One More Last Time

It seemed like forever, at least twice a year, I would captain a sailboat for Offshore Passage Opportunities taking a Swan charter crew between New England and St. Maarten. When Rebecca and I briefly returned to Rhode Island last November, it had been 11 years since I last captained a boat for the NARC Rally heading south. But now I got to make one last trip.  This article appears in the April, 2018 issue of Blue Water Sailing magazine. This is a very long story, 4,500 words. Most sailing magazines have a limit of 3,000 words. But Blue Water Sailing, being privately owned, can be more liberal. 

                                                    One More Last Time    

John, Patrick, Keith, Chris, Dave, Marco

Strong gusts threw short rollers into the marina pinning our N  autor Swan 53 to the dock and drenching everything with spraying blasts of cold, October, Narragansett Bay water. The floating docks of the Yachting Center, in Newport, Rhode Island, morphed into a galloping coordination test to dance across.  This weekend marked the 5 year anniversary of Super Storm Sandy, which ground to pieces the coasts of New Jersey and New York.   Fortunately this weather was no Sandy even though my charter guests came for a strong, open ocean adventure.  If we had already been at sea, the 35 knots of wind would have been manageable but now, we were trapped in the marina until the spiraling storm system could spin away.

For many years, each fall, I had captained a large Swan sailboat for Offshore Passage Opportunities, www.sailopo.com, between Rhode Island and St.Maarten, with a stop in , my favorite harbor in the world, St.Georges, Bermuda.  For the past ten years, my wife and I had sailed off to cruise the world on our Valiant-40, Brick House.  With a decade of passage making behind us, we left our floating home in Malaysia for a brief return to New England. I could not pass up the invitation to skipper, one more last time, the most challenging, variable, fun passage in the world I know of. Aurora, my new home for the next 2 weeks, was full of diesel, fresh water, and  food for a crew of 6.  We were ready to cross an ocean except for the weather delay and one vital piece of equipment, a large sponge.

The charter crews on these trips have always proved to be a successful, intelligent and motivated group who, know how to get along with others.  We are one of three Swan charter boats, with paying charter guests, captained by professionals who long ago stopped counting their number of sea miles.  There were also several privately owned, owner operated, boats that completed the group in which we would all sail together as the North Atlantic Rally to the Caribbean, The NARC.

Off with the 130 and on with the 90 percent jib.

The extra days in port gave the crew time to explore not only historic Newport, but the recesses and intricacies of a boat full of systems and electronics plus the opportunity to size up their crewmates. In anticipation of the worst weather ahead, we took off the owners 130 percent racing sail and bent on a more durable and properly sized 90 percent jib.  Also on deck, the dorades needed attention. When waves roll over a boat, simply turning a dorade to face away from the wind and waves is not enough to keep water from washing below. Besides, the crisp chill of fall made it uncomfortably cold inside Aurora. To keep wind, cold, and water out, all the dorades were covered with plastic bags and secured in place with light line.

Rebecca giving her PredictWind weather forecast to the crew of Aurora.

Crew member Dave, stowed his gear in the aft cabin opposite my bunk. His short body builder frame complimented his energy and competence. If a conversation amongst the crew ever lagged, Dave always inserted an interesting spark.  As a long time commercial airline pilot, Dave slipped easily into the functions of a yacht far larger than his Catalina 27. Dave brought his plastic sextant and sight reduction tables to practice with. Maybe together we could learn what I had long ago forgotten.

The other four crew had their choice of the two stacked bunks forward on the port or the 2 bunks on the starboard bow.  At this point in the trip, it is difficult to determine which would be the most leeward side, thus the most comfortable, for the majority of the passage.

We finally found the sponge we needed at a hardware store, an 8X5X1.5 inch cellulose sponge. By Tuesday morning, 6 November, the wind settled to 15 knots so we backed Aurora out of the marina.  We were on our way. 

My new Henri Lloyd foul weather gear is the first to do what it is advertised to do, plus it has the see through visor.

Layers of shirts and gloves broke the chill blowing across Narragansett Bay.  I loved my new Henri Lloyd foul weather gear. The jacket stopped the wind and the unique Optivision hi-vis hood system allowed full peripheral vision.   John ground fast and hard on the jib sheet winch working up a sweat as we practiced tacking.  Materials transport is how the crew labeled his occupation, but with a chuckle, he more squarely says, “No, I am a truck driver”.  John has read the classics like Slocum which stoked the desire for a sea adventure his 26 foot sailboat won’t allow.  He thought, maybe in the mornings, he could stroll the decks and pick up flying fish to fry for breakfast.

