A sting in the tail ...

Rhiann Marie - Round the World
Stewart Graham
Thu 23 Jun 2011 07:05
Thursday 23rd June 2011 0742 Local 0542 UTC ( I have just put the clocks back two hours to South African time )
 
28:17.012S 036:29.697E
 
Yesterday towards the end of the day the seas started to calm a bit and we could gradually increase the boat speed without the slamming.
 
The clanking coming from up the mast is driving me mad not knowing what it is. My worst concern is that with the pitching and slamming of the boat and no mainsail to help stablilise the mast in the fore and aft plane that the mast splice had suffered damage. As far as I can see so far, this is not the case and looking out this morning all of Rhiann Marie's 28.5 metre mast is still there!
 
My next greatest concern and more likely possibility is that it is one of the starboard spreaders, possibly the second one that has loosened slightly at the mast fixing. I cannot detect any movement with the binoculars and up until last night the pitching has been too violent to risk going up the mast, unless critically neccessary. The clanking noise only comes when we are pitching heavily and therefor in the calmer waters has mostly disappeared for now. It is however disconcertingly loud and solid when it is doing it's dinger.... First thing yesterday morning I emailed the boat builder with the full details of the issue and my diagnosis, ruling out of the equation some of the likely causes to that point. They were quickly on to it and got drawings together to analise the possibilities and the only one that so far I consider as a potential cause is that the conduit inside the mast could have come adrift at some point up the mast as the dramatic change in loads occured when the mainsail clew let go.
 
During the night due to the fast progress we set a waypoint half way between Richards Bay and Durban figuring that if progress kept up we could make to inshore waters before Friday's gale set in and bash our way along the shore out of the worst of the weather and possibly make Durban on Friday by nightfall. From where we were at that time Durban was 60 odd miles further to go than Richards Bay so about an additional 7 or 8 hours by which time the gale would be fully upon us, but we could be inshore hopefully finding some measure of protection and certainly inshore of the dangerous overfalls of the Agulhas current.
 
Today the seas are calm, with only five knots of variable wind and we can make 9.5 knots by gunning the engine a little and full blade jib set to stabilise the rolling. Though the seas are calm they definitely appear to be brooding with a large heaving swell - the slow breathing in, breathing out of the slumbering monster. There is a definite latent potency to the sea conditions and the long swell, some hundreds of metres in pitch is showing us - the flea on the elephants ass, insignificant in the enormous scale of things - just how much respect it deserves. The scale is enormous and one minute we are atop the hill looking down over the distant glens the ocean is forming and next we are down in the shady glen looking up the gentle hillsides to either side. There is no doubt this is the calm before the storm.
 
Knocking off watch at 0400 this morning I was able to get some sleep as I had been very anxious for the previous 36 hours since the clew broke and had managed very little sleep at all despite getting the lying down time. The fact that the mast situation had not deteriorated, the slamming and pitching had stopped and sea conditions allowed us now to have a fair chance of reaching the mid Durban - Richards Bay waypoint before the worst of the gale was forecast helped a lot. Also as this was now the case I knew that the fall back and more likely scenario of heading to Richards Bay ahead of the gale was now more in reach. On the upside there was now a very slim possibility, especially if there was any slowing or moderating of the forecast intense depression, of carrying onto Durban to make a nighttime landfall.
 
That was then.
 
However this morning I crash landed from my heavenly slumber onto the hard tarmac of the sudden rumbling and metallic crunching noise coming from right behind my head. Such are the senses I was up and on it before Craig who was on watch even realised anything was amiss. Right in the tail of the boat and behind my bed headboard live all the autopliot, steering and rudder mechanisms. Last time I looked they all lived together in harmonious order. All nicely joined together and separately intact. The autopilot drive motor had been out and had its loose bolts tightened and the rudder headstock bearing mount was regularly tightened down.
 
What the hell was up now? We showed to be heading dramatically off course and a loud metallic rumbling was the only response to the wayward Rhiann Marie. Back with the throttle, away with jib, up with mattress, off with headboard, out with screws and off with panels all in a few minutes. With my head and shoulders hovering inside the compartment Craig took the wheel and set autopilot to standby - it would operate in one direction only and would not turn to starboard. Rhiann Marie started performing a graceful ballet, pirouetting around and around. I could see that the auto pilot motor was operating and was able to turn the boat in one direction but when the signal arrived to turn the other way there was nothing but a whirring and crunching of rumbling gears having fallen out with each other.
 
Within another few minutes we had out the emergency tiller, had it fitted and a jury rig set up with a dyneema line running through aft cleats either side and led back to the genoa winches. The loads to move the emergency tiller manually were very heavy and the short lived thoughts crossed my mind that, to be on your knees for the next 36 hours - 48 hours into the forecast severe gale would be one hell of a job for ............... Craig. (Lol I think they say!)
 
After performing a waltz around the giant ballroom floor of the Indian Ocean that would not have been out of place in Vienna we managed to stabilise a course broadly heading at Africa. Craig then (spurred to inspiration by the thought of the alternative ) had the brain wave of trying the wheel again manually. The steering is good in one direction and can only take a small load in the other direction but on a steady course and manually helmed we can take the wheel for now. We tried the autopilot again but due to the heavy loads it just spins through the porridge that was one side of the gearbox. So manually helming it is. Craig first for two hours till I work out whether I should disassemble the gearbox at sea or not. If it is a stripped gear then the whole exercise will be pointless and we will have wasted several hours which we need to get in front of the weather. If however it is a loose gear pinion or such like that would be easy to repair. I will think on it a little and see if the manufacturers can cast any light on the likely failure first.
 
To mix or conjoin my metaphors; only a few hours ago I though I was swinging the world by the tail and now the tail is certainly wagging the dog. Somewhat optimistically we are for now still tentatively pointing our head at the midway point but it all depends what the tail is going to do. When the wind returns it is forecast to set first from the north and that combined with the south flowing current, and the exact onset of the gale will determine (along with the steering hanging in there) where we head. Heads and tails. Heads and tails. You just have to laugh, but hey its only 36 hours or so and ther are two of us so you will not hear another word about it from me. Its two hours on the helm and two off till we get wherever we are going. Days are now ten hours and darkness is fourteen hours. Its getting quite cool at nights now and the heating had its first ever test drive last night. The sky is blue the sun is starting to warm the crisp air and it is not even snowing though it is winter, Craig is with me and has been absolutely excellent so we have to be thankful for for a half full glass.............