Day 8

Sadie
Wed 13 May 2015 16:50

29:47.000n 63:11.000w

 

Distance to home:  3098 miles

 

Distance run today:  87 miles  

 

Course 350

 

Wind has died.

 

We are using the engine and moving towards Bermuda and as we have a couple of minor gear issues we have decided to call in and fix them before the big push for home across the Atlantic.

 

We should be there on Friday morning.

 

 

Domestic

 

Jez and Tim watched a film in the main cabin yesterday with the boat rolling in the swells and a couple of pauses to track ships and speak to them on the vhf.  It’s getting busier out here but it’s all commercial traffic so far with no yachts sighted since passing Barbuda .   Thanks for the film suggestion Dave S.  We don’t have that and settled on Inception – good enough film but we are too easily distracted and probably missed most of the subtleties of the plot.

 

Will decided that a couple of hours additional sleep was more important and retired to his pit.  Is this training for his impending return to Uni?

 

It’s too noisy now for movies now.  The diesel is thumping away and making it hard to think.  On the other hand, the sea is flat calm so there is a chance to clean up and get things done that were too much effort in the big, rolling swells we normally get. Or perhaps time for a game of Scrabble!

 

Bread production is back on an even keel as Tim was on duty this morning following the production of Chinese Beef with vegetables for tea last night.  A lot of our fresh veg is looking a bit dodgy so we are trying to eat it before it rots.  Potatoes, onions, garlic and cucumber are fine (some of you will know Jez’s views on cucumber) but the carrots are on their last legs and the melon is not far behind. Eating rotting melon isn’t like eating a bruised banana and just a bit softer, it’s worse than eating a banana skin!   

 

I understand that it’s been sunny back home but the crew here are feeling the result of travelling 800 miles north in a week and are all now wearing jumpers in the cockpit in the evening.  We are trying to work out if we have enough layers to stay warm in another 3 weeks or so.

 

William has had to endure Tim and Jez’s music tastes this week but that was pushed to a new level as Jez broke out his pod cast selection last night.  We all have common ground with some of the sailing and general knowledge stuff but listening to the Desert Island Disc’s selections of Ben Ainslie and Eric “Winkle” Brown could have been a step too far.  As it happens, I think we got away with it! The QI pod cast, “There’s no such thing as fish”, has been highly amusing during the evenings and full of interesting random facts that tend to be forgotten by the morning.

 

Cards have made it out into the cockpit, we started off with rummy with all of us knowing how to play it was a good place to start until we discovered that maybe rummy varied in difficulty and complexity from region to region, Jez being from Oxfordshire/Bucks way, his version was acknowledged but put to one side when we realised its best to hold as many cards as you can on a boat that moves and is (sometimes) windy. Not that this game lasted long as after only three rounds (of which Wills was winning) we changed the game to ‘knock out whist’ a game Jez introduced and Wills remembers playing with Grandad when he was younger. The skipper was more successful at this game and so it lasted slightly longer.

 

 

Sailing

 

Winds went light and flukey on us yesterday and we tried various approaches to make sure that the Monitor self steering could still handle things.  A full poled out genoa was the best option we found through the day but Tim had to hand steer for some of his watch last night and Jez eventually gave up about 2am and started the engine.

 

There were 2 big ships close by at the time, a tanker on it’s way to Houston (Jez thought this was inland, but that’s what they said) and a cargo ship heading for North Africa.  Both came within 5 miles of us at the same moment.  By local standards, this is rush hour as we normally only have to look out every 20 minutes or so, and almost always, there is nothing there to see.

 

We were a bit surprised to hear Bermuda Radio a couple of times on the VHF this morning at a range of 206 miles talking to a French yacht entering St Georges channel to the harbour.  Either they have a really serious transmitter and aerial or there was something odd with the atmospherics – Em if you get time can you ask your dad whether vhf will skip on the ionosphere.  We don’t have the science and are reverting to “google by text”.

 

 

 

 

Natural History

 

We continue to harvest flying fish from the deck each morning but none have been worth a meal for us. 

 

Our mate the Skua has been back and we have also had a couple of Tropic Birds ( just after we sent the blog saying that we are now off their patch ).

 

 

 

 

Todays responses

 

Em – It wasn’t a great loaf but it was still better than one of my normal efforts.  I’m told that you are showing off with Banana Bread production at home.

 

Lizzie – Guides without Faye for a second week.  You must be missing her a bit but I don’t really think that Mollie will know I’ve gone yet as long as you keep feeding her.

 

Mum tells me that it’s my turn to do the next maths homework.  Do you think you can get the questions down to 160 characters ?

 

Joe – Come on, more on emu please.  You can’t leave it there.  

 

See you “not to soon” too !

 

Harvey  (should that be HARVEY !) – I received a text from you at 11pm (your time) last night saying that you where just going to school.  So either there was a delay in the system or you are much keener on education than when I left.

 

11 – 0 sounds like you stacked up all the best players on your team.  Not sure that’s fair.

 

SNAS- Hi Shaun and the rest of T1, It’s a tough call as both have their pros and cons, Jonny has been great on the social media side of things this year, but then again that gets annoying when he continually asks you to like something or pushes for votes. Sian, in fact, Sian has no cons as such, how can you not vote for such a lovely lady that, for the last year has saved up all her breaks every day from 6 am to come sit, have a gossip, a laugh and do us endless favours every day from around midday! Sian FTW!!! Love to all and especially Sian!

 

Mum – Good to hear you have nearly finished the cards how many have you done? Also where are you going away to? Quilting in the summer!? What about my jumper you’re knitting? Loads of love xxxx

 

 

Bye for now

 

 

Sadie