St. Helena to Grenada - Day 16

Harmonie
Don and Anne Myers
Mon 28 Jan 2013 14:41
05:19.220N  43:14.588W
 
January 28, 2013
 
Revenge of the sea gods?
We never did the promised equator-crossing sacrifice to the sea gods.  It's not clear why.  It's possible we were distracted by the bad weather, or the higher winds, or bouncy conditions, or bout of seasickness, or our fast speed, or maybe we just plain fell too far down into the pit of passage laziness.  Whatever the excuse, it didn't happen.  A big mistake.  We haven't seen the sun for longer than an hour or two since crossing the equator five days ago.  That's five full days (and nights) of gray gloom.  On top of that, we've had a constant parade of rain storms, particularly at night.  Granted, the rain hasn't brought particularly high winds (30 knots, tops), and we do like the cleansing effect the rain has on all of Harmonie's very salty surfaces, but the storms also often bring an east or southeasterly wind, which causes us to point north instead of west northwest.  Last night we were hounded by a line of rain stretching ear-to-ear on the radar screen for hours.  Unfortunately, our less than desired sailing speed seemed to match that of the rain front's progress, so the two of us were stuck together for a good eight hours.  We were pointed north for a good part of that time, which eventually would have taken us several hundred miles to the east of Newfoundland had we continued on that way for another month.  The rain also likes to play hide-and-seek with the wind, which is equally annoying as the light wind causes our speed to plummet, leaving Harmonie prone to the will of the waves and sometimes negative current. 
 
Of course, the real reason we find all this bad weather so irritating is because it's messing with our predicted arrival time in Grenada.  Having just published (and bragged about) our stellar progress, and boasted that we were on track to beat our total passage time estimate by one day, we are now perilously close to recanting that boast.  How embarrassing. 
 
As the Zulu would say, 'I'm tell'n you man!  I'm tell'n you!' it's the sea gods!
 
(Even after all our whining, progress for the past 24 hours wasn't really all that bad at 180 miles.  It's just that we love to brag about 200 mile days and the rain last night robbed us of that opportunity.  Woe is us!)
2,580 miles down, 1,170 miles to go.
Anne