Half way there (about)

Alia Vita
Rob & Frances Lythgoe
Tue 25 Nov 2014 19:07
17:48.70N 43:12.88W
Today marks the half way point of our Atlantic crossing between Cape Verde
and St Lucia, 1,043 miles back or 1,043 ahead. We have had a meeting and
on balance we have decided to carry on. I was going to say that we are
over 1,000 miles from land for a bit of dramatic effect, but in fact Suriname
(go look it up) is only 950 miles south west of here so its not so bad after
all. These are of course nautical miles and we are actually 1,092 land miles
from Suriname which we will now revert to just for today to make us sound like
real adventurers. We are over 1,000 miles from land!
We started the day by wrapping the spinnaker around and between our two
headsails which was fun. This is a huge, and I mean huge, 225 square meter kite
that is seriously powerful. It will pull our home which when fully laden with
water and fuel probably displaces 18 tonnes, through water at over 10kts
(12mph), so trying to pull it down again once powered up can be a problem.
It has only come out of its locker once so far this trip, on the way down from
Las Palmas. That occasion almost ended in disaster so it has taken another 1,500
miles or so for us to pluck up the courage to try again. The time before that
was in Corsica in June which also went badly and it wasn’t repaired until we got
to Malta. It went up a treat though and was quite a sight to behold, so
Chris thought as it was such a success we should take it down straight away and
practice just to get our confidence up. Oh dear! Next time was not quite
so successful and it took quite a while and a lot of energy to get the ‘cat back
in it the bag’. I sighed in relief that we had managed this without
damaging anything and was thinking of bed as I had been on watch since 4 am,
when Frances in her inimitable style decided we shouldn’t be put off and that we
should try again. The crew voted and so to avoid a mutiny and to prove I was
right I let them go again. What a disaster. We finally got it down after a long
and tense battle and it is now safely away never to see light of day
again. Skipper has spoken. I have been forced to make a few life
changes in recent years to reduce stress, and I’m not about to let all that good
work be undone by a brightly coloured piece of rip-stop nylon; that isn’t what
this adventure is all about!
FOR SALE: One Symmetric Spinnaker, 225 Sqm, red and white, hardly
used. All serious offers considered.
Half way celebrations started prematurely with an amazingly light coffee
and walnut cake that Elaine whipped up whilst all the excitement was going on up
at the pointy end. Elaine then whipped up a Victoria sponge with lemon curd when
she remembered that Chris has an allergy to coffee. This was preceded by
Confit of Pork and local cheeses (not local to where we are now.....obviously).
This evening we will be dining at or very close to the half way point so we are
having pan fried sirloin steak in a cream of mushroom sauce with garlic and
onion potatoes and seasonal vegetables. The boat is always run ‘dry’ on
passage which means no alcohol to those of you that will be unfamiliar with the
concept. This evening however, skipper has allowed a rum ration to be
distributed amongst the crew who have unanimously voted to trade that in for
half a glass of red from our 5L box and Frances has a beer in the fridge as we
aren’t opening a bottle of white just for her.
|