Sunday 4th December

Nowcrew
Sun 4 Dec 2005 11:20
Title: Message
After spending a good part of last night getting the correct sail configuration for the the low winds we were experiencing, Saturday morning started with a steady 9 knot breeze and the now well balanced boat making 6 knots towards St Lucia.
 
There was a clear blue sky and as the sun came up it was clear that it was going to be a HOT day. Tom (Papa Smurf) rustled up the usual beans and bacon breakfast, Andy set about finding the best winds for the day and the rest of the crew settled into finding shady areas of the boat to sit and read with the exception of Nicko who is set on having a golden brown tan before Sarah and his kids arrive!
 
 
Mid morning there was a bit of frantic activity on deck and we found that during a wind shift, an adjustment to the rigging had caused one of the starboard side power winches to be over stressed and the underside of the jammer had sheared. This was the main winch that we used to raise and adjust the main sail so we needed to find a solution to fixing it. Bails and Chas set about stripping down a manual winch of the same size on the Port side of the cockpit and used this to replace the broken parts.
 
Soon we were up and running again and Andy set about trimming the sails for maximum speed. The wind speed was slowly increasing and skipper was determined to squeeze every available knot out of the boat.
 
Bails (The Swedish chef) rustled up a pasta carbonara for lunch washed down by pink water. Our way of making the desalinated water taste more palatable is to put a touch of ribena cordial in a jug of it with lots of ice! Tom calls it his mid day medicine shot.
 
 
Due to the superb weather the afternoon activity of the day was to dismantle the spray hood that had so wonderfully protected us from the waves that crashed over the bows in the heavier seas. This was replaced by larger bimini that covered the entire cockpit and gave us some much needed shade from the now scorching sun. The decks were getting so hot that it was difficult to walk on them in bare feet. This was a good sign that the skipper was not expecting any more heavy sea's from his weather predictions and that the much awaited trade winds were setting in.
 
Afternoon cinema featured Anger Management staring Jack Nickolson. If you have not seen it do, if you have watch it again as it is one of those films that makes you laugh however many times you watch it.
 
Sundowner time was soon upon us with another couple of bottles of Simon's (Master Chef) red wine and then it was on to Thai Green Curry a la M&S for dinner.
 
 
The evening progress report still had us third in our class but we did receive news that the first racing boat which is a 104 foot yacht called Leopard was due to arrive in St Lucia at about 6pm today! A good 5 days ahead of us (we )but at the start we would have expected that gap to have been even greater.
 
It had been a good days sailing without any engine power and as we cruised into a golden sunset it looked like we would continue this way for the rest the night.
 
 
Nowcrew out.