 

 

Marko steered seaward as the rest of us worked the deck. His experience sailing his own 37 foot Island Packet made him quickly capable of maneuvering a highly responsive performance cruiser. At 30 years old, he is the youngest crew yet the most adventurous.  Marko made a big news splash when he and two pals did a base jump off the top of the new World Trade Center which left the police, FBI, and Homeland Security, unamused. He is working as a movie set carpenter to pay off lingering lawyer bills. Marko is gaining ocean experience before sailing his own boat to the Caribbean.

I am impressed with Keith.  When I grab hold of the main halyard and hang with my full weight to hoist the large main sail, it still won’t reach its final height.  Keith can stand there and send the main up as though he is pulling on a string. Keith is the Hollywood image of the square bodied, bear strong, gravel voiced, Marine sergeant, which he was before retirement number one. He now specializes in telecommunications. Keith is trying ocean sailing to determine if he should become a fulltime sea gypsy.

The man I would eventually defer to for sail trim advice is Chris. Since childhood, he has been racing sailboats along the coast and on the Great Lakes. Chris analyzes billion dollar companies to determine if they are worthy acquisitions for far larger companies. Chris is looking for an ocean crossing adventure. 

On all my NARC trips, everyone has come from vastly different neighborhoods across America, yet by journey’s end they become a cohesive group of friends.  This is one of the amazing things about sailing across an ocean.

The relative 200 foot deep waters of Rhode Island Sound extends over 100 miles offshore before the ocean bottom drops away to depths of miles deep. It is a boisterous business crossing the shelf in 20 knots of wind after a strong spiraling storm sets up wave trains colliding from all directions. But the very bumpy ride was a nauseous experience for two of the crew who were soon spewing over the side. They did not follow good advise.  It is always strongly advised to take seasick medicine at least six hours before leaving port.   Those who followed the advise and wore a Scopolamine patch, swallowed Bonine, or Dramamine-non drowsy, fared well. In Bermuda, the very effective product called Stugeron can be bought over the counter, but it is not sold in the U.S..  Crossing an ocean for the first time is not the place to be experimenting with ginger root or wrist bands when your shipmates are relying on you.

We did not talk, we yelled to each other over the ocean and wind noise as the breeze increased to 25 knots.  Maximum sail was set, on a beam reach, which kept us moving at ten knots over the ground and at times peaking at twelve.  The windward running back stay was set. The Swan loved this weather. Everyone had their turn on the large steering wheel in daylight before a watch schedule was set. Holding a compass course in bouncy weather is a learned skill everyone would become fully adept at on this trip.  Steering with the wind on the beam meant the sails had to be trimmed properly so the boat would be balanced and not round up into the wind uncontrollably.

The weather router which gave the fleet briefing before departure predicted calms ahead. My wife Rebecca gave our crew similar weather information using her PredictWind, a new weather prediction application. I had also loaded PredictWind onto my tablet specifically to test on this passage. But with PredictWind, as we headed into the north Atlantic, I could watch the daily wind arrows display for a far better interpretation than a one sheet handout.   The Predict Wind projection went out nine days. If we had on board “Iridium Go!” a satellite link, we could get daily weather updates. The same can be downloaded over the Single Side Band with a Pactor 3 modem.  

Natuor Swans are incredibly strong and seaworthy boats. I have all the confidence in the world in Swans, of any length.  But John’s romance with the sea was being tested. In the famous sea stories he read from his easy chair he says “Those guys don’t tell how violently you get knocked around a cabin and how you have to crawl around the deck on all fours.”  John was already hinting at jumping ship and flying away in Bermuda.

 “Rough weather“ is a perception based on one’s experience. Chris and Dave were looking for far higher wind speeds and waves to have an ocean experience that would increase their offshore skills. According to Dave, “Anyone can sail to Bermuda in this.”

As darkness approached, the watch rotation was set. Watch “A” was comprised of the three most adept crew. The watch consisted of three hour shifts beginning on a whole hour. One and a half hours later, that is half way through a shift,  a crew from the “B” watch would come on deck on a half hour clock reading.  So half way through a crew’s 3 hour watch, a new, fresh face would show up. With this system each man has 3 hours on and  6 off. Additionally, the system has a natural rotation so no one is stuck on the grave yard shift. Everyone gets to see a sunrise and sun set. South of Bermuda, where living far out at sea is easier in the more settled weather, and the crew has gained experience; a different watch system would be used. 

A sail snubber saves a lot of wear on the rigging.

As predicted by the weather router and Predictwind, only 24 hours out of Newport, our wild ride over short waves and favorable beam wind ran out of steam. The wind died yet the residual waves roguishly combined into a sloppy froth of colliding waves. To keep the main sail from continuously slating at the end of its sheet, which can be terribly destructive to the sails, slides, gooseneck, and rigging, we set up a large rubber shock absorber. It  started with a bowline to a bail on the boom near the main sheet. The bitter end was then secured to a winch on the windward side of the boat. A preventer on the leeward rail completed the triangulation necessary to restrict the main. The main sheet was slackened so the initial shock was eased by the rubber absorber. If needed, a shock absorber can also be rigged to the jib sheet.

