If I were a carpenter

28:23.51N 13:51.37W Wednesday, Thursday and Friday 10th, 11th
& 12th November Wednesday was spent getting some planned jobs done using
spares and items purchased whilst we were back in the UK last month. Sarah also
went aloft in the bosun’s chair firstly to attach the new SSB radio aerial
stand-off blocks that I had made, on the back stay and then up the main mast to
do a thorough rigging inspection. The backstay operation also involved her
removing a nylon block with a small hacksaw and all went well until the very
last part when she did an excellent job of sawing into one of her fingers. We
lowered her to the deck and after treating the wound with several steristrips and
cups of coffee all round, she went back up and finished the job. Somehow the day slipped away and it did not help that the
weather is very odd with blazing sunshine interspersed with rain which was
definitely not in the brochure. On Thursday the plan was to go for a day sail and return to
the marina in the evening, but when we got up to find huge black clouds
swirling around the island we had a little change of heart and decided to get
the last of the bigger jobs finished instead! One of these involved modifying the bracket on which we
store the outboard engine on the pushpit rail. We devised a cunning plan to
make this work better and to make it stronger but like all such projects where
neither James nor I are any good at carpentry we did encounter the odd
technical error along the way. Friday saw us finally underway and we left Puerto Calero on
Lanzarote around 11.00 am after various goodbyes to all the crews who were
staying a little longer. Very little wind to start with so progress was slow on the
30 mile trip south to Fuerteventura, but gradually it filled in and as we
gained speed so the apparent wind came forward of the beam and we were able to
fly the full cutter rig and our speed leapt up to around 7 knots and we ate up
the miles before having to gybe round and start the very interesting
(challenging) approach to Puerto Del Castillo. The wind was only around 15 knots and the sea was bouncy but
nothing untoward, but the pilot book and the electronic chart plotter had rather
different ideas as to what we would find by way of navigation marks leading us
past a very large shoal and reef guarding the entrance to the marina. In the event both were wrong and we needed to use some
common sense and caution as we dropped the sails and swept in out of the swell.
The two marineros came down to show us our mooring which was alongside on the
very end of the only pontoon, which itself looked fairly rickety. All went well
and we appear to have arrived in a tiny marina with just 5 visitors moorings
close to a small tourist village. There is some bad weather on its way and so
we plan to stay here until it blows through but we may review this when we have
a chance to explore the rather limited local facilities. Heard in the evening by email from America the latest on our
parcel which has to date travelled from USA to Spain, to Tenerife, to
Lanzarote, back via Spain to the USA but not quite to the original supplier who
had heard that it was on its way back to lanzarote again. Well you could not
make this up really but they have discovered from the tracking that it is now
in the Czech Republic – heaven knows why, but the supplier (Boxer Marine, who
have been outstanding in their support throughout this sorry story of mail
service incompetence) have now refunded our original payment and hope that we
will re-order when we arrive in the Caribbean where they may be able to deliver
the goods faster! We taught James Mexican Train last night and he picked it up
very quickly, almost too quickly as he nearly pipped Sarah for second place! |