Ooh, and another thing...

W2N 'Where to Next?'
Rob 'Bee' Clark
Tue 21 Oct 2008 21:47

What a night!

 

The dice has conspired against me and a really vicious little storm just blew through the anchorage! Oh, and every time I go online in Europe with Vodafone roaming, it costs me £9.50 for 24hrs so I’m making the most of it! More about that in a bit but I promised I’d credit the winning skipper of the SB3 race on Sunday when I had his details and I’ve just picked up an email from him. Just too late for the newsletter I’m afraid but I don’t suppose he’d mind too much. I also hope he doesn’t mind if I quote verbatim from his email as it’s typical of several truly uplifting and encouraging responses to the newsletter and blogs.

 

Hi Rob.

 

First i´m sorry about the english.

 

Let me just interrupt there just so there’s no misunderstanding here… I’m fairly certain that Luis is sorry for his English and not sorry about the English as a nation generally!

 

I´m the guy who roll the dice for you in Cascais. I hope you do have a good trip to ???casablanca???.

Now my friend, about the way you are doing the round the world, belive me, i listen thousands of guys saying that they want to do it, that way, this way, around the horn, to Panama, i don´t know, thousands of brilliant ways to do it, but with a dice it was my first time.

So the only thing i can say is good luck,(sometimes you need luck in sea) and  i´m sure that in the next 2/3 years you will meet wonderfull places and you will have story´s to tell in your book.

Now you have my email, and also my name (Luis Santos), if you need something email me.

Good Luck

Luis 

 

And he’s right isn’t he… It’s going to be a cracking two or three years. Particularly if I continue to have experiences such as on Sunday when so many sailors far more accomplished than me offered their support, their admiration and their best wishes. Congratulations to Luis for his win on Sunday and thanks again to the Clube Naval de Cascais for their gracious hospitality.

 

 

Casino Estoril

 

Yep, I went to the casino tonight armed with the dice and fifty euros that I had every intention of going home with. It was a new experience for me although I had a vague idea about how the roulette table works from a childhood game I think. I wandered around for a while surprised to see so many people at the slot machines and the… whatever the other machines are. Literally hundreds of machines on two floors beneath a headache inducing grid of lurid blue neon lights. It’s a chaotic spectacle of colour and noise and yet, surprisingly, it’s completely joyless. Most people were sitting alone hunched over the machines looking drained of all hope. Those that were with friends spoke in hushed tones as if they alone had discovered the winning formula that would win back the fortune they’d spent the afternoon losing. I moved on to the roulette tables where an unlikely mix of gamblers was assembled. A middle-aged Indian chap was littering the table with 5 Euro chips with every turn of the wheel. Each time, he would turn to his wife despondently making gestures that I took to be reassurance that his extravagance would be rewarded. It wasn’t. There was a guy about my age, maybe a bit younger studying the display where all the previous numbers are documented. He clearly thought there would be a pattern and each time he would place a small bet on Red or Black and very occasionally, on one of the three sections relating to the high numbers, middle numbers or low numbers. He was fretting, pacing, smoking and I felt quite sorry for him. There were others too. An impossibly attractive young Portuguese girl with her surfer boyfriend, a chain-smoking woman who watched the table intensely from afar only occasionally moving forward to purposefully place a 10 Euro chip on one of the three columns of numbers. And of course, there was an unbelievably handsome chap who between each bet was walking away and throwing a little blue dice – that was me!

I started by simply using the dice to determine an ‘odds’ or ‘evens’ bet. I decided to play ten games each time staking one chip of 5 Euros. The statisticians amongst you will not be surprised to know then that I started with ten chips and until the last spin of the wheel, I still had ten chips. I lost the last one and considered leaving although I felt that the dice had not been sufficiently tested. I thought about a controlled experiment where I would discard the dice and test my intuition but decided instead to raise the stakes a little. I would place another ten bets but this time, a one, two or three would relate to each of the three columns, a four, five or six would relate to the low, middle or high numbers. The first throw – a one; first column. The wheel spun and to my surprise and delight, I won. Looking good! And that’s when it started going wrong. The pay-out for each of these bets was double the stake so although the risks were higher, so too were the winnings. I did win another couple of bets but overall, after ten bets, I walked from the table with just six of my ten chips remaining. The dice that is so influential to my global adventure had robbed me of 20 Euros!

 

 

 

I left the casino to find that it had been raining and a strong offshore wind had materialized in the short time I’d been squandering the money I can’t afford to lose. You can see from the photograph that the flag pole is bending in the wind and that’s when I started worrying about Canasta. I rushed back along the promenade and launched the dinghy although I could now see that Canasta hadn’t dragged the anchor as I feared she might. You might recall that my outboard motor was temperamental since it’s ducking on Sunday. Well it doesn’t work at all now despite my best efforts this afternoon to service it and as such, I had to row back to the boat in a howling wind. Once aboard, I switched the instruments on to discover that thirty knot gusts of wind were whipping Canasta around on her anchor chain and furiously rattling the halyards against the mast. As I write though, the storm has passed and the wind is now blowing a gentle four knots although I’ve just checked the forecast and it’s still giving strong wind warnings for the St Vincent area tomorrow. I’ll check it again in the morning.

 

I re-read today’s newsletter after I’d sent it and wondered if I’d perhaps been a little harsh on this seaside town. It was once good enough for Kings and the aristocracy so who was I to call it ‘false’ or ‘defaced’? It is after all ‘just my opinion’ but it is an opinion that will not be shared by the tourist brochures and for that I make no apology.

 

So maybe I’ll be setting sail for Morocco tomorrow and if I do, I’ll keep the blog updated with regular positions. I’ve bought the Moroccan courtesy flag and confirmed that no visas are necessary. I’ve also bought the Admiralty Pilotage book for North Africa for a staggering 93 Euros (how can a book cost 93 Euros!?) so the only thing stopping me now is this little storm.

 

I’ll keep you posted…

 

Bee

 

 

 

 

Rob Clark

W2N Global Ltd.

 

+44 (0)7967 661157

 

 

 

www.w2n.co.uk