This 635 nautical mile passage, from Newport to Bermuda, was proving to be one of the most challenging ever. Never before has the wind died to leave a flat sea north of the Gulf Stream or been so consistently light and contrary, blowing right up our nose.

In Newport, the water temperature was 70 degrees. We watched the ocean temperature rise as we neared the Gulf Stream. With the warming water, the air too meant the crew would strip away layers of clothes to become more comfortable.

A mid ocean swim in warm water, miles deep.

 On the first calm, after the waves died away, we dropped the sails, and turned off the engine so we took advantage of the flat, warmer, water for the crew to plunge into an ocean where the bottom is over three miles deep. In that refreshing clear water we discovered how terribly fouled the propeller and prop shaft were.  This fouling would at least double our fuel consumption and leave us dangerously low on fuel for our approach to the reef strewn coast of Bermuda, in very uncertain winds.

As we motor-sailed south, this was a most unusual day as we approached the Stream. There was not the normal long bank of puffy cumulous clouds floating in a perfect line to mark the presence of the Stream. We knew we were in the stream as the water temperature rose to 81 degrees. The wind had picked up to 15 knots yet came blowing out of the southeast, directly where we wanted to go. Blowing somewhat against the east flowing current, there was not the terrible standing waves one often hears about. In fact for us, the wind against current helped us maintain the best course we could steer to Bermuda.

Keith caught the first fish, a nice yellowfin tuna.

Near the northern edge of the Stream is where the yell of “fish on!” was heard. Keith and John fished with a “Cuban Yo-yo” hand line with 100 yards of 300 pound test line. Keith let out only 50 feet of line to troll a colorful plastic Hoola Skirt with a single hook. Keith had a wild, strong, fish to work inch by inch, closer to a sailboat moving south as the fish struggled north. The hook was well set when the fat ten pound tuna was lifted aboard. Flopping and vibrating wildly, the side deck and cockpit soon mirrored a bad Hollywood horror film. Thick red blood flew everywhere including the murderers face and foul weather jacket , till someone brought up the bottle of rubbing alcohol. Doused down its gills, the fish stopped, immediately.

We don’t want to catch fish bigger than that tuna. The small ones are difficult enough to deal with. That most valuable tool, the yellow cellulose sponge, began scrubbing its first chore working buckets of seawater into the grain of the teak deck to displace the slippery red mess and to change Keith’s foul weather gear from red back to yellow.  More situations would put that sponge to great use. 

Sailing into the axis of the Stream, the water temperature climbed to 81 then dropped to 78 as we exited the southern edge, and with that, the ocean became even more tranquil and the air more tropical, the crew peeled down to shorts and shirts which is rare north of Bermuda in the fall. The plastic bags came off the dorades and the vents were turned to face into the wind, hatches and portlights opened. Even John was feeling better about life at sea.

There was a large clockwise rotating eddy along our rumbline which would help propel us to Bermuda, or if approached on the wrong side, would slow us down.  The weather router used a model which placed the eddy to the east while Predict Wind showed it to be to the west of the direct line to Bermuda. We would see whose Gulf Stream predictions were to prove most accurate.    Gulf Stream information is initially gathered by satellites. Various organizations gather the raw data and put it through programs like RTOFF and HYCOM that analyze and work the information into a viewable and predictive format which weather routers and PredictWind use.  Predict Wind will soon be using the ROTOFF program. For real time satellite imagery of the Gulf Stream, Rutgers University “Sea Surface Temperature, Daily Composite of East Coast” and “Northeast”, analyzes satellite information and at times creates a 3 day color composite that a navigator can print out and compare to other Gulf Stream sources.  Possibly because of cloud cover, Rutgers did not have the composite I needed for this passage. And that is part of the fun and planning for this passage, trying to outsmart the Gulf Stream and all its intricacies with whatever information that can be gathered and sifted. As it turned out, sailing the rumbline took us into a one to two knot contrary current indicating the RTOFF, used by the weather router was more accurate.

“As Seen On TV” rescued the fuel we needed to prime the engine and get moving again.

