Dragons Den

Rhiann Marie - Round the World
Stewart Graham
Fri 3 Dec 2010 14:59
Friday 3rd December 2226 Local 1426 UTC       
 
08:19.39S 119:11.52E
 
Have you noticed our Easting? With less than 120degrees left to go to the Greenwich Meridian we are actually two thirds of the way round the world now!
 
Our pace has been intense these last weeks and I think Trish is feeling the strain a little. The time of year also makes it hard for her to be away from friends and especially family. The constant motion and the heat plus hectic shore based exploring are adding to the stress.
 
On passage last night from Timor I had an engine room extractor fan pack in and in an operating engine room I had to disassemble the unit for the generator and re-fit it to the main engine room extraction ducting. I thought I was clever but just as I was finishing I remembered that the generator was a 12V fan and the Engine room one was 24V although identical in all other respects. But that was ok - for my efforts I nearly lost my hearing and about 6 pounds in body weight - sweated out and pumped out through the bilge pumps I suppose.... Don't tell the HSE at home what I have been doing please they will have me extradited. Today I will try to rebuild the original fan.
 
Later into the 270 mile flat calm engine driven passage, about 2130 last night I heard a crunch and the engine sputter. The boat was racked with excessive vibrations. My immediate reaction was that I had run a fuel tank dry, and changed tanks in a flash. However it wasn't that and the engine ran fine when the gearbox was disengaged. 
 
I ran the boat astern to re-engage overdrive and there was another strained clunk and still some vibration. Then it dawned on me. We had wrapped something round the propeller. We certainly could not sail as there was just over 1 knot of wind but we were 50 miles fom anywhere so if push came to shove we could loll around untill first light when I could dive under the boat and inspect the problem.
 
In any event having concluded we had something in the prop, I checked and re-checked the shaft from inside the enigine room and there were no problems. So we decided to limp on through the night, knowing that if the prop was driving at all our Spur rope cutter would clear a path through the debris for the prop which it did. Speed however was greatly reduced and there was more vibration than there should have been.
 
Our reward for soldiering on was having the whole of the bay at Komodo to ourselves and also being the only visitors to the island we were able to have a liesurely hike around the island to see the dragons. This hike however has to be accompanied. We were accompanied by a young warden armed only with a long forked stick to keep these beasts away.
 
They were gruesome. About the size of a crocodile and capable of running at 18 - 20kmph on raised legs. I took my speargun and shot two of them.
Just joking - of course I didn't, but it was a little nerve racking walking through the narrow paths in their inland domain.
 
After stripping out the 50 metres of 14mm polyprop rope bunched round the prop we engaged a couple of fishermen and bought a few lobsters off them. For a whole 10 dollars. He wanted 50 at first offer!
 
Then we decided to make another two hundred and fifty mile passage the same night and buy ourselves an extra day of R&R ath the Gilli Islands. (Strange term this as I figure Gilli means island anyway...) We have been studying lonely planet and it says there is great diving there. 
 
So here we are under way again with an ETA of Tomorrow night and 5 or 6 days in Lombok/Gilli an Bali to look forward to where I can hopefully also get a few critical boat jobs done.