33:46:00N 53:10:24W

Boatannie
Mon 21 May 2012 16:47
Update from Annie 21st May 2012
It's been an unusually hectic 24 hours aboard our
little sailing boat Annie. Yesterday at dawn, just as I was about to go off
watch the bridge of a large cargo carrier nudged above the horizon. Within 20
minutes it was only about 2 miles off on a convergent course but then made
a change so that it ran parallel to us before disappearing ahead. Then we heard
there was a gale behind us headed in our direction and an abandoned yacht dead
in the water just ahead ( well maybe 100 miles ahead). Neither so far have
materialised, which in a way has been disappointing although peering into a
murky night on lookout for a boat without crew does not have a lot to recommend
it, save for the slight frisson it adds to proceedings. Then, yesterday
afternoon we had the diversion of the mother of all riding turns on the mainsail
halyard. We tried everything to get just an inch or two of slack in but with the
sail neither able to go up the mast any higher or come down it proved difficult.
There I was lashed to the mast tying rolling hitces when the wind piped up to 30
knots and I got acqainted with a series of breaking waves over the foredeck. In
the end we had to take the winch apart and force the turns off with a hammer and
flat balded screwdriver, all the while the boat careering about; wind and waves
braking over us - high drama!! Eventually we freed the line and no sooner had I
put two reefs in at the mast - having volunteered to go forward again being
already drenched - at that precise moment the wind fell away and we have
been lolling around in no wind at all for the whole of last night as we struggle
through the Azores High which is unusually high, of course. Last night Graham
cooked his signature dish of pasta and tuna adorned with stuffed olives. A near
disaster was averted at the last moment when he realised that having cooked the
pasta in seawater alone it was a tad on the salty side - a kettle of warm clean
water from the tank soon sorted that one and we enjoyed a hearty meal.
Throughout the night we struggled through a windless gloom but still, this
morning dawn broke and a clear if windless day emerged. We were a grateful
crew when Graham agreed that running the engine would be a good thing, enabling
us to generate some water, recharge the batteries and head for the Azores, at
least for a couple of hours. Just when the engine started (thank God)
guess what? ANother frighter popped up on the horizon, this one heading straight
towards us - a British boat no less which passed down our port side no more
than half a mile off. That's the third ship we've seen since we left ANtigua. I
retired to my berth a happy man - no engine din would keep me from my sleep this
day.
Peter
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