Final run towards Richard's Bay

NORDLYS
David and Annette Ridout
Mon 22 Oct 2007 04:08
Last leg to Richard's Bay
 
25:33S 34:39E
Early am 22nd October 2007
 
As I write this I am surrounded by the sights and sounds that have over the last few years become so familiar.  The glow of the various instruments, the creaks and groans that although not many in number tell me that an old lady of nearly thirty years and who has today put on 55,000 miles in our ownership is presently hurling herself happily over the seas at nearly eight knots.  We are broad reaching in fifteen knots of wind over a reasonable sea and with a nearly full moon making it almost like daylight outside.  There is not a cloud in the sky and also not many stars as the moon takes all the glory at this stage of her cycle.  Up in front of us are Aquila and Taniwani, behind us Bell Breeze and a Swiss boat.  We all left a very bumpy anchorage just outside the Mozambique port of Inhambane as dawn stole over the horizon earlier today.
 
Forty eight hours before it had been very different.  Aquila and ourselves were battling into an unusual contrary current with twenty plus knots right on the nose.  Both had been unforecast.  We did two hundred miles to gain one hundred and forty down this coast.  Limping into the former anchorage we were under staysail only with the engine working hard.  Our mainsail had earlier ripped across a seam in the top third.  Before this an apparently unchaffed or otherwise damaged genoa sheet that had taken us happily for thousands of miles suddenly parted.  Both of these events happening in pitch blackness after the moon had set.  Aquila we learnt had shipped nearly a ton of water through her bow and everything was wet.  This after over sixty thousand miles of dryness.  The Indian Ocean certainly finds out a yacht's weaknesses.  Yesterday Annette and I stitched for over twelve hours while sitting in a near gale of wind and hot sun on a rolling pitching deck.  The only thing that can be said was that the object of our attention was not a mail bag!  I now know the meaning of aching sore fingers.
 
But as I said earlier conditions are now very different.  Sunset a few hours ago was magnificent.  The golden orb sinking below the horizon surrounded by a splendid set of colours from turquoise to orange.  The weather man however is promising us a gale before we get in but from behind us.  The trysail is bent on for the first time but so far yesterday's needlework is holding up well. It would seem that in this part of the world one has to accept strong winds, the secret is to try and make sure they are not on the nose.  The reason that our little 'village' of yachts is pressing on with much canvas set is that our weather window expires sometime on the day after tomorrow and we want to be tied up to a dock before the south westerly blow gets going!
 
So with over seven thousand sea miles behind us since we left Fremantle in May we are just two hundred and forty from South Africa.
 
Happy times
David