Day 26

Sadie
Wed 18 Dec 2013 17:38
16:45.950n
56:46.257w
Distance to
Antigua 287 miles
Distance
Run today 150 miles
Course 290
Speed 6 kts
Sailing update Ocean sailing is hard on boats.
Chris has gleefully sent us updates on the sorry state of ARC boats
arriving in Rodney Bay Marina with blown sails, leaks and damage to their rig
after making the same crossing that we have done. Many of these are racing
boats and they deliberately rnanage the fine line between speed and
damage. But we are also seeing cruisers like ourselves
with problems.
Early this morning we saw a large yacht crossing our stern with no sign of
a sail up. It was blowing the usual 20 knots so there was no obvious need
to be running on engine as a sail make life far more comfortable. We
called him up on VHF and he is a French Yacht " Que Pauro" who lost his rudder 5
days ago at the height of blow we received. Since then he has been making
his way very slowly towards Martinique from where a tug is on its way to tow him
for repairs in Antigua. He seemed cheerful enough when we spoke 4 hours ago
but we have just dropped all our sail as there is a band of rain going over with
winds of 40 knots plus and we have have heard him speaking to a French ship
locally. He is no longer so happy !
We have had our own trials and tribulations. We had another band of
rain and strong winds through at 6 the morning (these are pretty common here and
there are several each day) so we were all up to reef. We left it a
little late and tore the end fitting from our whisker pole. We need the
pole to hold out the jib and give us consistent speed downwind so
this resulted in an hours work with saw and epoxy in the main cabin -
we now have a working whisker pole but it is 6" shorter than it was
yesterday.
This became irrelevant when we noticed that the forestay was slack
mid-morning. We have been using the removable inner forestay to fly a
second jib for days, so initially put the slackness down to this stay taking
most of the load. Actually the link between the foresrtay and mast
has failed and only the sail and it's halliard were in place.
We still have the removable inner forestay and have added a wire spinnaker
halliard tight to the bow, so the mast is safe but we can no longer fly our
genoa. That said we are still making 6 knots plus and going well.
Domestic
It's Emily's birthday and we will be having cake ! Happy Birthday !
Were having our last Tollesbury ham tonight with mash and carrots followed by
"yes" more cake.
And a "heads-up". We had anticipated being in Antigua a few days ago
but weather and adventures are not like that. Our Iridium contract is
monthly and expires at midnight on Thursday 19th December. We will be
unable to send email or blog, or to receive texts after this time. We will
do a final update from home and expect to be in and safe by late Friday
afternoon. Some of you will be hearing us on the phone once we are
in .
Natural History.
Nothing new seen. And absolutely definately no sharks !
Todays responses:
Em and Rowles Kids - Stop watching "deadly 60" till we get back. Too
busy fixing things and changing sails to swim anyway !
Mum and richard for there near costant stream of sport and news
updates.
Sadie |