Passage to New Zealand: Day 3

Author: Pete
Location: 21°35.573S’ 175°13.900E’
Date: 10.31.15
Day 3 at sea.

Happy Halloween!  We’re celebrating All Hallow’s Eve aboard with a big bag of candy corn smuggled to us by Miranda’s buddy Teri. Surprisingly, we haven’t had many Trick-or-Treaters out tonight.  Miranda doesn’t have much of a sweet tooth, so I have a feeling that I’m going to be eating the whole bag myself.  Jacked up blood sugar is a really great way to break up the monotony of cruising.  TIME TO GO RIDE BIKES!  TIME TO SWAB THE DECKS!  WHO WANTS TO GO UP THE MAST?!  Haven’t figured out a good costume yet.  Possibly a sailor?  A pirate?  Or maybe a mermaid?  Not much else in the costume department ’round these parts.  I wanted to go as a ghost this year but Miranda said we need the sails intact.  She doesn’t feel the need for a costume, saying, “I pretty much resemble a hobo right about now.”  We’ll have to find her a stick and a handkerchief.

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You’d think the open ocean would be a spooky place on Halloween, what with the web-footed sea monsters, shipwrecked souls lost to the deep, and devious merfolk all floating about.  In actuality, it’s another beautiful moonlit night.  The only scary thing out here is our hygiene and diet.  We’re pushing canned meat since it will be confiscated in New Zealand.  BLTs have been on the lunch menu with crispy Spam instead of bacon!  We still have ghoul-green lettuce and blood-red tomatoes to go on the sandwiches.  They’re horrifyingly good!  No pumpkins floating about, and we’re out of coconuts, so we made a dozen zombie eggs for fun!  It’s tough to draw on a round object on a bucking boat.

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Time to go howl at the moon.

 

 

 

 

Passage to New Zealand: Day 1-2

Author: Pete
Location: 20°00.000S’ 175°31.251E’
Date: 10.30.15

 

Leaving Fiji we encountered fair winds and flat sailing for a few hours inside the barrier reef.  We were welcomed back to the high seas outside the pass by 25 knot winds on the beam and 2 meters seas.  It got pretty raucous with foam blasting our bows and the dishes rattling in the cupboard as if by juggling poltergeists.  A bright moon lighting up the sea helped ease us back into our night watches.  We’re sailing as close to the wind as possible, and still not quite pointing at our waypoint.  We put on Scopolamine patches right out of the chute and have felt pretty darn good even below in the heavy seas.  The medication gives the impression that one has been chewing on cotton balls and sawdust though.  Mlehth…

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Winds moderated through the night and into the afternoon.  Tonight we are motoring through the forecasted lull with mirror seas with only a whisper of breeze.  We are deviating from our intended course to head more directly to a point 500 miles north of Cape North in New Zealand.  Will have to wait to see how the wind fills in as the cycle of highs and lows progresses farther south.

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First Major Passage: Bahamas to Colombia

Author: Pete

Location:  Cartagena, Colombia

 

Sailed on the first day out of Inagua. Felt odd to leave port in the late afternoon with night coming on and no land in sight. Sailing overnight was a novel experience again after not doing it for some time.

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Our second day the wind died in the Windward Passage between Haiti and Cuba, so we motored for about sixteen hours on the flat seas. The ocean almost became a mirror it was so still aside from our wake. As we passed close to the southern peninsula of Haiti we could smell the land, sweet like flowers. Miranda thought sweet like human musk. Eeew…. She’s weird like that.  Played Settlers of Catan and Pass the Pigs taking advantage of the flat.

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Body is adjusting slowly to the awkward motion of the boat. It’s pretty loud in the hulls from slapping waves as we were on a beam reach doing five knots. Morale was good though, if slightly sick feeling.

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It’s short of like a week long hangover after a college house party. Everyone is lethargic, and slightly nauseous. We sit and stare into space at the horizon and talk sparingly. Every couple of ours someone makes a big pot of starchy bland food that we all eat quietly and feel better for a bit. Dishes pile up. Bright lights are painful. Everyone is just a little unwashed. Does that bring back memories? We’re making them right here.

