Passage to Marquesas: Day 18

Author: Pete
Location: 09°04.752S 128°06.807W
Date: 11:00 April 16 to 11:00 April 17

 

Day 18 at sea.

Sailing through lines of squalls today with generally light winds. At some point we were only making 2 knots, so we did some swimming/dragging off the transom, trailing a line to haul ourselves back to the boat. Foolishly, the line we chose to drag was dark blue. Jumping in, I found myself with the rapture of the deep, looking straight down into cerulean blue thousands of feet straight down. Upon surfacing, I realized that the dark blue line blended in nicely with the dark blue water and the boat was moving away. Liza pointed at the line and I swam that way with plenty of time to grab it. Will use white line next time. Also, two knots doesn’t feel like much when you’re on the boat, but trailing behind it on a rope, two knots is pretty fast. Enough to take your drawers off.

GOPR2097

P1140336

GOPR2096-3

GOPR2096

GOPR2097-3

GOPR2097-6

GOPR2097-4

 

 

In the afternoon we couldn’t keep the spinnaker inflated as the true wind speed dropped below 4 knots so we doused it and fired up the iron gennies. Motoring is not without its merits. We charged up the batteries and everything else aboard and had hot showers all round!

It’s been fantastic flying the spinnaker for days on end. The boat looks nice and clean with the sails all furled up and the big blue, pink, and purple chute billowing out front, dragging us along downwind. It’s quiet, doesn’t luff or pop much even in very light wind. Not much trimming as long as she’s inflated. Makes for great afternoon shade of the hammock for reading and keeping watch. The following seas roll up under the boat and gush between the two hulls. It is, as they say, smooth sailin’.

DSC_3228

DSC05736

 

We did get a fish bite yesterday evening! We all finished dinner with a great sunset and were all busying ourselves downstairs in the boat. We all heard the same zzzzz sound, but thought it was someone winching in a line, until we realized that we were all in the boat! So we ran outside and Felix tried to pull the line in with no avail. Too big to hand line! Couldn’t crank it with the reel either! Some sort of monster. It pulled out our spool for a few minutes, and then inexplicably spit the lure out. Or perhaps we ripped it free. Either way… something BIG was on the end of it. Not sure we could have eaten something that size!

P1140337

In other exciting news, I saw a boat yesterday! It was a freighter heading almost are reciprocal course. I was at the bow watching the stars spin over the course of my three hour shift. There’s always a few near the horizon that look like boats, but in minutes they dive out of view. This one moved east along the horizon and over the course of a half hour I made out the bow light, then navigational lights. I lit it up with radar, not out of necessity on a clear night, but out of sheer interest. She passed five miles north of us making 13 knots according to our AIS. It didn’t register a name. In all these wide waters, five miles is pretty close. It’s all too easy to get complacent about the insulating, protective isolation. You almost feel indignant when someone sneaks over the horizon and into your little bubble.

DSC_3481

DSC_3485

But tonight it’s pretty quiet. Motoring through heavy rain. Radar and AIS are blazing away, so we shouldn’t have too many surprises. The wind and sea state are calm, making for an easy ride. More to come.

 

Passage to Marquesas: Day 15 – 17

Author: Pete
Location: 08°54.943S 126°16.550W
Date: 11:00 April 13 to 11:00 April 16

 

Day 15 – 17 at sea.

Another fairly exciting couple of days roll by Tayrona! Yesterday we passed into the triple digits! We celebrated being under 1000 miles, and 2/3 of the trip done with a big pan of brownies! Seems like every other day we have a milestone, but it’s the little victories that keep one going on day 13, 14, and now 15. At a conservative 5 knots, landfall would be another 8 days from here, putting us in Hiva Oa on April 21st. Give it a day for who knows what, and we’ll call it the 22nd. We had a great Thai noodles with a special sauce Miranda cooked up, and even a couple of beers with dinner! Then we sat on the bow at sunset and devoured the entire pan of brownies like the starving sea dogs we AREN’T.

