Cascais- Lagos

Trippwire
Sat 10 Oct 2009 06:46
Having been in Cascais for a couple of days, poor weather came in and so we had to move from our anchorage off the beach into the marina. The nice thing now we have got down to this latitude is that when the weather is bad at least it is still warm. My plan was to do lots of kite surfing, but before then, I still need one more lesson. Unfortunately, despite good wind, it seems that there was no beach around with the right wind direction - an offshore wind would give me a rather unplanned (but potentially quick) trip to Madeira, whilst an onshore wind would more likely than not turn me into strawberry jam on the side of a building.....I therefore took the less heroic option and wimped out! So, lots of boat sorting and a bit of surfing later, we set off after lunch on Thursday 8th after a very pleasant stay in Cascais.
 
The forecast was for more motoring, and so a force 3-4 from the north-west was very much appreciated, particularly when it turned out not to be a sea breeze and continued through the night. The sea was pretty mixed up having had a few days of strong southwester lies, creating a motion that made it difficult to stand up. Setting off just behind us was a Discovery 54 owned by some very nice people that we met whilst in Cascais..we expected to sail off into the horizon, but this Discovery proved to be pretty quick.....suddenly there was rather a lot of pride at stake! Anyway, a bit of tweaking later and we had the legs on them, but for a while it was a close run thing...and re-opened the "spinnaker debate".
 
We has already pre-agreed no spinnaker whilst there are just two of us on board...this was after a fantastic sail that we had last year from Falmouth to Dartmouth, when we put the spinnaker up and the wind increased progressively....Jen set 20 knots of wind as the limit, and fantastically, every time she came on deck the wind dropped to 18 knots....umm time for a confession...only after I had turned the wind reading to read apparent wind rather than the original true wind speed....and given that we were surfing downwind at 14 knots, meant some pretty good breeze. It all came down ok when it was time to bring it down, but it was decided that we had perhaps exhausted our luck. Which is all very sensible and stuff, but when you have a perfect 14 knots from behind you...unfortunately and despite several consistently better lines of persuasion, I proved just not to be persuasive enough and had to make do with the two sails we had up!
 
We came around Cape St Vincent at around 5 in the morning and reached a huge milestone; we did our first tack or gybe of the trip so far. When buying the boat, one of our main concerns was the running backstays. These are bits of rigging that attach themselves to the back of the boat, and you attach them via a pulley and a large winch to the windward side of the boat; this means changing them over every time you tack or gybe. The particularly important thing about them is that if you have an accidental gybe (which can be very likely when sailing downwind under autopilot), or just get a tack or gybe wrong, the danger is that when the sail gets thrown across the boat, that it takes the mast out with it....so, not for the faint hearted, or indeed for anyone with any sort of sense who is cruising double handed. My logic was that we would be using the boat for ocean passages during which there are very few maneuvers anyway.....a few friends 'in the know' did a huge amount of teeth sucking and generally agreed that we were bonkers.....well, to all you tooth suckers, our first gybe (well, we chickened out really and tacked around, which was more than sensible given the 20 knots and lumpy sea off the headland!) was done after we had clocked 1080 miles. Don't worry though the tooth suckers, you still have at least 10,000 miles to prove me wrong!
 
We had a fantastic sail for the last 20 miles into Lagos, with the wind on the beam and a steady 10 knots on the log, and arrived in ready for breakfast, a bit of a kip, followed by a lunch in a beach side cafe washed down by lots of Sangria!
 
The plan for the next few days is to potter around here, do a bit more boat sorting, and perhaps a couple of short hops along the Algarve, ready to meet Charlie D who is coming out on Thursday night for (weather permitting), a trip to Madeira and perhaps some fortified wine!
 
Jen & Miles
 

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