Sun 4/12/11 - 1000 Miles!
SUNDAY
4/12/11 – 1000 MILES, PANCAKES AND A SLICE OF HAM…- 15:44.2N
46:38.0W First
Mate First Galley
Ali here - getting in first for a change.
We now have less than 1000 miles to go to Saint Lucia and for our
celebration we intended to make pancakes with afternoon tea. We passed the 1000 mile marker at
lunchtime and it would seem that the skipper has invented a new ceremony. It seems to involve dropping most of
your cheese and ham sandwich on the cockpit sole, attempting to throw it over
the downwind side of the boat across the cockpit, hitting the spray hood and
having it land on the first mate’s head.
Such was the exertion involved in this manoeuvre that the skipper had to
go for a lie down and missed his pancakes.
Fortunately we have the wherewithal to make more and not all the jam was
eaten! Martin took up the cudgels
and ate the extra pancake. It has
to be said that I think my old cookery teacher Miss MacNaughton wouldn’t have
been too impressed with the presentation, one of the four did actually look like
a pancake, the other three were several stages short of ‘pancakeness’ but we enjoyed them and they say that
practice makes perfect. Once the skipper woke from his afternoon
slumber he rose to the task of cooking a very good one- pot wonder with the
dorade that Martin had caught. It
was much enjoyed by all, however the heat in the galley was close to unbearable
and we have decided that we will stick to the frozen pre-prepared meals and have
volunteers who have offered to defrost them by sticking them up their tee
shirts. We did use the cold cans of
lemonade the other lunchtime twice, once drinking the contents but before that
we rubbed the cans over our faces and necks. We had reports that it is snowing in
Edinburgh and I have been trying to picture the scene and imagine feeling cooler
– sorry folks at home who are all too easily feeling the cold. It
is now 21.00 and I am on the midnight to 03.00 watch, so I shall try to have a
rest before I take over from Alan/Bob at midnight (he is already in his
bunk). Alan and Martin are here in
the cockpit too wave to the dolphins this evening. We had been missing them for a few
days…..so since a dolphin day is a happy day I shall sign off and wish you good
night. “Interesting”
Night Watches Most
of our night watches have been pleasantly peaceful, nothing to report on
changeover apart from meteor activity, and an almost surreal exchange about
whether or not a masthead light had been seen (never conclusive). Yachts do not
show up well on radar, and they seem to have put off their AIS transmitters, so
the issue of sightings is usually moot. Tonight, however, we had a definite
sighting and a concern that they are not keeping a good watch. The unidentified
yacht came within 1 mile of us from behind us on our starboard quarter (possibly
motoring), and it took a course change to leave them
clear……………… ……..and
the usual changeover discussion about radar images of what might be squalls
became a little more real, when we had a really heavy downpour accompanied by
near 30 knot winds from astern. Not dangerous, and not – we understand – a
squall proper as the winds were too light (so it is now officially a “squall
let”!). T’will keep us on our toes hereafter, though…. Watergaw |