Neither the High road nor the Low road.

Rhiann Marie - Round the World
Stewart Graham
Tue 13 Sep 2011 08:34
Tuesday 13th September 0730 UTC 0830 BST
 
28:13.67S 011:40.81E
 
Wind Speed 8 knots South, COG 305 Deg True, SOG 6 knots
 
Most of yesterday I glided along as if on air skates. I sailed a beam to close reach and in 6 - 8 knots of boat speed was ........... between 6 and 8 knots depending exactly on the wind angle. This is an excellent performance and was very welcome after the frustrating night before. 
 
As night drew in and I got my third night of lasagne inside me, the full moon shone above Africa lighting up an exit path for me to Namibia 200 miles on my right if I had chosen. For enjoying such blissfull conditions I was rewarded with an extremely frustrating night.
 
Yesterday at the time of writing the blog I had hoped that I had just hooked onto the Southerly edge of the South Atlantic high. Anyway it turned out not to be and after the beautiful reaching conditions off the edge of what turned out to be the North of the passing low I was deposited right off the end of the escalator into ..... well neither one thing or another! Neither the Low road nor the High road. The doldrum like conditions only served to deny me much sleep, provide much sail and rig chafing frustration and posted a very strong message as to what I may expect in the horse latitudes.
 
Now I know I said I was going to take my foot of the throttle a little on this trip but spending a night between 2 and 5 knots with everything slopping around is a bit of a joke. The lightest of airs were swinging around through 180 degrees. I find it difficult enough not to sail Rhiann Marie to her optimum but I can't really tolerate the light conditions at all. I am forced to constantly tweak and try to squeeze the best out of the conditions I have been provided with. Grrrr! Very frustrating.
 
This morning again just before daylight the wind steadied a little and built for a time to 10 knots but has now settled into the south at about 8 knots. Not great but al least steady and I am making over 6 knots boat speed. I hope now that I have crossed over from the end of the low to the beginning of the high. The forecast always looked flukey for me until from Sunday till the end of Tuesday. (Just hit 6.6 knots there in 8.2 knots of breeze!)
 
I was thinking of fishing today but I am not sure a lure would not provide a drogue effect and slow me down!    
 
Current position is about two hundred miles off the Namibian coast. The sun is already high in sky which has about 30% cloud cover. Almost three miles below me is a disused submarine cable lying in 4,500 metres of brine, which has now increased in temperature to 18 Deg. Outside temperature is still I would estimate round about 16 - 17 deg but the breeze is very chill. There has been very little shipping and thos that I have seen are following a line inside me (between me and Africa) and are now mostly about 10 miles away. No fishing boats have been spotted since the first day.
 
Though at home I was very focussed on business and had little time to spend thinking about this trip a few events towards the end of my time at home and my departure from Capetown focussed my mind on the risks and challenges at hand. I was reading a book called "Halsey's Typhoon". This is an account of an American fleet caught out in a Typhoon near the Philipines during the second world war. Destroyers were actuall rolled and sunk and over 800 men were lost. The accounts of the conditions were sobering to say the least. Reading about seas which simply ripped superstructure on these warships apart was nothing less than terrifying.
 
On the way out to Capetown I read of the sudden capsize of the 100 foot yacht Rambler when she lost her keel just off the Fastnet Rock, a place I sailed to alone only a few years ago. What was particularly concerning about this event for me was that 1) the liferafts could not be gotten out from there deck positions once the boat inverted and they tried to inflate (Rhiann Marie's life raft is transom mounted - so should float free in such a catastrophic event) 2) that five people who were thrown into the water right beside the boat could not swim back to the boat and drifted away (they were fortunately later picked up alive) and 3) perhaps most worryingly of all that several boats passed by within 400 or 500 metres from an upturned 100 foot yacht and did not see it - the conditions were not even bad! The message for me once again is you do not end up in the water. If a 100 foot yacht can be missed what chance is there of finding a person.
 
The third thing that helped serve as a reminder not to be complacent was the story told to me by the young sailor working with the rigger who was doing some work on Rhiann Marie for me in Capetown. He described how when on a race from Rio Janeiro to Capetown and some 200 miles off Tristan da Cunha their yacht sunk. As usual there is a series of events acting together which culminated in this event. They suffered a technical problem and could no longer receive weather information. An unexpected storm came down on them and they battled with winds which peaked at 70 mph. The next day with the rig apparently having been fatally damaged the mast came down. They tried cutting everything away with bolt cutters but could not get the rigging cut away quickly enough before the mast holed the yacht and she sunk. Fortunately they did get into their liferaft and were picked up by a ship two days later.
 
If I don't talk to you later I hope that by tomorrow I will be in the South Atlantic high pressure system and the SE trades.