Flying along!

Rhiann Marie - Round the World
Stewart Graham
Sun 17 Jul 2011 14:52
Sunday 17 July 1430 UTC 1630 Local Time   
 
Last night we flirted with the edge of the Agulhas current and between the 100 and 200m contours we kept up high speeds in light airs.
 
This morning as forecast 20 - 25 knot winds arrived from behind us building up from 12knots. So I got the whole main all the way out on the preventer and poled out the full genoa to windward and flew the jib to leeward, creating again for the first time in many months the downwind "white out" sail plan we used so much for sailing deep downwind. This incidentally was not a sail plan I was at all familiar with before setting of on our circumnavigation.
 
In clear blue skies it was fantastic sailing and I steered a course to divorce ourselves from the current and sail closer to shore on the continental shelf some 6 miles or so from the land. We have spent almost all day and most of last night above 10 knots and at 1300 today we had covered 285 miles since 0700 on Saturday!
 
At this time of year one of the greatest migrations of biomass on the planet (in addition to the Chinese at new year and the Widebeest on the Serengeti) takes place along the south eastern shores of South Africa. That is the great sardine run. Following this huge biomass food source are the Humpback whales that we saw so many of in Tonga at close quarters. As soon as we left Durban the familiar spouts could be seen and we have seen them another couple of times too. Spouting and bursting the surface, presumably feeding but this time in the distance.
 
Fingers are currently crossed for nothing to go wrong as we intend to keep on sailing through the night right past Port Elizabeth which we were planning to reach tomorrow sometime but is currently only 66 miles away. We will therefor plan to keep going to Mossel Bay which is 240 miles away and possibly put in there tomorrow night. It depends on the weather and how we make progress in the lighter headwinds which we expect later tonight.
The whole passage from Durban to Capetown marina to marina is 800 nautical miles .... you know what I am thinking ................
 
I am enjoying reading at the moment and having just finished Nelson Mandela - Conversations with Myself I am now, keeping up the South African theme, reading My Experiments with Truth by Mohandas (Mahatma) Ghandi. Enlightening during a dark nightwatch. My reading list has been long and heavy for the most part but over the past while I have been able to create time for reading which is very enjoyable. I must keep a list of what I have read but I won't bore you with the list - you just would not believe some of it!
 
Time for me like Rhiann Marie is flying....