37 40N 035 58W Heading 96 degrees at 5 KTS motor sailing

Pipedream
Tue 23 Jun 2009 00:25
During this time of the year a major high pressure sits more or less over the Azores.  On one hand it pretty much protects them from real bad weather this time of the year.  Unfortunately it makes sailing there tough because there are almost always light and variable winds there.  Of course tonight we read an old National Geographic where an Azores fishing Captain says, "this is the north Atlantic where the weather is pretty bad and the seas around here are 30 feet in the winter" - no thanks.  We are now about 350 miles from Horta our destination in the Azores.  We are running the motor whenever there is not enough wind to make 2.5 Kts.  Which was last night and tonight so far.  We are doing pretty good on fuel and water so far.  We have two tanks of each and have used about half of one water tank and a quarter of one fuel tank in about 12 days.  The days we don't run the engine we run the generator about two hours to charge batteries. 
 
Progress over the last couple of days has been slow Day 9 - end of storm and hove too 45 miles, Day 10 100 miles, Day 11 yesterday 120 miles.
 
Chris spotted a shark circling the boat the night we stopped to rest.  Just like in Jaws.  I didn't see it but Matt said the dorsal fin stuck out of the water pretty far so it must have been a pretty big guy.   "Maybe we should get a bigger boat!"  We have been trolling two lines in the water every day but not a nibble yet.  We saw a feeding frenzy about a half mile to starboard yesterday and just watched the water boil and the fish jump before it dawned on me to start the engine and troll through it.  I'll get it right if there is a next time.  We are coming up on the Azores's current.  I think it is where the Gulf Stream comes out over on this side of the Atlantic after making a big circle around the north Atlantic.  Probably some better fishing there.  Sure could go for a nice slab of fresh tuna.  Chris pointed out at dinner tonight that every time we go shopping we buy more cans of tuna and haven't opened one yet.
 
I baked a fresh loaf of bread yesterday to have with dinner.  George made some dipping sauce from garlic, olive oil, seasonings and the four of us proceeded to eat the whole loaf hot out of the oven.   I was concerned about our oven not getting hot enough but it worked fine.  We'll do that again.  We have another sack of flour and two packages of yeast left.  Nothing like the smell of baking bread.  Tonight George, who is fast becoming our most of the time cook, made corn beef patties, potato pancakes, and vegetables.  Peaches and pineapple for desert.
 
I've gotten questions about stuff breaking.  Keep in mind that there is a lot of mechanical stuff on this boat that is nice to have but that is not really necessary to the safety of the crew or the sailing of the boat to where we are going; an, that the boat has been used nonstop by the four of us for almost two months now.   Being mechanically orientated that is what I focus on.and write about  i.e. don't worry... I am never satisfied with the way anything works.  Mary bought me a coffee cup that says something like 'if its not broken yet you can always just take it apart, see how it works,  loose a few pieces... and then you can have something to fix.  Ask Mary to tell you the guillotine joke sometime...   all for now.