Hospital ship!

Rhiann Marie - Round the World
Stewart Graham
Thu 7 Apr 2011 16:58
Thursday 7th April 2231 Local Time 1631 UTC   
 
06:41.91N 085:57.69E
 
Just after midnight last night the promised 7 or so knots of wind filled in and I was onto it immediately. Being alone I got the genoa up until one of the off watch were available. Donald was first up half an hour later and we hoisted the spinaker behind the genoa to keep momentum up and then furled away the genny and released the spinaker. We glided along at an average of five knots but occasionally we peaked above seven. Quite incredibly Rhiann Marie will make four knots in six knots of wind and in fact two knots in four knots of wind. Before now we have never tried out this area of her performance, but needs must.....
 
We sailed to a standstill at 1330 so we got twelve hours done and about a third of our minimum required sailing time. During the morning which was bright and sunny with a clear blue sky reflecting deep into the azure Indian Ocean we put a line out.
 
Not long after a group of about a dozen dolphins arrived on the scene. Murdo and I were on deck and we went forward to get some entertainment and photos of the playful and probably quite tasty mammals.....
 
We were startled by Trish who had appeared on deck and was calling what I thought was "whale". We rushed back but it turned out she was calling "reel". By this time there was only a few metres left on the reel and because we can't afford to depower the boat and loose any of our precious wind, I tensioned up the Penn and started reeling. I handed over to Murdo after he got the harness on and he fought away with it for a while before it leapt skyward and probably then broke one of the treble hooks that he was on. 
 
Trish then headed back below and i heard the scream of pain coming from below. On the way down the companionway she did something to her foot and was slumped in a heap in agony and almost sick from nausea. We are not sure if she has broken a bone in her foot or torn a tendon or what but her foot is swollen up and she is laid up with her foot bandaged up. We brought the swelling down with ice initially but it is still painful.
 
Like a true hero she still managed to hobble to the galley and prepare the casserole for dinner and stuck it out through happy hour to recieve her tonic. The tonic was heavily laced with gin and seemed to help. She is in good care as Murdo is aboard to compensate for my sensitivity deficiency.
 
Good grief! - nothing much happens for days and all of a sudden it all happens at once! Lets hope its a sprain or something. Rhiann Marie is rapidly becoming like a hospital ship with the geriatric wards forward and the medical ward aft. 
 
We need to find enough wind now for about another 150 miles of this passage. At the moment the sea is oily calm. The stars and sky however are stunning and our old friend the moon has just reappeared again to wax her way back to full splendour. The night sky is stunning and the spectacular shooting stars may have to be our entertainment if we have to slop around for a day or two.
 
All this stuff about no fuel - don't worry we are on a very capable sailing yacht. People leave to sail round the world with no engine so us having to find wind for a 250 miles or so doesn't phase me at all. However it would be nice to know that wind will appear sometime in the near future. Our fridge is down and we are starting to loose food. I hate waste.