With each passing day, the lack of wind became more of a issue than a potential storm. The throttle to the Volvo Penta engine was set at the most economical 1,800 RPMs, revolutions per minute.  On the 3rd day out of Newport, suddenly, the engine RPMs oscillated and then the engine fell silent. The engine had run for far too few hours on the starboard tank to empty it. The fuel gage sat on ½, not much different than when the tank was filled with fuel in Newport.  Dave and I agreed we should dip the fuel tank to see the reality of the fuel level in that tank. Swans have a specific plug on top of the tanks and an aluminum dipstick for this purpose. There was plenty of the fuel in the tank. The remotely mounted Racor filter was only slightly discolored. We disassembled fuel line connections and found no restrictions from the tank pickup to the Racor entry point.  We had on our hands a mid ocean mystery. Since the engine had run earlier in the day, without problems from the port tank, as an experiment, we swapped the equally new looking port Racor filter element with the starboard element. That got the engine running again. But as the engine RPMs were increased to 2500 RPMs,the engine would again begin to cough. There were no new Racor filters to be found on the boat.  What we eventually realized is that the filters were only 2 micron.  For this engine, such a fine mesh with a moderate amount of contaminants was too restrictive for the fuel flow of this 100 horse power Volvo Penta.  However, by lowering the engine to 1800 RPMs, we were getting by.  Aurora was an untested boat, new to the charter fleet, with a growing “to do” list for the owner.

 When the engine first died, we were in a real jam as we had already emptied the two jerry jugs  of spare fuel into the tanks.  We then needed a small reserve of fuel to top off the filter and bleed air from the fuel lines. “How will we get the fuel back out of the tank?” Dave asked. “People break out of prisons. We will have to think on it.”

 The owner of Aurora had put on board a cheesy looking, flashlight-battery operated, “Liquids Transfer Pump”. On the box it even said “As seen on TV”. The toy turned out to be a valuable tool. Removing five screws from a disk on the tank top just gave us the clearance we needed for “as seen on TV” to do its job. From then on, we would always keep plenty of fuel in reserve for priming the engine. 

 We still had just over 100 miles to reach Bermuda and we were concerned that the quickly diminishing fuel supply would not be enough.  The badly fouled prop was doubling fuel consumption. At all costs, we had to keep a reserve amount of fuel to motor around the extensive reefs surrounding the north and northeast approach into St. Georges. With no other option, we would squeeze the zephyrs and sail the distance even if it were no faster than one to three knots over the ground.   But like a good end to a difficult thriller, the wind did pick up from the east so we could sail at five knots.

With Marko, Chris, Keith John and I on deck, visually picking our way through the white dots and blinking lights, set against a black background, Dave sat at the chart plotter below, making sure we were on a safe course. At 9:00  Saturday night, the 5th day after leaving Newport, we tied to the customs dock, in St. Georges, to find that all the officials stayed open late for us to clear in. They knew we were coming. What other country in the world could be as welcoming as Bermuda? Just around the corner, we tilted libations at the White Horse Tavern to celebrate our safe arrival then slept soundly in a boat that did not budge, tied securely to the quay.  In the morning, the crew had their first good view of the hill sides of St. George’s Harbor, full of colorful concrete building all with white tile roofs, as we motored the short distance to berth at the St. George’s Dinghy and Sports Club where the rally festivities would take place that evening.

The tourists adverts say that Bermuda is “Very Proper”, and it is. One of the nicest places in the world.

Bermuda has the most northerly reefs in the world and it seems more old forts per acre than anywhere else in the world. One full day in Bermuda is not enough to be a respectable tourist, but the four day delay in Newport left us little room to play. We wanted to stay on a schedule to meet our departing airplanes in St. Maarten. Monday morning we topped off the fuel and water at the Shell station and once again headed seaward out the steep and narrow cut of St. Georges. 

We motored right into a flat calm ocean.  This certainly made John happy for he had decided to stick with us and complete the voyage. We were a diverse group like gears made from completely different metals, but all of us meshed and worked together and the absence of any one would have been sorely missed.

Heading out the narrow pass, seaward, from St. Georges. Cruise ships squeeze through the same cut.

This was the time for the hand fishing lines to trail again off the stern. It did not take long to catch 6 dorado. They are a far less bloody mess of a fish to deal with than tuna. We had no need to arrive in St.Maarten with more food than we departed Newport with so the hand lines were retired.

For a full day a ten knot breeze shifted from the bow to a port beam reach. That was the chance everyone was hoping for. We struggled and fed the giant sausage containing the huge spinnaker out of the sail locker onto the foredeck. The sausage was hoisted to the top of the mast on the spinnaker halyard. Then the fiberglass collar was hoisted allowing the sock to free the spinnaker to balloon to a monster of a sail pulling us along at five knots. All day it kept us moving. In late afternoon, the wind shifted again onto a beat. The spinnaker came down.  

All the crew were now competent with the workings and handling of Aurora. Even John had gained his footing and was moving easily with the rhythms of the boat, on deck and below. Each was fully competent to stand a lone watch. If needed, the captain is on call 24 hours a day for the slightest question. My bunk was in the aft cabin so it was always easy to call me by lifting a hatch in the cockpit.  The new watch system became far more conducive to crew rest. Each crew, including the captain, would stand a 1.5 hour watch with 7.5 hours off. 

