Day 15 - Its a hot one!

Jacana
David Munro
Sun 25 Jan 2009 21:24
Last night we felt the heat as the sun set, the breeze was steady and warm - we were on deck all night in T-shirts for the first time in the trip. We carried the Pink & Grey runner all night and made good progress towards the finish. We had been hopeful of a 200 mile day but dropped below the magic figure of 8 knots during the night for too long resulting in a commendable 185 mile day. The night sky was clear allowing us to star gaze without any light polution, there was no moon either making the stars seem brighter still. An hour before the dawn saw the first of three squalls pass us by, the only indication of them are dark patches in the stars and the freshening of the wind, having a little more experience of them, we kept the spinnaker flying, coming down to a broad angle in the puffs. By first light there was a clear horizon and a freshening breeze - down came the light runner, up went Olive who remained up all day and into the evening where we managed a 100 mile run in 12 hours.
 
For those of you wondering what a grib file is, there is a picture of one attached showing the wind direction lines depicting strength and direction in the area you happen to be. They predict the weather forward for upto a week in advance so that you can make routing decisions, either avoiding bad weather or seeking out the best winds. All the boats racing in this race use a Grib service to avoid the dead patches where there is no or little wind. The gribs for the remainder of the race suggest that we have fair winds for the run into Salvadour - we havn't opened the last packet of Smash in celebration just yet in case they're wrong.
 
The mutiny over the removal of cushions from the cockpit at sunrise rumbles on and hasn't been helped by "Rudge" E-mailing the boat suggesting wheel barrow inner tubes as the ideal solution - where was Rudge before we left Cape Town?? Rudge goes on to advise that "Kwik Fit" do a very good delivery service - not that good I suspect. Today it was too hot to sit in the cockpit, the decks burnt the soles of feet - the bare chested rail fodder sculked below moaning about the heat, you just can't please some people. At one point this afternoon there was a scuffle for the shadiest place under the bimini, Chris won as he still hasn't changed his shorts. (see attached picture)
 
We were perhaps a little quick to blame the water boy for over filling the water containers and flooding the bilges as we have now discovered a water leak on the starboard tank which floods the bilges, also explains why there is never any water in the starboard tank. As a result, we have stripped open Paul's bunk under which is the water tank. We politely waited for him to wake up and then politely waited for him to get up, then we impolitely turfed him out after we could wait no longer. Water leak was found, the pipe work stripped out and repaired, the system put back together again, tested and signed off as another successful piece of routine maintenance. The water boy is back on full rations and an extra tot of grog.
 
 
Nature watch
 
Flying Fish Fry ( try saying that after one of David's cocktails)
 

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