, California; moored; 1415 miles since Oxford, Maryland
Happy New Year!
I'm back in California at last, having enjoyed a fantastic, but all
too short, vacation in Tortola. We managed to get some fun in,
swimming and snorkelling around the islands, as well as helping J and
Jenny preparing the boat for the owner's arrival.
Our journey back was somewhat epic; we flew out of the tiny airport on
Tortola on the 30th, thinking that we would be home the same day,
well in time to
organise our new years' celebrations. However, missed connections,
airline incompetence, and general New Years' Eve travel chaos meant that
I got back to the bay area just a little late, and celebrated the
new year on the way back from San Francisco airport, on the
local train in Oakland!
 |
| The boat in Soper's Hole. |
|
Still, I managed to hook up with some friends here for a belated
celebration; meantime, Rachel's already off arranging the next
stage of her move.
So that was our trip, my first ever yacht delivery... but if J and Jenny
need crew next time, I'm sure I'll be available!
Trip Statistics
| Crow-flies distance: | 1358.4 nm |
| Distance covered: | 1415.8 n.m.
0.0 n.m. hove-to
808.4 n.m. motoring
607.4 n.m. under sail
1415.8 n.m. since |
| Elapsed time: | 8 days, 2h 15m
none moored
none hove-to
4 days, 10h 37m motoring
3 days, 15h 38m under sail |
| Speed average over leg: | 7.29 kt (174.92 m.p.d.)
7.29 kt moving total (174.92 m.p.d.)
7.58 kt motoring (181.98 m.p.d.)
6.93 kt under sail (166.34 m.p.d.) |
| Fastest speed over leg: | 10.23 kt (Mon 18 Dec 2006 05:31:51)
9.48 kt under sail (Mon 18 Dec 2006 10:38:51) |
| Best day's run: | 200.8 nm on 17 - 18 Dec 2006 |
Note that "Crow-flies distance" is the straight distance between
the leg start and end points; "Distance Covered" is the actual
run over the ground. Similarly, "Speed average
over leg" is our effective speed average over the ground.
In the log entries:
- The date and time are in the timezone stated in square brackets,
which is generally our local time zone at that point.
- The latitude (North or South) and longitude (East or West) are in
degrees, minutes, and fractions of a minute; there are 60 minutes
in a degree. Hence, 22° 59.5' is 22 degrees and 59.5 sixtieths of
a degree. Note that 1 minute of latitude = 1 nautical mile, which is
very handy for navigation.
Show Track Data
Show Daily Runs
Copyright (C) 1995-2006 Ian Cameron Smith. (index.cgi $Revision: 1.98 $)