St Helena...

W2N 'Where to Next?'
Rob 'Bee' Clark
Tue 3 Feb 2009 11:28
I bet your wondering for what possible reason a perfectly sensible (debatable, I know) bloke would want to sail the wrong way down the Atlantic against the prevailing winds, currents and waves to two of the most remote islands on this earth - right!?
 
Well, I've just arrived on an anchorage at St Helena almost exactly halfway between South America and Africa and I'm really hoping that the answer to that not unreasonable question lies ashore here for I too have been wondering that exact same thing!
 
The leg from Ascension Island to St Helena was always going to be a bit gruelling but the numbers speak for themselves...
  • The rhumb line distance from Ascension to St Helena is almost exactly 700Nm... I have sailed exactly 1358Nm to get here!
  • My best daily run was about 152Nm (not too shabby considering that's against the prevailing wind, waves etc.)... That same day, I got just 71Nm closer to my waypoint!
  • I left Ascension at midday on Friday 23rd January. By the same time on Saturday, I was starting to lose sight of the island - nothing to get excited about but progress at least. By the same time on Sunday, I'd drifted backwards such that I could make out detail in the rocky shoreline.
  • The total passage has taken almost 11 days although admittedly, I arrived last night and hove-to offshore until daylight. 
  • Average speed over water 5.34Nm
  • Number of tacks on windshifts... shed-loads!
So, there were no real horrors; nothing more than about 28 knots of (app.) wind. The SE trades blew fairly consistently usually around about 15 knots and the waves were seldom more than about three or four metres - mostly much less. The genoa halyard snapped but was furled to the first reef at the time and stayed aloft for the remainder of the passage although it wasn't pretty! Anyway, it's over for now and this morning's approach to the island as the sun rose was perhaps the most dramatic arrival yet. I know the people here are friendly as the population of Ascension is mostly from St Helena and as I've already mentioned, they're a ludicrously welcoming bunch! There are several yachts here on the anchorage too although I suspect they're all heading north. I'll go ashore this afternoon and let you know how I get on.
 
Oh, I meant to tell you about something funny that happened on Ascension Island...
 
I think I mentioned that I'd hired a car and ended up sleeping in it next to the 'giant turtle nesting' beach as I couldn't get back to the boat. Well, that was of course the first time I'd slept ashore, on stable ground, since leaving the UK in September. Well, maybe it's just me but I think it's funny that I woke up that night dreaming that the car was floating away. In fact, I came to my senses standing outside the car by the driver's door looking a little bewildered and surprised to find that my feet were dry. 'Got to be the work of a disturbed mind affected by four months (and 7033Nm) of constant rocking!
 
So that's it from me for now. I've got an island to explore...
 
Bee