Holy Humid Hotness - Lingga Island, Indonesia

Harmonie
Don and Anne Myers
Fri 29 Oct 2010 02:51
00:18.709S  104:59.231E
 
This is no ordinary hotness.  This is take your breath away, clothes shedding, sweat seeping, sleeping in the cockpit on a towel, feet burning on the deck, air thicker than the smog hanging over LA, too hot for hugging, hotness.  It is Holy Hotness - with capital H's.  Even better; Holy Humid Hotness.  No wonder people living in the islands don't always seem to have a lot of energy.  Holy Humid Hotness is an energy sucking black hole.  Making lunch becomes an effort (cold cheese and crackers).  Life ceases to revolve around the sun, and instead revolves around the shade spots - of which there are few on a boat.  We wish for clouds and don bathing suits (if a boat is close enough to see us - otherwise we don't bother) and run around the deck when a rain squall blows through to get cool (as long as it isn't accompanied by scary fork lightening - then we run around stowing the computers in the oven and hunker down).  We watch the thermometer in the main cabin and rejoice if it doesn't hit 90 by 9 in the morning.  "Aha!  It's cooler today!" we might crow as the thermometer hovers around 89.  "And we have a nice breeze!" we say as we bask in the tiny waft of air the motion of the boat creates as it motors at 6 knots through flat water undisturbed by wind.  That's when we are feeling positive about the Holy Humid Hotness.  When we're feeling negative, there is no crowing - only, "Holy shit, it's hot!" or the more morose, "I think I'm going to die."
 
As you might have guessed, we reached another record high temperature during the 1 1/2 day, 210 mile motorsail from Belitung to Lingga Island on October 14-15.  95.9F this time.  Enough to drive a less civilized couple insane.  Here we are living to tell about it though, so it couldn't have been that bad.  Besides, we were only 20 miles south of the equator at that point, so really, who can complain about the heat?
 
The good news is that the anchorage at Lingga Island was really nice - clear, blue, calm water between Lingga and a smaller island, and only a few putt-putt fishing boats puttering past on their way out to sea.  No nearby town, no canoes full of kids, and only four boats - Harmonie, Priscilla, Storyteller and a new-to-us sailboat from Austria, called Anima.
 
 
Sunrise on the morning of the second day on the way to Lingga.  That's Priscilla in the distance next to a tiny island.  Our motorsail through the night was blissfully quiet.  Some freighters, a few tugs and barges, squid boats and other fishing boats, but no flotillas.  It was our last overnighter of the season, and will probably be the last overnighter we do for quite some time.  No one on Harmonie is shedding tears over this fact.
 
Next up:  equator crossing.  Or, more accurately, re-crossing.
Anne