Day 22

Sadie
Wed 27 May 2015 16:21

39:32.000n 45:49.000w

 

Distance to home:  2058 miles

 

Distance run today:  116 miles  

 

Course 055

 

 

Nothing to see here – move on please …

 

Edited at 17:00 hrs BST to:  Oh boy, we just saw a whale !

 

 

Domestic

 

We try not to focus on food but it does form the highlight of our day sometimes.

 

In yesterday’s case, Tim decided that in the absence of fresh fish it was time for Chilli Con Carne using a tin of minced beef in order to preserve our fresh food.  He added a little of “this and that” to give it a bit of bite.

 

Somewhere down the creative process this resulted in 3 chilli peppers bought in the market at St Johns in Antigua going into the pan.  The crew (and the chef) collapsed in coughing fits around the boat unable to breath with a fiery burn to eyes and the back of the throat

 

A hurried discussion agreed that 1 chilli pepper was going to do the trick and the others were fished out before they could do lasting damage and we could still see and breathe. 

 

The resulting Chilli was great and in fairness to Tim, it’s a bit of a lottery as we have mixed the outright chilli’s with the flav

 

A rare treat this morning.  As we cane off the night watches a large cloud drifted overhead, the wind died and the heavens opened.  The mainsail funnels water down to the gooseneck where, following William’s lead from yesterday, Jez and Tim have the luxury of a freshwater shower to wash away 3 weeks accumulation of grime.

 

It’s hard to describe just how good it is not to have everything tasting of salt.

 

The sunshine has returned but not the wind to date.

 

 

Sailing

 

We limped through the night making 3 to 4 knots in about 8 knots of wind.  The ability of our monitor windvane to hold a course in such conditions is frankly amazing.  At various points through the night, the wind died to next to nothing but it was just enough for the vane to hold our course of about 040 degrees and each time it returned (usually after 10 minutes or so) the sails would fill, the windmill would start turning with a high pitched whine and we would bound on into the night. 

 

William has just set the genoa and the engine is going off – peace and quiet returns.

 

We have come across a buoy and made a close pass this afternoon – no fish.  Our theory on where to catch Dorado is now in tatters.

 

 

 

Natural History

 

More dolphins, large groups and small, spotted and otherwise (our key Natural History contact is away on a jolly (sorry, important business meeting) so we are unable to name the second type at present.

 

 

No fish caught for further study which remains a frustration.

 

Update at 17.00 hrs BST.  

 

We just got the one we have been waiting for.  The three of us were in the cockpit having just finished lunch when Tim saw a whale spouting about 150m astern of us. 

 

And there it was, we saw it spout 4 times in quick succession and saw the length of it’s back.

 

We have no idea on what sort of whale it was but it was at least 10m in length, had a horizontal tail (is this the case for all whales ?) and there was no dorsal fin. 

 

Fantastic !

 

On the basis that “cosmic ordering” is clearly working for us, we would like 15 knots of South Westerly wind for the next 3 weeks please. 

 

And a Tuna !

 

And a further update – about 20 dolphins just joined us and stayed with us on the bow for 5 minutes.  They were fantastic and we have some excellent video both from the bow and from underwater using Will’s Go Pro.

 

 

Today’s responses  

 

Em – I was surprised to see a response from your gmail address and guessed you had mastered the phone.  Good to see that Lizzie’s ICT skills helped along the way.

 

I’ll wait till you are home before sending you any personal email.

 

Rowles Kids – you seem to be having a big adventure of your own there.  Granny Samways will probably be very happy to hand you on to Granny Rowles today. 

 

Harvey / Joe – The climbing wall sounds great. How high did you go ? I didn’t think you liked heights.  Do you owe Granny some new Bluebells and has she now confiscated the football ?

 

Lizzie – I know what a “high-fly” is.  William has been to the indoor skydiving centre too so he described it to me. Well done.

 

Dave Payne – thanks for Ampair update.  We are limited to guardrail for height but have worked out that it needs a high quality rope that is stiff enough to resist the rotational movement.  Our mainsheet has been pressed into service. 

 

Barry – thanks for GP standings and update.

 

Richard – You and Dave agreed on Great Shearwater.  Some question over size but we have not seen another to confirm.

 

 

Bye for now

 

 

Sadie