Goodbye Ireland -- Hello Spain!
Crosshaven: the final
chapter The weather
really wasn’t very sporting during the last 2 weeks we were in
The boat bums chatting up Miss Betty – they never could resist a firm pair of sponsons. Brian (David’s Dad) was there with his display of the only remaining working horse-drawn Breeches Buoy – which was still in service until 10 years ago.
Bryn being rescued by Breeches Buoy.
Grandad, Bethany and Bryn. On another soggy
day we boarded the bus for the bright lights of
The O’Prisoner: Scene 1, take 2. The saga of the
SSB radio continued. We could receive excellent static (with a very realistic
helicopter effect in the background) and could actually talk to coast guard
stations 80 miles away, but the DSC function (digital selective calling – the
bit that automatically reports your position so that the rescue services can
find you if you make a MAYDAY call) still wasn’t working. After having the set
checked out by an Irish radio engineer and numerous lengthy telephone calls to
the manufacturer, we had to rip out the equipment and send it back to the
Having finished
my work and taken delivery of the new mainsail, the main thing that was now
stopping us from heading for Bethany, Bryn and I went to stay with Brian/Grandad and Angela to do our Personal Survival at Sea course – setting off distress flares, learning just how dangerous it is to abandon your boat and get into a liferaft, plus air-sea rescue procedures. On the Friday evening we joined in with the local St John’s Eve celebrations – a midsummer festival with a bonfire, outdoor games and activities for the children, and copious quantities of candy floss, ice cream, sugar dummies and chips, all washed down with the obligatory Coke of course! On the Saturday we had a brilliant session in the local swimming pool playing with the liferaft and making synchronized swimming patterns with fellow shipwrecked crewmembers. Seriously, we learned how to get into the water safely (no, you don’t just jump in), how to move about in the water in a lifejacket, how to conserve energy while in the water, and how to right the liferaft if it inflates upside down. We also got to practise getting into the liferaft – not an easy task while wearing an inflated lifejacket. To give you some idea of the enormity of this manoeuvre, imagine you are bobbing in the water with the equivalent of a pair of very buoyant size 48 DD boobs. The task is to get the boobs high enough out of the water (0.5 m) to flop them over the tubes of the liferaft while balancing on a rope ladder that is disappearing under the liferaft ‘cos you’ve got your weight on it. You claw your way, hand over hand, up a bit of rope until you get the boobs over the tubes, and then land face first on the floor of the liferaft. I hope that I never have to repeat this bit for real! In my absence,
David and Lawrence repacked all the loose gear into random lockers (we are still
looking for some of this stuff a week later), delivered and collected the
Everest of laundry that we had generated during the grotty weather, got the SSB
radio refitted and tested, had a crash course in how to set up the Aries wind
vane (self-steering gear), victualled the boat for a worst case scenario of 2
weeks at sea, and attempted to get our gas bottles refilled – you know, all the
little jobs that we should have done a little earlier than 2 days before we
wanted to leave. Did you know that gas bottles in Bobbing in
Biscay The By the end of day 2 the weather had started to abate and I had stopped being sick. For the next couple of days the wind settled into a steady N 4–5, occasionally 6 and we relaxed into a pleasant 3 hours on, 6 hours off watch system, put the world to rights, watched the sea, the stars and the phosphorescence in our wake, and played Traveller’s Trivia to brush up on our general knowledge and collection of interesting – if useless – facts. Do you know how long it takes a hen to lay 19 dozen eggs? Well we do now (see end for answer). We eventually got the Aries working in stronger winds and let Helmut the Autopilot take over in lighter winds (he is designed to work when the engine is running, but on this trip he was quite happy under sail). It seems that our Aries likes the strong winds but is very temperamental in light winds (must be female according to David and Lawrence) and is now christened Hairy Mary. The new mainsail was great, but we did bust a couple of mast cars (bits that hold the sail against the mast) – luckily we managed to replace them with some that I'd secreted in the depths of a locker. The wind fluctuated a bit more over the last day or so and we were totally becalmed for half a day. Overall, our speed varied from a dizzying 12 knots surfing down waves while running with the wind with 2 reefs in the main and no genoa, to a frustrating 0 knots as we wallowed and bobbed in Biscay. Our motion was brilliant as long as we were doing more than about 1.5 knots and we had a steady heel to port the whole way. Overall we averaged 4.5 knots (nautical miles per hour) on the crossing, this included being becalmed for about 10 hours and having a day of light winds. Going nowhere in a yacht is not pleasant, it is noisy and nauseating as the sails flog and snatch, crash and bang at the deck fittings. However, being becalmed had its advantages – we had whales around the boat for an hour or so (well we saw a non-dolphin fin, a metre of arching back and lots of blow). We are still not quite sure what flavour whale we saw as the crucial pages (pp 36–40) are missing from our Guide to the Identification of Whales and Dolphins (we've never had to use that bit of the book before and I suspect they were missing when we bought it…). We also saw Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) and had a mega-pod (roughly a 100) of Common Dolphin (Delphinus delphis) who played chicken by the dozen with our bows for hours.
Bad photo of a dolphin…but we have lots of video footage. So what about the leaks I hear you cry? The boat was DRY!!! Admittedly the sea was from behind not on the nose, but the only water we had in the bilges was the melt-water from the ice in the coolbox. We did have a bit of a dodgy moment when we had motor out of the path of a stonking great container ship (who either hadn't or didn’t want to see us and was doing 25–30 knots) in the dark and the engine mysteriously starting making water. After that we didn’t dare use the engine except in emergencies – we will have to get it checked out before we go any further. Anybody know where we can get cheap, reliable Perkins (do they have an outlet shop Stu’)? Anyway, we
survived Biscay and after 116 hours at sea, we made landfall (yachty term for
getting there) in
Approaches to
Since arriving,
the weather has been warm but overcast and the adults have been catching up on
sleep and alcohol while Beth and Bryn have been catching up with other kids (two
next door on a Dutch boat). Having been on a port tack for 5 days, I was still
on a port tack for a good few hours when I first stepped on dry land too (it is
particularly disconcerting to sit on the loo on dry land at a 10º angle of
heel!). David and I had
our 10th wedding anniversary while we were on passage and we arrived in
Well, I think
that is about it from us for this blog entry. We are intending to stay here for
as long as it takes to explore the city a bit more, visit the aquarium and
Answer: 12 months! |