 The night watch south of Bermuda was quite different from the first leg. The moon had waned and the night, all night, was black. Even when there is a brilliant Milky Way of stars above, it does nothing to define a horizon or illuminate the deck. Barreling across an ocean, through the dark, one relies on Karma and odds, as visibility on the ocean past the bow, is simply a black void. There would be no way to see a floating container, a whale or anything else directly in our path, other than a lighted ship.  But a watch soon gets used to the idea of spooks in the dark and there is no option but to continue on our way. To make the watch even easier, the autopilot now did the manual work so the lone crew only has to stay awake and watch for the lights of distant ships, monitor the RADAR and engine instruments. 

Between motoring and slow sailing, we were chasing a seemingly unreachable horizon. As Chris said, “After the first half of this trip, my greatest emotion is boredom.” The tranquility  gave Dave a perfect opportunity to refine his celestial navigation using “line of positions” of the sun.  He worked hard at teaching himself the process and finally found our position within a three mile accuracy plus a very accurate longitude from the noon sight.  That is exemplary accuracy considering all the inherent deficiencies of a plastic sextant.  

It took a lot of effort for Dave to teach himself celestial navigation. He was spot on with his LOPs, line of positions. Marco knows how to relax.

In the afternoon of our sixth day since leaving Bermuda Marko yelled “Land Ho!”  We would not reach land in daylight instead we would be skirting a shore in the dark. Rather than going a circuitous route, we would shoot the narrow gap between Anguilla and Scrub Island, off the northeast coast of St. Maarten in the black of night.  I have sailed the route many times but the crew had not. Airline pilot Dave was at the chat table below guiding us through, IFR, “instrument flight regulations”. “Dave, don’t let us hit anything.” I love adding a little pressure. I was on the helm watching the radar screen mounted over the binnacle. “Trust your instruments not your instincts” is the old aviator’s adage.  But the rest of the crew were incredulous and tense. They could see what was on the navigational screens but saw nothing but blackness where they knew land should be less than a mile away.  Dave called up a course to jog us over, what amounts to a “base” course and line us up with the pass to be on our port beam before making a sharp turn to port to aim us straight for it on a final approach. With that maneuver, the cockpit radar, which had been showing a solid wall of land features, then spit a dark crack which spread to a black space amongst the yellows and green returns of solid shore lines. Sailing under only a jib at five knots we headed into the void.  To everyone’s relief, especially Dave’s, nothing went bump against the keel. 

Out of the blackness, the twinkle of lights on St. Maarten, miles to our southwest, began to build and define not just shoreline but altitudes of a mountainous island.  The small south east breeze helped blow us around to the west then the southern shore and into Simpson Bay just outside the bridge to the Lagoon. We anchored at 3:30 in the morning and switched on not only the anchor light, but deck lights to well illuminate our anchored ship against the backdrop of city lights.  Then we fell to our bunks, exhausted from a long day and adrenalin crash after the heightened alertness required for coastal sailing at night. But we were all happy to have crossed an ocean, from north to south.

Dave, Chris and Keith are all determined to return next November to sail again in the Offshore Swan Program.   They want to shoot for a more serious high wind sailing experience. As Dave says “I want to learn things I don’t know and can’t learn sailing in pleasant weather along the coast.”  And Chris adds “I want to sail with different professional captains to see how they handle the same situations.”  It won’t be long before Marco sails south on his own boat…..and John, he is staying put in his arm chair. I will be winging  back to Malaysia to prepare my own boat for the crossing of the Indian Ocean, so this really just might be, my final last time, in the NARC rally.

 

 

 

Related Images:

A New Back Stay

I can tell you with certainty, while anchored, it is far easier to remove a 9 year old back stay and install a new one than to make a video about it!  I searched You Tube and there were no such videos so that seemed right in line with what sort of content I want to post. If you watch the video, please gloss over the hiccups. It took days and long nights and constant reloads to get to the point to make it somewhat publishable. Some of the technical blanks I still can’t figure out but hopefully they will disappear in future videos. But the technical marine content I think is proper, and should be helpful to others.

It would be helpful if you gave it a “Thumb Up”.

Thanks!

 

Related Images:

Indian Ocean Crossing, The Preparation

This is an article which appears in the March 2018 issue of Ocean Voyager magazine. Ocean Voyager is a special, annual, publication of Ocean Navigator. But what you read below is the full, unedited version.

