Drama and finish line reached!

Gwylan
Charles Manby
Tue 8 Dec 2009 17:51
Well we have been here for nearly 24 hours only some of it sober!
 
We had washed the decks using the last of the fresh water, tidied up inside, removed the plastic from sofas etc, Nicky was putting mascara on.  Parasailor up 20 miles to go.
 
Black cloud appears, looks as though it is going to miss us, we sail away from cloud, wind builds to 20-22 knots, Gwylan is reaching hard at 9.5 knots away from the edge of the cloud which looks as though it is going to pass. Debate going on as to whether we should drop the sail, captain downstairs getting docs ready for the finish etc, so we are a bit slow.   Suddenly the right flank of the cloud detaches itself from the main bulk and "Ack, Ack, Ack" dive-bombs Gwylan.  Wind increases to only 24 knots which should be fine.
 
"Pop", "Bang" is the sound of several thousand euros worth of sail ripping horizontally across.  Tom is 3 metres up the forestay in 30 seconds to "spike" or let go the tack of the sail.  Nicky and James are the leeward rail, and the sail well-ripped in back on board without getting wet.
 
After the storm, the calm so we wallow into the finish line 3 hours behing Satori and 45 mins behind Sarabi, 10 hours behind A Lady (who used 9 hours 40 mins of engine).  Sarabi missed the worst of the storm and then had a better angle in for the light drift to follow, so it was very tight.  Windflower about 4 hours later.  So all 4 Oyster 56s basically arrived within 8 hours of each other.
 
Two welcoming committees.  Firstly Andrew and Satori.  We could not work out why the glass-bottomed boat was rushing madly around at full speed on the finish line until we saw the crew of Satori.  Very funny indeed.  Then Pippa and James on the dock-side.  Champagne, beers, punches, wine, dinner and a sore head this morning.  Apparently there is a bench that at 2am I was calling my new best friend.  Tidy-up today.
 
So we arrived at 15.38 on Monday.  Total elapsed time 15 days 6 hours and 38 minutes.  So faster than the 18-18 days.  Those 6 hours under the cloud sound worse than the delays most experienced and cost us in time, as did the late storm and calm, but not in experience.
 
All-in-all it was fulfilling a dream I have long held, first seeing an Oyster 56 called Kathara sailing north of St Vincent I think 15 years ago with an ARC flag on it.  A great experience, Gwylan was a rock-star, just the perfect boat for such a voyage, she behaved well and put up with "operator error".
 
Good preparations make for a safe, fast and enjoyable trip, so Tom's time in Lanzarote, Nicky's thinking on provisioning etc., the weekend course in Guildford where we found out we could do this.
 
Thanks to all the crew.  Carsten for his sailing skills, calm and complete helfpulness,  Otter for non-stop chit-chat and enthusiasm, Lara for being a complete laugh, massages, cups of tea in the middle of the night, bikini fashion shows.   ARC asked for the 5 best pieces of kit we took: I wrote Parasailor, Autopilot, AIS, ARC weather reports  and Tom.  Great sailor, massively helpful, kind and a good teacher too.  Gave us a complete sense of confidence but it remained our trip.  He also put up with my skippering which must be pretty tough if you are used to working for Russell Coutts et al.
 
Lastly to Nicky.  Planning this trip and having it as an objective and something to aim for has been a great motivator for both of us after the dark days of Breast cancer, chemo and radiotherapy.  I think it has helped us through that in a big way.  Nicky pushed me not to put it off, and so here we are.  Her provisioning, happiness-creating skills, sailing skills (she is now a much better helm than me because she doesn't overdo it), made for crew cohesion in a way you will all recognise.  It has been very special to do this with my wife, of whom there are not many on the ARC.  Being able to sail and ski together is a great part of our lives and marriage and I am very lucky to have her to do it with.  Lots of love to you girl.
 
OUT
 
PS I will post some more photos when I can have access to faster internet.  There are some great ones of Gwylan crossing the finish line on www.photoaction.com