Undercover of the night

Monday 14th June Another of those long days sort of waiting to get off on the
night passage, but the tension was considerably higher than usual due to the
nature of tonight’s trip. T & L set off with Rupert from Rumpus in their hire car
to get some final bits and pieces from the supermarket which ended up taking
them hours, whilst Sarah made soup and sandwiches for the overnight sail.
Swimming and showers were the order of the late afternoon before we were
finally able to get out of the raft we were moored in to get to the fuel dock
(VERY cheap fuel here in Lebanon), where we were also able to pick up our
passports and set off for Haifa in Israel. The obvious catch is that the Lebanese do not allow boats to
travel from Lebanon to Israel and the rally was therefore very publically
heading for Southern Cyprus but once we were 25 miles offshore we all turned
left instead of right and headed through the night leaving the lights of Beirut
blazing in reflective sunlight on our port sides as we motored into the rolling
swell and light southerly breeze heading for what promised to be a very
exciting and eventful night. We tried fishing for an hour but with no luck and with the
onset of darkness, our radar once again gave up on us on the one night when we
perhaps would need it most. The wind died away totally by the late evening and as we
motored south we read and re-read the very detailed instructions as to what was
likely to happen as we approached Israeli territorial waters. We were prepared
for gunboats and warships that would appear alongside without appearing on our
radar and who would almost certainly board most boats as a matter of course. We
were prepared for our GPS signals to fail as their navy would be likely to jam
the satellite signals to blind us while they investigated our presence and
purpose and we were ready for a host of other possible scenarios and an
inevitable barrage of questions that would be delivered over the radio to each
and every boat. Let alone the heightened security regarding world
events in this area! The key point though as we proceeded along the Lebanese
coast was that we had been given a very specific narrow gateway at an exact GPS
location 16 miles offshore and some 90 miles south of us through which all
boats had to pass in order to enter Israeli waters and a very specific time
determined by the Israeli navy. |