Cruising for over three years in the tropics of South East Asia has wilted our sea-legs. We have experienced nothing more adventurous than an occasional sudden thunder shower as we ghosted the coast of Borneo and all the shores of Thailand, Cambodia, Malaysia, Brunei and Indonesia. Now it is time to get back to serious passage making and prepare to zig zag our way cross the Indian Ocean, from Malaysia to South Africa via Madagascar and many remote islands in between. Thousand mile long passages and longer abound. Once again, we will be in belts of strong weather. In the Indian, yachting facilities are few. The boat must be in solid, long haul condition.   When we depart Malaysia, we will be ready for real sailing yet the preparations have been a year in the fixing.

Heavy Weight Supplies

Owning  ones own long range cruising boat is the only way to access some of the most remote specks of land in the world like in the Pacific, Holmes Reef, Minerva Reef, Bikini, Suwarrow, Fatu Hiva. Now, heading out to the Indian Ocean, we cannot miss the chance to visit the fabled Chagos, where no one lives but the largest coconut crabs and seabirds on tropical islands with countless fish on the clear reefs. Departing Malaysia, our water and fuel tanks will be full, including all our deck stowed jerry jugs. Since there will be no cheaper fuel on our horizon, some of the 5 gallon jerry jugs are one time use disposables. The waterline of Brick House will be further depressed by months of food stores. Food throughout the Indian Ocean is expensive so we are stocking up in Malaysia. As we move south in latitude and into known windy areas, our load of supplies will lighten so we will become more buoyant, agile and seaworthy. As we work our way to Madagascar, where aggressive storms are a near certainty, we want to be as unencumbered and nimble as possible; to lift and move on top of the waves, not be washed over and beaten by them.  At that point, we want on our boat no more than 50 gallons of water and no more than 40 gallons of diesel in the main tanks with the remaining deck stored jerry-jugs to be empty.

General Preparation

We have worked hard removing the hatches and portlights, resealing them to stop present leaks and to insure there will be no new leaks. Cracks in the side decks were ground out and repaired. The not so clear plastic of the dodger windows was renewed. A new mainsail cover is now in place. All the rigging has been inspected. The hull has been cleaned with new antifouling applied. These are all parts of the maintenance treadmill any cruising boat owner must endure. But to successfully sail us across the Indian Ocean, we decided to order a new genoa.

Genoa Sail

To move us through the calm weather latitudes to Sri Lanka then southward to Chagos, we have on board a new 125% genoa from Mack Sails, www.macksails.com , located half way around the world from us in Stuart, Florida. We have personally visited some of the lofts in S.E. Asia and have concluded, it is better to buy American.  Our new genoa is made of  7.77oz Challenge Marblehead Dacron. “These fabrics are the finest most tightly woven fabrics in the world and rely on the quality of yarn and weave, rather than impregnated resins, to maintain integrity.” To distribute loading more evenly across the fabric on our genoa, and to hold the sail shape for 15 to 20 years, Mack sews their jibs with the more difficult miter panels rather than the easier to sew, long, crosscut panels.  As we work into the stronger wind areas, we will replace the new 125% with our  90% jib made of  8.77 oz Marblehead. These sails, along with our tough little cutter sail, made by Mack, gives us the versatility needed for working through known soft and strong wind latitudes.

Anchoring

After the sails, our thoughts turned to anchoring. 10 years ago a 60 lb CQR was our primary anchor till it showed how it could plow a long farmers furrow and still not dig in. That anchor nearly ended our voyage soon after it began. The 30kilo Bruce became our primary anchor which has served us well in all sorts of anchoring conditions for the past 10 years. But the Bruce was not infallible. We want to keep up on the latest anchor technology so we felt an anchor with a more pointed entry would burry quicker and could hold as securely as the Bruce normally would and possibly better.  We decided to replace the Bruce with a 27 kg (60 pound) Manson Supreme anchor which is made in New Zealand. Because of their sailing environment dipping into latitudes of the roaring forties, New Zealanders know how to manufacture their yachting products to withstand harsh conditions.  I don’t want to risk having gear on our boat made in China.  So far, the Manson Supreme is performing as flawlessly as we had expected.

Foul Weather Gear

In the tropics, when a heavy downpour or sea spray breaks over our boat, to stay dry, we have been slipping into a cheap plastic raincoat bought at a hardware store. Our “ocean” designated foul weather gear has always leaked right through the “breathable” fabric. Now we have gotten serious about foul weather gear which will do what it is advertised to do. Our research brought us to the Henri Lloyd Freedom line of foul weather gear, made of Polyamide coated with polyurethane. I recently tested this gear on a yacht delivery from Rhode Island to St. Maarten and it was impressive. It kept me warm and dry and it was not cumbersome to put on or take off. There are plenty of pockets in the right places without overdoing it. An interesting highlight is the hood which gives full wind and spray protection and can do this without ruining peripheral vision. The hood has a clear Optivision hi-vis hood system. No more messing around now, we have the good stuff. Here is Patrick’s Jacket.