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I guess it’s a challenge. The night watches are still novel and beautiful. The sky lights up with the stars and you can see clouds, waves, and horizon. It’s a peaceful, if boring four hours. The right song comes on the iPod, and it becomes a solo dance party breaking out on the deck in a lifejacket and tethered to the boat. They can’t hold these moves down though.

 

Once in a while the realization of how far we are from anything and what we’re actually doing crosses my mind. I feel fear and elation. And sick. Always just a little sick. Damned the dry heaves, full speed ahead. Onward to Colombia!

 

 

Day four in the passage. Wind steadily increasing as we go south. Now about 15 knots. Still choppy, uncomfortable seas, but nothing ferocious. Altered course 10 degrees starboard for our final run to Cartagena, which lays 116 miles away. I think we’ll be ready to get off the boat.

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Last night on watch was like living a dream. I’m on the midnight to 4AM graveyard shift, and generally pretty spaced out at the beginning of watch. Throw in clouds and no moon, which blurs perception, and the boat trailing streams of bioluminescent sparks, as well as being hundreds of miles from anything, and no boats in sight for days. Pretty far out there. It’s nice on deck. Down below the creaks and bangs sound like the boat is coming apart. …but I know she won’t. Not my Tayrona.

 

Last day of the passage was a trial. We went to bed with moderate winds and low swell. Over the course of the night we passed 11 degrees N and the trade wind predictably caught us. Screaming 25 knot winds gusted 30 and kicked up big rollers. We were beam reaching, which rolled the boat disconcertingly. Tayrona started surfing on the waves, reaching the troughs and veering to port, climbing the next under sail and repeating.

 

Down below trying to sleep in the roller coaster of creaking fiberglass and hammering waves was impossible. We did our best. I relieved Miranda of duty at midnight and kept it together until 2 AM when the wind had reached 20 knots and we had a Cartagena-bound freighter to dodge. I couldn’t raise it on the radio, so I woke Mir to help me reef and tack back north out of the big ship’s way. The seas were so big by that point we couldn’t swing the bow through the wind to tack. I fired up the engines, but the starboard wouldn’t turn over. There may have been some swearing involved, but eventually we got the boat tacked over. Liza was up by now roused by the vulgarity washing over the decks. The lights of the big boat grew closer. I thought I was sure which way it was headed and then wasn’t convinced. The rolling waves bucked and skidded the boat. The dark felt overbearing in the cloudy, moonless night.

 

Then the fore and aft lights unaligned and the freighter passed us a mile off our port and slid south. By now it was 3 AM so Liza and I put together an anchor, chain, and several warps as a drogue, and also double reefed the sails.   The combination slowed the boat to six knots and kept it from surfing radically. Still big walls of wave thundered in to our aft quarter, rolling the boat sickeningly up and forward. We stood at the helm and watched them come like a car wreck that you couldn’t help rubberneck. It was sickeningly worrisome that maybe, though not likely, but just maybe, one of those waves out there was steep and tall enough to roll us.

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Eventually it was Liza’s 4 AM watch but I stayed up, too juiced to go below. We ate all the cookies and tried to keep hydrated. The waves pounded on. Dawn broke, as did our hopes that the weather would moderate at daylight. I don’t know if seeing the monsters is better than just imagining them. I went below and pretended to sleep for an hour.

 

It was into the early afternoon that we approached the coast and seeing it through the haze got to bellow a legitimate, “Land Ho!” Actually, I’m not sure that I can bellow, even if I tried. The waves and wind moderated and a pod of dolphins welcomed us to the continent. We sailed to South Amercia. We were exhausted.

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Ran with the wind under full sail past Zona Norte, my old kite beach, and our friends’ apartment, past the walled city that I love, and beside Boca Grande’s glittering highrises. So close. We were so close. Pulled down sails and motored towards the shallow entrance to Boca Grande and Wendy, the port engine, started screaming. Well, her alarm did. I shut her down and found no coolant. So we loitered under sail until it cooled off and I could get more coolant in, then motored over the submerged pirate wall into the bay. The smell of fried goods wafted through the air from shore. We dodged skiffs and slid past the statue of Mary protecting the harbor. We anchored off Club Nautica with the other scabby looking boats.

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We were home. We’d made it back to Cartagena, Colombia, South America under sail. Back to where it all began. I love this city and I can’t wait to walk her streets again. But now to bed, at 7:30 PM. Gork, out.

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