Blog 15th June

Nightsong
Tue 15 Jun 2010 12:06
Dear Blog
 
Midday position 37.42N 25.20W
 
Having spent the last 2 weeks in the Azores exploring 4 islands (Faial, Sao Jorge, Terceira and Sao Miguel - well 5 really 'cos Pico is best seen from Faial see photo), I left Ponta Delgada on Sao Miguel this morning for Corunha in a moderate Easterly and am currently motoring the 25 miles to the eastern end of the island. Should be 6 days or so to do the 850 miles but with contrary (if not strong winds forecast) might well be 7 or even 8 days. 7 days is only 120 miles per day but to keep a VMG of 5 knots up to windward will be hard even with the use of engine to assist motor sailing.
 
The Azores have been a revelation - fantastically beautiful and varied - somehow I always thought of them as low but they are like all the other Atlantic islands from St Kilda thru' Madeira, the Canaries, the Windward & Leeward Islands and BVIs - mountainous and volcanic. Shame not to have had time to visit Flores but, of the 4 islands visited, really have seen 2 islands well (Faial on a scooter and Sao Miguel by car) and they are both stunning. I do not think I missed much with Santa Maria, Graciosa or Corvo which with Pico make up the other 4 of the 9 islands. The most memorable thing will be the miles upon miles of hydrangea hedgerows - plus all the other flowers from wild lillies, cameleas to roses and the sheer greenness. Faial has wonderful windmills, a spectacular caldera and recent volcano and tiny little fields (always with 2 cows only)  whereas Sao Miguel is very mountainous and beats even Montserrat in soaring beauty. It has special places like the Blue and Green Lakes (which exceed in beauty the NZ equivalent) and Europe's only tea plantation. Both the 17th/18th century city of Angra do Heroismo on Terceira and the extraordinary rural and fertile plateau of Sao Jorge above the sheer cliffs full of night noisy Cory's shearwaters were also v interesting (Sao Jorge cheese is great too). And above all the lovely friendly Portuguese people who are so so nice.
Horta harbour visible in background
 
There are only 3 things that worry me about singlehanded sailing on Nightsong
 
1) Slipping while harnessed on and breaking a stanchion base and going overboard - very hard to get back on board with the boat going at 7 knots - but in bad conditions I will carry the Raymarine smart controller with me so I can turn the self steering off and she should round up
2) The self steering packing up again - not fatal but very hard work for a week!! Luckily Nightsong is well balanced to windward
3) The delaminating jib ripping and being irrepairable - Elvstrom have not obliged with a new one - prevaricating as always - a small claims court case pending I think. Again not fatal but slow with only the 12 sqm storm jib - tho' I could bear away to Portugal and hoist the Code Zero, I suppose.
 
AIS and radar alarms will be on to keep an eye on commercial traffic and I will be using Tony Robinson's alarm to wake me every hour (thanks Tony- v useful). The new carbonfibre Duogen shaft is working great so that should keep the batteries going producing 200 ampere hours pd and be more reliable than the fibreglass one.
 
Hopefully I will have time to do a daily blog
 
AJB 15.06.10
 
PS Cockroaches still alive and kicking!!