Paper Charts and Real Books

At our navigation station we have a Raymarine es128 chartplotter with a 12 inch screen. Not only does the large screen have the advantage of being viewable all the way back to the helm, the large screen gives us a much better spatial awareness than any of the smaller screens that preceded it. But there is nothing like having a large scale paper chart to see where a boat has been and where it is going. The distances in the Indian are so great, we ordered a paper chart, from Bluewater Books and Charts in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, which covers all of the Indian Ocean. That chart will be folded flat and live under the Plexiglas of the chart table. We will be able to quickly plot the location of fellow cruisers and keep track of our own wanderings. Additionally, as we start the second half of our circumnavigation, we find, despite the digital plethora of information, a printed paper cruising guide is still our preferred way to organize routes and anchorages ahead. Bluewater Books and Charts has been in business for more than 30 years, and offer the single greatest selection of paper and electronic charts, cruising guides, marine books and publications, software, flags and instruments available for sailors like us. We stocked up with the Indian Ocean Cruising Guide, theEast Africa Pilot Guide, the South Atlantic Circuit, and the Patagonia and Tierra Del Fuego Nautical Guide. Rebecca has also made .kap files(Google earth charts) for every possible stop along the way. We can now go into anchorages with full satellite images. But, at our fingertips will be all the paper books, and information we need, in one central location, without having to turn on a computer.

Weather Information

Getting accurate, economical weather routing reports and communicating with those back home while we are far away from land has always been a challenge. On previous ocean crossings, we relied on our SSB radio and Pactor modem for email and weather. Sadly to say, that trusty equipment is becoming equal to using a cassette player when an IPod is available.  Although there is still a use for the SSB radio for communicating on a schedule with other cruisers, its other functions are waning. We have signed up for an “Iridium GO!” Marine Package with  PredictWind www.predictwind.com .  Iridium Go! is a new generation Iridium satellite wifi hotspot to which all our handheld devices can connect to. PredictWind also offers a myriad of downloadable weather products, including weather routing, with intuitive, feature rich software to retrieve and examine the reports it offers. But better than using this application via a cantankerous SSB, the Iridium GO!, with an external antenna, offers the best value and least complications for downloading weather and email while on a passage, anywhere in the world. It’s not faster than SSB\Pactor but it is available around the clock, when we want it. The Iridium GO! is so completely integrated with the PredictWind software, that one would almost think they were using the application on the internet, albeit more slowly.  PredictWind controls all of the connections to the GO! We will be able to receive and send emails as well, as well as utilizing 150 minutes of voice time per month,  to be used through our smartphones, for family issues back home, ordering of parts or technical support at sea, or emergencies. We paired this system with another product called Xgate to add more functionality when using our laptops, through both the GO!, and when connected to the internet through other means. With such interoperability and so many advantages, an entire article could be written about the combination. Month to month contracts for service, if purchased through www.

.com , allows shutdown to a minimally priced plan while in port. Predictwind sells through Amazon too,        but buying directly from Predictwind is the best way to go…get your SIM cards, external antenna, Iridium GO, weather service, through this one supplier for the best in support and service!

Another great feature of the GO! is the SOS button.  This is not a substitute for a stand alone EPIRB, but a great additional tool.  Geos Safety Solutions (http://www.geossafetysolutions.com ) provides free coordination of efforts in case of an emergency, as well as affordable  (Search And Rescue)  and Medevac if the SOS button is pressed during an emergency.

EPIRB Batteries

Recently, we hand carried our ACR brand self deploying 406 GPS, EPIRB (Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon) and smaller PLB (Personal Locator Beacon) EPIRB on airplanes from Malaysia back to the U.S.. With the batteries in the equipment, we ran into no concerns by airport inspectors. The batteries have a long shelf life even after their 6 year expiration date but we want to take no chances. In the U.S., we sent the equipment to ACR in Ft. Lauderdale. After changing the batteries, they were mailed to us at our departure address in the U.S. so we could hand carry them back to Malaysia.  Monthly, we flip the switch half way on our ACR, EPIRB, to activate the self test mode to be sure it is successfully acquiring satellites and transmitting to the test receiving station properly.More ACR Epirbs