DSC_3251

DSC_3237

DSC_3248
Prepared a message in a bottle for this occasion too. An almost empty rum bottle was all we had aboard, but I thought it fitting. We obligingly emptied it, put in our names, contacts, date, and location, and pitched the old girl overboard. The crew members have a documented, running bet about where it will show up, with some brews on the line.

DSC_3239

DSC_3240

 

Wind has been slacking and is predicted to do so for the next day or so. Bob McDavitt, a marine weather forecaster from New Zealand, discussed El Nino indications in the south Pacific, with warming waters bringing lighter trade winds with more southern development. We’re already seeing the effects, yesterday with 14 knots (9 apparent) of wind and now 9 knots (6 apparent). All coming from 135 degrees to port. Still making ~4 knots with the spinnaker up through the night, but may mess up our landfall prediction.  A rocky, but authentic picture of the motion on our boat at night- here’s Venus, as she guides us along just off our starboard bow.

DSC_3424

 

Last night Miranda saw a meteor airburst! It’s a relatively rare meteoroid entry that ends up coming into the atmosphere, heating through ram pressure (extreme pressure differential, not friction with the atmospheric molecules as generally thought) and then exploding in the atmosphere in a brilliant burst. She said the sky lit up in a white, etherial flash, bright enough to cast shadows on the boat, just for a second, then a falling trail of glowing debris, also white. It occurred roughly at 12:30am, early morning April 14th. Our position was 08 degrees 42.700 min S, 122 degrees 20.000 min W, and Miranda saw it around 20 degrees up in the sky SSE of our position.

Cloudless and great stars again tonight. Tranquil seas, and no moon make for fantastic stargazing from the trampoline! All good aboard Tayrona.

DSC_3444

Passage to Marquesas: Day 14

Author: Pete
Location: 08°35.981S 120°27.125W
Date: 11:00 April 12 to 11:00 April 13

 

Day 14 at sea. Two weeks! Can you imagine spending two weeks in the same 2 rooms of your house? I suppose if you live in Northern Michigan in the winter, that’s not too much of a stretch of the imagination. We discussed our lives in the real world and cited all the things we’d be getting done in two weeks of our normal efficient worker bee cadence. It seems like our days out here go so fast though. We have our routines, our duties aboard the boat, food to cook, dishes to do, then time to do our own things. Still astounds me that every day there is something that I didn’t get time to do. How does that happen when there’s seemingly nothing to do?

DSC_3192

DSC_3405

DSC_3467

GOPR1998

GOPR2101

 

Lower winds today gradually turning aft, so we put up the spinnaker! Gave us a boost of a knot or so, and no flopping headsail to annoy the crew. A little pink and purple are welcome changes in our general world color scheme these days. The big, parachute of a sail also provides some welcome shade on the trampoline in the hot afternoon sun to sit and play guitar.

DSC05728 GOPR2094

 

We’ve been checking in with the Tangaroa fleet in the afternoon really briefly for any emergency traffic. Apparently it was ‘Tantoa’ only on the frequency list sheet they gave me before we headed out. It’s Tangaroa. Sounds like there may have been some trouble in paradise with some broken bits on a boat well ahead of us, not in our fleet. Tallulah Ruby suggested a quick afternoon monitoring of an emergency frequency in case anything of the sort happened to one of us. Good to have safety measures in place.

P1140229

 

Today was a sad occasion, as we finished our last remaining fresh fruit. It’s cans from here on out, baby.

P1140331

 

All good tonight aboard Tayrona. The moon has come and gone. The stars are out in force. I’ve been enamored with Scorpio in the southern sky. There are some great astronomical features around it, globular star clusters, the Scorpio Jewel Box, and the red supergiant Antares, all well visible through a good set of binoculars. Unfortunately, I’ll have to wait until we’re back in a flat anchorage to really scope them. Just get a good dose of nausea from eyeing the heavens too long on the deck of a rolling boat.

DSC_3445