Day 13 Light winds

Jacana
David Munro
Fri 23 Jan 2009 21:50
Today saw the first true light wind day, over night the winds died down to nothing in the early hours with sails flapping and the wind indicator doing loops Jacana ground to a halt. The stop lasted a few hours before a light steady head wind saw us once again making progress, the first time with a headsail rather than a spinnaker in 7 days. The wind strength varied up and down, never really settling until an hour before dawn when the wind had come aft enough to fly the spinnaker. Olive was summoned, hoisted and remained with us for most of the morning where we benefitted from a large squall passing a few miles to the north giving us a steady 17 knots. As the afternoon set in the wind died away again to nothing - more flapping. At about 5 knots of breeze on the beam, our 5th spinnaker was hoisted - the light reacher. With some coaxing we managed to build boat speed and  once she was set achieved some very respectable speeds in such light airs. (see attached photograph)  We have named the kite "India" after John's daughter who provided the colour design in the autumn. (see attached Photograph) As the afternoon wore on, the wind filled in to a steady 9 knots and "India" was carried into the evening.
 
The sun shine returned today and with such light winds, the decks became almost too hot to walk on. Bimini man erected the Bimini cover at the rear of the boat for the first time. For the following hour, more time was spent trimming the Bimini than the sails but the new camp site at the back of the boat was a great success. Attached is a photograph of David modelling the Bimini in his new shirt Laura gave him for Christmas. We believe David to have entered into some sort of sponsorship deal with "Tilly Hats", as his is a permanent feature perched on his head, whether doing the nav, cooking breakfast, gybing the spinnaker, it is always there.  The hat "became detatched" this morning and landed on the side deck, very close to sliding over the edge, Paul leaped in two giant strides like a caped wonder boy (he's taken to wearing his pants on the outside of his shorts) and retreived the hat before it was swept away to certain doom. Paul was heralded the hero of the hour, by himself and was awarded extra gruel and a double tot also by himself.
 
Paul spent the afternoon advising the other members of the crew on the latest male grooming products on the market, information passed on from his GQ magazine which he managed to smuggle past the weight master before leaving Cape Town. As a subject matter, the crew perhaps should have paid a little more attention or to be polite any attention at all given that the four of us have been living in such a tight confined space for so long.
 
We have been visited on a couple of nights by lights on the horizon like the looms of light houses. Two nights ago there were two very distinct looms and again last night one very distinct loom .They were large enough to warrant a quick look at the AIS system to see what was approaching, nothing within 150 miles of us.We have considered a number of explanations but decided that they were alien space ships come to take Chris back to his planet, being aliens they don't have to register their vessels on AIS.
 
Nature watch
 
Small brown jelly fish about the size of a 2p piece.
Flying fish
Plankton

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