St. Helena to the Caribbean - Day 10

Harmonie
Don and Anne Myers
Tue 22 Jan 2013 13:40
01:58.836S  27:28.146W
 
January 22, 2013
 
On a slow boat to the equator.
At least we aren't headed to China.
Our pace has slowed to 5 or 6 knots as the last of the southeast trades puff behind us at 9-13 knots.  It's slow, but not unbearable, and still better than listening to the engine drone on while it sucks up gallons of diesel.  The sea is nearly flat, which is good because there will be a fair amount of cooking going on over the next few days as the last of the meat pile slowly defrosts in the fickle (and non-functioning) freezer.  Our red meat intake will spike, quashing all likelihood of an anemia outbreak.  All good except we have no way to counteract the ill effects on our arteries with the appropriate intake of red wine.  Not that we don't have plenty of good South African red wine aboard, just that we practice teetotalism while on passage.  We'll have to make up for it upon arrival.  This is not expected to be a problem.
 
In other news, fishing has been suspended until further notice given the lack of frozen food storage space.
 
Also, it's hot.  Not Thailand or Malaysia hot, but normal equator hot, which is hot enough.  You might have noticed that if we're not busy moaning about the cold, then we're whining about the hot.  Our temperature range tolerance continues to narrow as our time in the tropics increases.  After almost six years, we're happy in 78 - 85F and anything outside that range warrants some degree of complaint.  The one excellent thing about sailing so near the equator is clothing becomes more and more optional, which saves on laundry.  Although, even without the excuse of the hot weather, we've been doing our best to save on laundry by wearing the same pair of shorts every day (and night).  To clarify, what I mean is we each wear our own pair of shorts (not that we wear the same shorts at the same time - that would be too difficult, but would save on laundry).  We like it when there's no one else to impress other than each other.  This way no one minds when the jean shorts with the two giant holes in the back that look like huge upside-down eyebrows under each pocket are worn day in and day out.
 
Day 10's progress report:  140 miles.
Estimated time of equator crossing:  Thursday morning.
 
10 days down, 13-ish to go.
Anne