No pain no gain

ULA
John & Jackie Richards
Fri 8 Aug 2008 15:23
Position: 045:34.257N 005:47.625W
 
'No pain, no gain' is frequently heard at my fitness training group sessions at home in Wolverhampton as we put ourselves through lots of pain trying to stay fit and fab. Lol! This saying could equally apply to the crew of the good ship Ula- at time of writing (1.20pm 8 Aug) we are approx halfway through our trip from South Brittany to La Coruna, enjoying a great sail in gorgeous weather. We are bowling along SW with the wind at 60degrees, full sails up, averaging between 6.5 - 7.5knots
 
The same could not be said some 26 hrs ago when we left Loctudy in a wet SW force 6 and rough seas. Given the ever changing weather pattern of the last week or so, we had obtained a forecast  which gave us a weather window when the wind was due to veer west and then north west in Biscay over Friday and certainly the earlier part of the weekend so we decided to go for it. Unfortunately this meant leaving Brittany in a poor forecast and just sticking at it for several hours before we got the better weather in Biscay. Loctudy marina had been slowly filling up on Wed pm as everyone started coming in from Iles de Glenan before the  poor weather arrived overnight. We and Libertad were among only a handful; of boats leaving on Thursday.(Les anglais sont fous!)
 
Only an hour in we were seriously questioning our sanity, when the forecast SW force5-6 materialised in to the top end of a force 6 and some pretty fierce squalls blowing through. We motor-sailed for quite a while as we had to pass to the west of the Iles de Glenan before turning off the engine, setting the sails (double reefed main and a hankie out front) and heading on a southerly course heading up west whenever possible.
 
It was one of those trips when going below was best avoided with those inevitable calls of nature being put off to the last possible moment. The mission of getting out of lifejackets, harnesses, oilies etc and then spending time in the 'heads' can only be described as 'character building'!
 
Much to Laura and John's amusement I managed to accidentally inflate my lifejacket in the cockpit while letting the mainsail out when my toggle got caught in a rope. Lol.
 
A highlight of our rough weather spell was a visit from a school of dolphins - we seemed to have both parents and babies and they kept us amused for a good half hour playing in our bow wave and down the sides of the boat.
 
Dinner consisted of sandwiches which in true Blue Peter fashion were 'ones I made earlier' - thank goodness! We had a couple of VHF calls with Libertad who indicated they were in 'batten down the hatches' mode as well. We began our watch system and during John's midnight to 3am slot the wind finally started to veer westerly and abate to around 20-22 knots. It veered further through my watch which enabled us to make still further progress west. We had very little other shipping to contend with, unlike in the Channel, with only a few trawlers, other sailing boats and what looked like a ferry or cruise ship in the distance. By then the clouds had cleared and it was a beautiful night with a spectacular array of stars.
 
Dawn started to break around 4.30am. By 8am the crew had started to dry out and get body and soul together again. Breakfast was an unlikely Cup a Soup with french bread as no-one fancied the usual breakfast stuff - even our ARC crew member and well known Weetabix addict, Andy Castle, would have struggled to eat his usual three this morning!
 
Hopefuly the weather is now set fair here for the next couple of days. We will decide tomorrow whether to stop in La Coruna or and carry on round Cap Finisterre to Baiona.
 
Adios, hasta luego!