Propspeed

I have never been able to keep antifouling on any propeller that was installed on Brick House no matter what material the prop was made of.  Antifouling far too soon disappeared which meant the beginning again of the biweekly chore to scrub the marine growth from the prop and drive shaft. In the 85 degree tropical water of which we are accustomed, the work was not terribly challenging. However, there are frigid waters in our future of which even layers of wetsuits are no enticement for me to go in for a casual prop cleaning.  Cruising friends who have used Propspeed, which is a silicone coating, are very satisfied. The application is a very precise process of sanding, cleaning, etching, primer application then the final application of the clear silicone coating. The clear coating is not antifouling but an ultra smooth surface which marine organisms have a very difficult time attaching to. If organisms do settle, they are easily brushed off. The manufacturer of our Kiwiprop suggest it is not necessary to prime the Zytel blades before applying traditional antifouling or Propspeed. Following those directions, I have never had success with antifouling staying on the Zytel blades for an adequate amount of time.  Applying to the Zytel, I followed the Propspeed directions in the same steps as the stainless steel components were treated except for the etching. With a Kiwiprop however, an applicator must be careful not to build up any material in the area of swing of the trailing edge of the blades which could inhibit their forward to reverse function. Propspeed is another great product made in New Zealand. There are imitators but only Oceanmax, makes Propspeed and has a long positive track record.

Nonskid Decks

A major safety item is the disappearance of the nonskid on our side decks. Since painted 9 years ago, our decks have gotten slippery over the years from the wearing away of the sand non-skid imbedded in the deck paint. Where we are going, is not a place for unsure footing. There are 3 grades of non-skid sand, fine, medium and coarse. We used the coarse and applied it to the wet two part paint using a plastic peanut butter jar with a lot of holes drilled in the lid, like a large salt shaker. The large grain is a good gripper like we need but can be a little uncomfortable when kneeling down with bare knees. Cosmetically, I think the medium grain would be nicer and may not retain discoloration and dirt like the coarse does.

Jack Lines

We haven’t seen our yellow jack lines in years. They and the inflatable PFDs have been stuffed somewhere in the back of a hanging locker. This will be the time to dig them out. In our normal mode of cruising, jack lines and harnesses can be a dangerous encumbrance which restricts ones movements on deck and becomes an annoying leg tripper. Normally, we just don’t need them and since entering the Pacific, I don’t recall seeing any cruising friends using them. There comes a time though, in very rough weather, when waves are breaking over the boat and the deck is pitched more like the steep slope of a glacier that it would be ridiculous not to strap into a safety tether and be shackled to the boat, especially if one had to go forward on deck.  

Titanium Bow Roller

Years ago we changed all our stainless steel chain plates to grade 5 titanium. The price of titanium parts is slowly falling so we decided this would be the time to replace the 41 year old stainless steel bow roller/chain plate assembly with one made of titanium. We removed the existing assembly and sent it to Allied Titanium, now located in Sequim, Washington  www.alliedtitanium.com  . Grade 5 titanium weighs a little more than half of 316 stainless steel yet is 3.5 times stronger. It is not affected by salt water or electrolysis. Since we will be keeping Brick House for a very long time, titanium upgrades and the safety margin it brings us make it a good investment.

SONAR

While hauled out of the water to paint the bottom in Malaysia, I installed a new faring block and sonar transducer. This is a new addition to our array of Raymarine, navigational electronics. We now have on our big MFD (multi function display), a sonar that gives a color rendition of what is below our keel down to 900 feet whether it is rocks or alive and swimming. There is another mode called DownVision which uses a sweep of frequencies rather than the standard 200kz or 50 kz.. This gives far greater detail and definition to the targets.  With this viewing equipment, we can see what the textures and contours the ocean floor below us is made of. This is especially useful when feeling our way into remote anchorages and knowing if we make a mistake, we will be on rocks or soft mud, and once we are anchored,  how many and how big the fish are outside our cockpit.

 Solar Panel

Soon we will be away from marinas…we will need to be energy conscious and our alternative energy sources need to be at their best. We took apart our KISS wind generator, and put in new thermostats, and bearings, and rebalanced the blades. It now runs better than it ever has. We also ultimately determined, with help from the “Solar Queen”, Amy, a sailor herself, from altE (http://www.altestore.com), that our 25+ year old solar panels were truly at the end of their life. Her team recommended the Morningstar ProStar MPPT-25 solar controller, along with one new 265 watt solar panel to replace our 4 small 51 watt panels, in the same footprint, on top of our hard dodger. Prior to this installation, we were seeing about 20-30 amp hours per sunny day. Now we are easily seeing 60-70.  The team at altE is passionate about solar power, and are able to provide astounding results.

For all the work we have just completed on Brick House, we should do just fine getting to Durban, S. Africa and on around to Cape Town, where we begin again on the revolving  list of maintenance and repairs.

For more information or to order, click on any link below.

Nearly a year now , and ZERO growth!

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases

 

https://whereisbrickhouse.com/2019/04/09/communication-evolution-on-brick-house-iridium-go-predictwind/

 

Two Free Sailing Courses with no halyards attached…

Related Images: