Haganes - Panama - Tampa Fl. - Aug. 2012.

Haganes – En route Tampa Fl. –
Aug. 2012 We got away Wed 15th
and it was as rough as a boars backside for the first 48hrs. 25kts on the beam
and rolling like only this old girl knows how. Couldn’t work out why it
was so quiet though, and then I realised we’ve seen little of Carol the
cook for the last couple of days. In fact the conditions would be perfect for
Splash Tango, 20-25 on the beam, warm, even a rare glimpse of sun, but not so
good for a 120ton vessel shaped like a pencil! There was a tropical
depression just east of the Antilles that looked like making itself into a
hurricane and heading through the Caribbean a couple of days before we left. My
friends Mel and Geno on their cat Meow are in the San Blaas Islands and I had thought
that if it did, it could be opportune to join them and wait a day or two while
it passed. However it fizzled out so we carried on with the task at hand but I
was sad to miss them. It’s been very ‘wet
season’ tropical since leaving Mexico, very hazy, humid and cloudy. ETA Tampa is Tuesday about 1400hrs and all hands
are looking forward to that. There is a lot of work to be done once we get
there, ‘retrofitting’ new gensets, winch gear and electronics, before we head out to the
Bahamas to trial the new equipment. But arriving in Tampa will be the
realization of the original objective when we left Singapore and as such, that
seems like the goal for me at least. Two days out of Panama, we reached our first waypoint and
turned towards Cuba heading up between the Rosalind and Gorda Banks off
Honduras. Heading
towards Cuba we were joined by a pod of pilot whales. I didn’t have time
to get my camera up as this cow and calf came up and had to “shoot from
the hip”. It would have been a great shot if I’d managed to get it
in frame. We are making good progress in calm and clear conditions with
a 1.5 kt current in our favour. There seems to be a lot of water heading the
same way as us. It’s all rushing to get in the queue to join the gulf
stream off Florida and catch a ride north east to the Azores and Europe. Nice
for us though, we can pull the revs back and still trundle along at 11kts with
a nice cool engine throbbing away down below. See the little bird on Ray’s left hand. He appeared on
board 150nm from land probably having come across from a passing ship. He
stayed with us 2 days, flying around the boat and in and out of the wheel
house. Ray tried to tempt him with a bowl of sugar water buy he
wasn’t really into that. Then when Cuba appeared, a faint line on the
horizon 11 miles off the starboard beam, away he went. Probably smoking a big
fat Cohiba cigar and telling his mates all about it right now. |