Day 13 - Trouble at Mill

Jacana
David Munro
Fri 23 Jan 2009 12:31
T
The night was spent charging along with a good presure in the big runner, by morning we felt as though we had covered some good ground, however, by mid morning we knew it was going to be one of those days. From first light we were storm chasing or rather they were chasing us, we have learnt from experience that the winds alter in strength and direction with each squall depending whether the squall approaches from the south or north. The key thing we have noted is that the winds rarely get above 20 knots and if they do it's just for a gust or two, it is therefore very important not to have one of the light weight spinnakers flying when there are squalls about. Big Olive is rated up to 20 knots and has coped well, when the squall hits we bear off and run away.
 
As has been the habit of late we had run downwind on port gybe during the night, switching to starboard with the dawn. Chris has found a way to spice up this relatively mundane manoevre by secretly putting the kettle on before starting. (see attached photo) This inevitably means that the tense stage of coming up to fill the kite on the new side followed by a big ease of the sheet is done to the not unstressful sound of a shrieking kettle whistle. It does also mean tea is up promptly thereafter which Chris believes fully compensates for any shredded nerves.
 
At around 8am, the boat rode gracefully down a wave, hit a velocity header (boat caught up with the sail) collapsing the kite, before we managed to pull in the sheet we had a wrap! (Spinnaker wrapped around the headstay) After a short period of tugging on the sheets we decided to Gybe the boat to rotate the wrap at the top of the mast in the opposite direction. The helmsman gybed the boat rather quickly resulting in a secondary wrap around the headstay in the opposite direction - what had started as a quiet morning was turning into a general free for all. Gradually we manged to unwrap the tangle and suddenly the kite burst free and was flying once again - disaster - we had torn a panel during the secondary wrap. Down came Olive and into the repair shop below, up went big orange as we now had over 20 knots with an approaching squall. After an extraordinary half an hour searching for the tear, it was finally located and repaired with spinnaker tape and bagged for future use. A great debate (still unresolved) then ensued. All of us recall seeing the tear near the leech (back edge) of the kite before dropping it. However when it was eventually found the tear was located only three feet from the luff (front edge). The very unlikely (but only plausible) explanation is that the sail was flying the wrong way round having been incorrectly tied on before the hoist! Could that also explain the severity of the wrap which came out of the blue? Quite possibly, but absence of video evidence means some element of doubt remains and the guilty cannot be hunted down and punished.
 
The morning and early afternoon saw us putting up four out of the five spinnakers we carry, we also spent some time with the headsail out, all in an attempt to sail a course as the wind backed & veered, dropped and blew. By late afternoon we had a settled light easterly and reached into the sun set. Yesterday we had decided that today would be the day to put up the bimini cover over the steering position to protect us frm the sun.  Paul who has been nominated "Bimini Man" decided that due to inclement weather, we would delay it for a day - all of us were drenched at some time by the tropical downpours.
 
A source of crew discontent has emerged and resulted in a petition to the captain (see photo). At stake is the posterior comfort of the "roughie toughie" racing crew during daylight hours when the "cushions in the cockpit" consession lapses with the sunrise. As we write, David is considering his response.
 
We have today passed another milestone, 20 degrees south - the event called for a celebration and David mixed up another cocktail, the "Lost Albatross" comprising of a warm, rather sickly, orange and mango based fruit punch with brandy. Our unreserved appreciation for this concotion indicates the depths to which our standards of taste have sunk as a result of deprivation. All of us are likely to represent quite "cheap dates" in the period following the race.
 
A communication glitch became evident in the late afternoon when the satellite phone stopped connecting us to the outside world. A quick analysis revealed that a new block of minutes, which had been purchased on Tuesday, had not been credited to the account and we had no pre paid time left. Since it was "out of hours" no one at the company could do anything about it. A promised call back to inform us what could be done in the morning also failed to materialise. If you are reading this blog then the situation has been resolved.
 

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