Purple Sky at Night - Pioneer Bay, Orpheus Island, Queensland, Australia
Harmonie
Don and Anne Myers
Tue 1 Jun 2010 23:01
18:36.525S 146:29.076E
We arrived in Pioneer Bay on Orpheus Island
Saturday (5/29/2010) after motoring 6 hours and 35 miles to the
northwest. It was another beautiful day with positively no wind. We
arrived just in time to prepare dinner for the captain and crew of Storyteller
(John, Sue, Annette and Tony), and the six of us spent our first really sultry
evening sitting in Harmonie's cockpit looking out over completely calm, flat
water to the western sky where the setting sun left behind an array of clouds
turned ten different shades of purple. Red sky at night is a sailor's
delight, but what about purple? We weren't sure at the time, but
pretty much figured it out later.
After carefully washing all the dinner dishes,
including the special real glass wine glasses that only come out in completely
calm weather, all were stacked neatly on the galley countertop to dry
overnight. At 3am, we were thrown into the front-loader washing
machine again, this time on the normal wash cycle instead of heavy duty, but the
stern smashing into the wind-against-current choppy waves was still enough to
wake us both up and cause me to wander aimlessly around the cabin for the better
part of an hour making sure everything was ok. At 4am, the stern smashing
died down enough for me to go back to bed after making sure the
still-drying special glassware was settled firmly on the countertop. Two
hours later, the first big roll occurred. We could tell it was a big roll
because I rolled into Don and he had to hang on to the side of the bed so he
wouldn't roll out. At the same time, there was a series of
'clink-clink-clinking' coming from the kitchen. In less than two
seconds I went from laying-on-my-side-squashed-into-Don mode to
up-on-my-feet-save-the-glassware mode. Before the next big roll,
you'll be relieved to learn that our precious glasses were saved. We
continued to roll in a big way and it wasn't long after the wine
glasses were stowed in their specially designed, cushioned storage spots
that Don was up, the instruments turned on, and the engine running. Next,
up came the dinghy. A feat in itself when the boat is rolling as it
entails Don getting into the dinghy to attach a halyard (rope that runs to the
top of the mast usually used to hoist sails) to the lifting harness, then
climbing out of the dinghy onto the boat and guiding the
dinghy up and over the life rail onto the back deck while I
lift the dinghy using the halyard and mainsheet electric winch.
In other words, I had the impressive job of pushing the electric winch button
while Don wrestled with two hundred pounds of flying dinghy with
attached outboard swinging from the mizzen mast while the boat rolled in the
building swell. With a few well-timed shoves, the deed was done.
Five minutes later, the anchor was up and we were off. We weren't sure
where we were off to, since we had planned to stay a second night at
Orpheus Island, but we were off.
From start to finish, it took us about twenty
minutes to vacate the rolling anchorage. There were only about
ten words exchanged between us the whole time. They went something
like:
Don: "Where are you going?"
Anne (while leaping out of bed): "To save
the glasses!"
Don (joining Anne in the galley): "Let's get
out of here"
Anne: "Ok"
Don (while shoving the swinging dinghy onto the
back deck): "Arrrrrggggghhh"
That's fourteen words, but still pretty
impressive. I guess if you live together for three years on a boat, there
is no need to exchange a lot of words at six in the morning when the boat
is rolling ferociously and you aren't sailing at the time.
Speaking of few words, as we pulled up anchor, we
noticed the crew on Storyteller doing exactly the same thing. No
consultation between boats needed.
That's the first time we've ever had to vacate an
anchorage. We knew the wind was going to shift to the southwest in the
morning, and that the anchorage wasn't sheltered well for a southwest wind, but
the southwest wind wasn't supposed to amount to much so we weren't
worried. Oops. It's good it happened in daylight because it wouldn't
have been as fun at night. Later, in another anchorage, we ran into some
friends on another American sailboat (named Baraka) who had exactly the same
thing happen to them in the same anchorage. Only for them it happened at
3am and they had to wrestle with an anchor chain wrapped around a coral head in
the dark on a rolling boat. I wonder if the sky was purple the previous
evening for them too? If so then perhaps a purple sky at night means a
sailor's flight. In the end, we all laughed about it. Besides, it
makes for a good story.
The other good thing was that the
gustier-than-planned southwest wind made for good sailing to our next, very
calm, anchorage - but that's a story for another time.
Anne
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