Our first visitors 2010 - Part Two

39:51.01N 25:13.70E Friday 11th June We woke at 3 ready to leave at 4am. Still dark so
lifejackets on and still cool so warm clothes required. Quite a tricky
little channel to navigate our way out of the anchorage so much watching out
for the sector lights to change colour while calling bearings from the hand
bearing compass. Here’s a picture of a yacht that got it
wrong...... Needless to say we were all paying close attention to our
allotted tasks. Mike had planned the passage with extreme care and we got
through without difficulty, put the sails up and set the course for Limnos just
as the sun was rising behind us. The winds were fairly strong but variable so we changed the
size of the sails repeatedly during the day, and it was just about at an angle
that would take us all the way to Limnos without too much tacking or needing to
use the engine. It was fairly cool most of the time so we carried on
wearing more layers than ‘Sailing in the Aegean’ would suggest..... But it was a lovely day and a fabulous sail. If we had
left a day earlier or later we wouldn’t have had sufficient wind and
would have needed to motor quite a lot of it so we were delighted. The
early start meant that sleeping was allowed and, for the first time ever on
Tashi Delek, Mike left us to it for a couple of hours, went down to our cabin
and went properly to sleep. Fantastic dolphin sighting when they came
close in to jump out of the water and play alongside us but we were in the
middle of changing sails so couldn’t make the most of it or take any
pictures. Mike came up trumps again with bacon sandwiches at just the
right moment. We made good time and arrived in the glorious anchorage of
Ormos Mhoudrou. The scenery on Limnos was completely different to other
Islands we have visited to far. Open hillsides and dry stone walls looked
more like the wilds of Scotland than the Mediterranean. Ormos Mhoudrou
was the anchorage for all the ships preparing for Gallipoli and it was easy to
picture. For Mike it felt like the Falklands. We spent the next couple of days hopping between anchorages
and enjoying a swim. Or not, in Mike’s case. Always a few jobs to be done. Taking advantage of
having Sue on board we put her into one of the deep lockers at the back of the
boat to retrieve a bolt that had dropped down. There was no way Mike or I
would have fitted. |