Dice Done Good!

W2N 'Where to Next?'
Rob 'Bee' Clark
Sun 12 Oct 2008 08:19
Wow, what a night!
 
Well, the wind died away completely last night but I didn't really want to come into the Ria de Vigo at night so I watched the sun set and ghosted along at walking pace. Then, just as I started the engine to boost the batteries for an hour or two on the computer, I noticed a dolphin breaking the surface of what was, by then, a pretty settled Cape Finisterre. It was then joined by two more and they stayed with me for about fifteen minutes playfully jumping through the bow wave and generally larking about. One of them was even showing off with a strange sort of leap out of the water landing tail-first.
 
 
They're incredibly hard to photograph particularly when they're in a playful mood but I was lucky with this shot. I was sitting right up at the bow just over their heads and little more than an arm's reach away as I watched them play. This really was a refreshing and special moment in an otherwise frustrating leg of the voyage. 
 
So despite my failed efforts to arrive in daylight, I had no problem at all navigating in through the well marked channel and approached the Ria de Vigo accompanied briefly by yet more dolphins. I had given the dice six options within the area of which five were anchorages and one was the marina in Vigo. 'Four' was a small bay on the east side of Isla Del Faro just south of Punta Muxieiro and that, according to the dice, was my destination. It was still fairly dark as I approached but I had read that the island was a picturesque nature reserve so I expected it to be pretty busy with tourists anchored for the weekend. Imagine my surprise and delight then as daylight finally arrived having anchored to reveal such a perfect place with only two other boats to be seen...
 
 
 
So, I'm going to inflate the dinghy and row ashore later today to explore this tiny island but the weather is fantastic and Canasta is in great shape so I don't feel the need to go looking for urban civilisation just yet. I may stay for a few days before moving on - a decision that I think will depend entirely on how long this high pressure system is likely to stay. Perfect conditions are rare when sailing and as you might expect, I feared the storms and the big seas but what I underestimated is the frustration of bobbing around with limp sails when the wind drops as it did for two days during leg 3.
 
I've logged 1001.68 Nautical Miles so far on this journey but relatively speaking, I've only just begun.
 
More later...
 
Bee