Chorizo for lunch

Irie
Sun 7 Jun 2009 13:02

Position 40 13.2 N 16 22.8W

Sunday 7th June Plymouth 795 NM

The wind arrived a little later than expected, filling in around daybreak today. Irie’s leaping along in 25 – 30 knots of wind from the south west with a steadily building sea. These occasionally rush past in  a welter of breaking white foam, known for some obscure reason as Skipper’s daughters (see below). Up to the north of us, the low is tracking along and as it overtakes and the cold front moves through (spiky marks on the chart), the wind should veer to the west and then we can gybe round and start heading north east. That probably won’t be until tomorrow so as to keep a fair distance from the low; last’s night’s forecast – ‘Low 997 Altair and Charcot, force eight, locally nine, seas rough to very rough occasionally high, fierce gusts’ – some respect due methinks. Still, the sun’s peeping through, lunch was an excellent chorizo concoction with rice, and supper’s only five hours away, time for a little siesta

Knot: Highwayman’s hitch   Saying: Wrap Full

Yesterday’s Knot: Constrictor knot   Saying: Skippers Daughter