Fw: Nearly there! N36. 28. 98. W39. 23. 61.

Moya
Doug Smith
Thu 24 May 2012 17:05
 
----- Original Message -----
From: Doug Smith
Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2012 3:44 PM
Subject: Nearly there! N36. 28. 98. W39. 23. 61.

Our Position is N36. 28. 98. W39. 23. 61. at noon UTC on Thursday 24th May.
 
As you are following the saga, just to letyou know we survived the 40 knot winds!  We had a day and a night of a super sleigh ride with the wind on our port quarter travelling between 6 and 8 knots - terrifying! but it made some mileage.  A day and a night with a single reef in both the main and the mizzen and only one headsail (we normally try to carry three) We would skip along at six knots, lift on a wave to seven knots, run down the back of it at 8 knots, then slam into the front of the next wave, instantly knocking us back to six knots again.  There was no escape, as even off watch the rising scream of the turning prop shaft, free spinning in the water, let you know we were about to hit another wall of water.  I worried about the rig, weighing up the pressure we were forcing upon it with the stop start motion of thirty tons riding down hill, balanced against the danger of reducing sail yet further and of  us slowing us down and placing ourselves at the mercy of the 9 metre (according to Frank) Atlantic rollers that were building beneath us, with nothing to check their progress for a thousand miles.  The only person who really enjoyed it was Rick, whose hopes of a Saturday night out in Horta were raising by the minute.  As we approached the second evening, the wind suddenly faltered, changed direction and dropped.  We were back to 3 knots, in a big swell, with Saturday night out of the question and a much relieved Doug.
 
We  are now only 530 miles from the Azores, in the Azores High - with no wind - and motoring at 5 knots toward target.  I am a little more confident about our fuel supply as I reckon we have a range shortfall of only 150 miles - so we still need the wind to come back - but its a gamble.  The benefit is that the platform is reasonably stable at last, which draws our thoughts toward the hopefully rapid turn around in Horta - and those of Dave toward booking his flight home.  He really has been an excellent chef and chief fixer, so I can forgive him for constantly re-arranging my carefully thought out stowage plans whilst maintaining the new locations carefully in his head!
 
Our second toilet - currently the only one that works - failed yesterday but Dave, clad in marigolds (as well as his other attire!) managed to fix that too.  We had prepared against failure by Rick making a very binding lunch of macaroni cheese but luckily we have not had to test out the theory.
 
Frank is busy taking additional readings from the GPS to compare against the chart and prove that we have actually travelled further than our instrumentation is telling us.  He is nearly ready to take on Garmin and the entire Geo-Nav structure when he gets home, I just hope he does not invest his life savings in the project - and write the theory off to wishful thinking - in the meantime I am trying to divert his energies toward fixing our tiller-pilot and compass light where a more immediate impact might be felt.
 
For the last two days we have been navigating amongst fleets of Portuguese Men of War - they look like discarded paper cups from previous voyagers, but hopefully they are taking their sting toward the American continent rather than our own British beaches -or have I been trained to say European?  This morning I spotted fountains of water about half a mile away on our port beam and was able to shout "Thaar she blows"  This raised both watches who confirmed I had seen my first Whale!  The Whale I had seen surfaced briefly, then vanished, but what an impressive sight.  There were several others about a mile astern but they did not stay long and soon we were left alone again in our Ocean.  We are also getting Dolphin visits almost daily but they appear to be much smaller than the ones we see off our own North West coast, but perhaps they will grow! We are also in ice berg territory - there was one spotted here not long ago according to the chart.  Richard sees the advantages toward a gin and tonic but I'm thinking of the anniversary of another steel ship, one hundred years ago, and asking the deck watch to maintain a close look out despite the empty sea that surrounds us.
 
Well, we motor on.  Food supplies holding up well and Frank, as our lunch time chef, is training for evening duties on Dave's departure.  As for water usage, we are on our last tank despite restrictions but should be ok for another week.  I did catch one of our number washing his smalls, very commendable normally, but when there is none left to drink, if we haven't reached Horta, thats the end of this blog, so soon put a stop to that.  You can imagine how delightful it is in here, little ventilation in the rough patches and five men living in close contact, none of whom have had a shower for three weeks! 
 
All for now - lets hope the next one comes from Horta, if there still is such a thing as dry land.
 
Doug.

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