San Antonio, Ibiza to Palma, Majorca
Position: 39:01.33N
01:15.05E |
Distance approx 70
miles.
Sailing 70 miles on the chart in ‘Timeless’ is one of those
awkward distances.
The sail ends up being just a
little over 10 hours ie. just a little more than daylight hours.
In
practice, this means getting up at sunrise and ‘maybe’ arriving in the dark, or,
leave before sunset and ‘maybe’ arriving at the destination just before sunrise.
On the basis that we neither like
getting up early, nor arriving nor leaving port in the dark it is a conundrum!
The solution for us is always a very slow night sail.
We left San Antonio, Ibiza at midday.
The predicted winds were
15knots, clear skies and calm seas. Our plan was to have a late lunch in a bay
(Cala, in Spanish) on the NW corner of Ibiza and then leave from there at dusk
for a slow sail to Palma, Majorca.
The plan was going well.
But as always
happens with us, when we reached
the NW corner (at around 5pm) we decided not to stop but - press on!
Our
thought was that by the time we would have anchored we would be lifting it
again. As it was a really pleasant sail with no other boats around, just a light
wind and a pleasant evening, a slow cruise of around 3 knots would get us to
Palma after daybreak.
They say conditions change quickly around the islands.
Almost as soon as dusk came so
the wind picked up to 20+ knots from where we were headed along with a sea swell
of 2-3 meters. Discovery 55 sailboats love this combination and Timeless did
what every self respecting Discovery should do – it found it’s groove and
increased speed to 8 plus knots. Damb!!
Time to reef.
Shortly after, out came the
tankers and the cruise ships!
Lots of tankers and cruise ships.
What a nice captain!
The first
cruise ship was really cool. Although not on a direct collision course
(clearance 500 meters) and still a good 10 miles away, the cruise liner
immediately altered course by 10 degrees to give us plenty of room to sail -
before we changed course as is the normal practice for us.
What a great
captain!
..it made us feel quite important.
..and it’s never happened
before.
We ALWAYS move out of the way of BIG ships – because they NEVER
change their course.
By now the wind speed had
increased to 25+ knots.
Time to reef again! The boat was still speeding
along at 6 knots.
..back to normal
We noticed a tanker
6 miles behind us. On a direct heading for us motoring at 18 knots (a COLLISION
heading even). The rules of the sea state that the overtaking vessel must steer
clear of the overtaken vessel (regardless of power, sail, etc). He did not change course even a few
degrees – not a jot, nothing. So if
we hadn’t of noticed him or if we didn’t have a good watch system he’d just run
us over! Geesh!
Just on principle we decided to
wait just a little longer to see what he would do. Nothing.
..back to normal then.
Regardless of the navigation
rules and with a good margin of safety we did tack away and left him to motor on
and get to his beer.
As we were sailing quite close to
the wind the tack meant a BIG change in our course and it was a good 30 minutes
before we could tack again to get back on our destination course giving him a
clear sea.
Ah well, our boat was sailing too fast to Palma anyway!
Oh! This reminds me..
We came across
this really experienced elderly couple (late 70’s) this season. They had clearly
been sailing many many years on their own.
It’s quite normal for people
sailing in one direction to swop charts, pilot books and the like with people
sailing in the other direction and this is how we met them.
They had just sailed for 8 days
non-stop. As they were clearly a very experienced sailing couple I was
interested in their watch system as we find 3 or more days on our own just plain
tiring.
“Oh, nothing
special.”,
the skipper started to explain their system,
“We tend to go to bed at about 9pm and then
get up at about 7 or 8 in the morning. Our radar proximity alarm is set for half
a mile and tells us if something is near us. We are getting a little hard of
hearing these days so we rigged a baby alarm by the radar speaker and put the
baby alarm speaker by our bunks. It works a treat!”
..anyway back to ‘our’ night sail and the
autopilot throws a tantrum
John went for a nap whilst Les
took first watch at around 10pm.
BEEEEEEPPPPP!
BEEEP!!
BEEEP!!
Within 15 minutes the chart
plotter/autopilot decided to have a tantrum.
The autopilot wouldn’t reset
either.
BEEEEEEEEP!
The autopilot was in a tizz and
refused to hold our course. We couldn’t really therefore trust the chart plotter
readings either as it is all connected together.
The choice was to manually
steer and live with the incessant BEEP or, turn the autopilot completely OFF so
the BEEP stopped and manually steer.
I turned the autopilot OFF.
Tush!...a short 30 mile manual steer is
nothing to us
We are used to manual steering.
When we sailed from Auckland to Tahiti with John and Amanda Neal, we sailed the
whole 3,000 miles without the autopilot.
So this was nothing.
..but we do like to use the
instruments for our hourly log and completely manual was going to be a real
pain. AND! Sudoku was going to have to wait for
another night.
John was stirring down
below.
“We have a problem. Can you come up John. The electronics is broken”
“..and I’m missing my Suduku!
‘cos I have to manually steer.”
John went through his trouble shooting
routine for 10 minutes and came up with nothing. We were going to have to make
the BIG decision.
“Let’s just shut everything down and reboot to see if that
fixes it – like a Mac!”
“If this doesn’t work – well, we
are in big winds, messy seas in the dark, ships everywhere and we are no worse
off.”
Powering ‘down’ and ‘up’
seems to take forever when you are waiting – just like a Mac – or a kettle of
water on the stove.
A few real minutes later (and 60
emotional minutes) we are working perfectly again. The boat electronics had had
it’s tantram, then had had it’s ‘time out’, and, like all children was now
acting as if nothing had ever happened.
Thanks to all the manual steering practice we had had with John &
Amanda, Les had steered a pretty well perfect course such that no course
correction was necessary at all!
hmmm….smarty pants
We were smiling.
John reefed
down again.
John went back to finish his
sleep.
The wind was peeking at
32 knots.
John came back up for his watch
at about 1 am and noticed a little lightning on the horizon but nothing too
scary. I went off to get warm and have a sleep.
Quite a few more cruise ships,
freighters and tankers had decided to make for Palma during the rest of that
night.
Then the wind died.
The wind
died around 3pm and John put a tad more sail out whilst still trying to keep the
boat sailing at under 3 knots. Not too much sail mind - we didn’t want to arrive
before daylight!
Damb it! Within an hour the wind got back up to
25 knots again and we were racing at over 8 knots. Time to reef – again!
It was a busy night.
Romantic couples go for a ‘sunset sail’ –
we try a ‘before sunrise sail’
Finally, we reached The Bay of Palma. This
Bay is a big Bay – about 10 mile deep.
Arriving was fine but we were 3 hours
too early to be at this position!
We needed to ‘really’ slow the boat down.
We reefed the jib yet again such that there was very little showing and put the
mail sail completely away. See the photo.
We were still doing almost 3
knots! We were ready to go for a ‘before sunrise’ cruise of the Bay if
needed.
Two cruise liners and three tankers passed us as we were sailing into
port.
We resisted the urge to enter
the port before daybreak.