A "Quiet Night" N41:44 W66:08

Millybrown
Mark Hillmann
Thu 7 May 2009 13:39
The three nights so far have all been quiet, at least the wind has dropped and then got up again at dawn.  A good thing too when it got up to force 8 on Tuesday and 6 yesterday.
 
Last night was only quiet in one sense: We had sailed through a group of draggers in the afternoon, probably out of New Bedford.  We would call them trawlers and most were big stern trawlers.  The first one I saw was astern, they did not have AIS transmitters and with the usual limited visibility over the cold water here you would need a very constant lookout to see them.  I hope they could see my radar reflector. 
 
As they were all circling and hauling nets close to each other, so they must have been watching carefully.  They were also in a particularly choppy bit of water, 70m deep but with a current crossing sharp banks and troughs at the northern edge of St George's bank.     
 
After that there were no more ships either out of sight on the AIS or fishing and the water was deep enough at 90m to make me think I was beyond the fishermen.  With the dark the wind fell away completely and we lay with the sails slatting in the swell.  We were going nowhere so I eventually rolled up the genoa and left the main to bang across, but at least stop us rolling too much. 
 
I went to one hour lookouts, perhaps 50 minutes sleep, then look round and reset both alarms.  The second one goes off as soon as you get back in bed, which is a good reason to have reset both as soon as you get out.  At midnight I was sure it was quiet enough to get more sleep, but half an hour later was woken by the battery alarm.  We had the masthead tricolour light on, our one remaining heavy current light, but I did want fishermen to see me if they were there.  I started the engine to charge the battery, set the alarms for half an hour and went back to bed.  Half an hour later, back up and stop the engine:  Now I could get a bit more sleep.
 
Half an hour later at 3 o'clock the AIS alarm went off.  It reported the Paris Express heading straight for us, just inside the 16 mile guard zone on the AIS.  There was no wind, so I started the engine and motored due south, at right angles to their course.  As they were doing 22 knots and I was doing 4 it only helps a bit.
 
The next bit was interesting: At 1.5 miles off I am sure that they saw me on their radar and switched off their autopilot.  They had been on a precise heading until then.  A little nerve-racking, as at first they came south a little, no guesswork, you could see the numbers drop on their AIS heading.  Then I think they recognised that I was going south and at 1.4 miles away, turned 20 degrees north.  They crossed my stern half a mile off and I could just make out lights, not navigation lights but a faint white blur.   
 
Back to sleep.
 
Before 6 the breeze was back and we were sailing again, close hauled but pushing smoothly up and down over the big swell left from yesterday.  At 6.30 half a dozen dolphins arrived.  If I could play in the waves, they would join in.  After a few minutes they fell astern but then a larger group, 20 or more white sided dolphins, came and played around the bows and astern.  4 or 5 surfacing together, crossing each other right under the bows and one jumped fully clear of the water.  They were with us for perhaps 1/2 an hour.  
 
If there are any under the bows now I cannot see them as it is raining again for the second time this morning.  It is only 8am.  There are none astern.  I can see that way even when it is raining.
 
So much for a quiet night.