Author: kerri

  • Sights of St. Helena……

    Sights of St. Helena….. June 3rd – 9th, 2013 (Western Hemisphere) Time: GMT

    To see the Photo Gallery associated with this post – CLICK HERE

    On our last day, we had the biggest flying fish I\’d ever seen. Friends Dave and Kathie of \”Sunflower\” were reporting lots of them, but this was the only one we saw.

    Nikki with Flying Fish

    \"Nikki
    We had a good night sleep and in the morning took the shore taxi (imagine that all the way out here!) to the main wharf where we did the usual check in with Customs, Port Captain and Immigration. Jamestown is a quaint village and reminded Nikki of Cornwall or Devon in England.

    The people are amazingly friendly.  Supplies here are at a premium as the RMS St. Helena only visits 4 times/year now and only another monthly vessel comes from Cape Town.  We were constantly checking on the markets for fresh veggies and fresh eggs. Our first big event was climbing \”Jacob\’s Ladder\”.  This is 699 steps at a 40 degree grade; about 1000 feet long.  Nikki and I decided to do it as an exercise in lieu of our normal routine.  It took us 27 minutes up and a leisurely 10 minutes down.  The record by the way is just a bit over 5 minutes.  As we completed the \”ladder\” we were awarded a certificate by the Museum on the island at the bottom of the steps.

    Scott on Jacob\’s Ladder

    \"Scott
    We enjoyed having lunch at the \”Inkwell Coffee House\”.

    No atmosphere, but the healthiest meals we found for lunch. We tried \”Annie\’s\” which is long time cruiser hang out. Lots of atmosphere, not so good on the lunches. It seems it has \”changed hands\” as they say. The few dinner restaurants don\’t open early, so we skipped them as the last shore boat ran at 6:45 p.m. There are a few internet hot spots around, so we\’ve been able to get some okay internet, but not at the anchorage Next on our to do\’s at St. Helena was what I call,

    \"Longwood
    For those of you who don\’t know, after Napoleons defeat at Waterloo, the British exiled him for the last six years of his life to this island.

    \”The Napoleon Slept Here Tour\”….:-)

    As he\’d previously escaped the Island of Elba in the Mediterranean, they wanted to take no chances on Napoleon\’s attempt at a third campaign.  We have Napoleon to thank for most of the middle of the United States.  It was due to his need for money to try and fight all of Europe that he sold the \”Louisiana Purchase\” to the U.S. Government.  Seems this was just when the British were starting to indenture US Sailors and something about a brief war didn\’t make us care much if Napoleon was up to no good. The other \”big deal\” here is that the British are building an airport which will handle 747\’s from the UK to promote tourism here.  It seems the new holiday fad is to go where no one else does.  That would be here!  Cargo craft are supposed to start at the end of next year, passenger planes in 2016.  The cargo aircraft will help a lot as to shortages of supplies that the locals have. As a last hurrah, I decided to go on my first recreational (vs. maintainence) SCUBA dive in almost 18 months. Craig, who is the local shore boat operator is also the local dive guide.  We had a nice group and did one dive at the ledge.  Water temperature around 72 degrees F (22.2 C) and I was amazed at how much this semi tropical environment reminded me of diving in the southern Sea of Cortez (Gulf of California).  We had a mix of tropical and cold water species; butterfly fish and scorpion rock fish.  A nice healthy Spotted Moray Eel was seen with cleaner shrimp as well as some good size (and protected) lobster (crayfish for our UK friends.

    Diving at St Helena

    \"Scott
    We checked out on Saturday and will most likely depart on Monday morning. So keep an eye out for our position reports and blogs from \”at sea\”.

    The weather looks a bit light, but very nice and right behind us..

    KIT, Scott and Nikki….Next stop, Georgetown, Ascension Island

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2013/06/02 21:20
    LATITUDE: 15-55.46S
    LONGITUDE: 005-43.46W
    MARINE: NO
    WIND_SPEED: 5
    WIND_DIR: ESE
    CLOUDS: 80%
    VISIBILITY: 6
    BARO: 1023.3
    AIR_TEMP: 21.1C
    COMMENT: Beach House – MOORED -St. Helena, Island – Mid Atlantic

    The trip took exactly 8 days 8 hours, 1340 rhumb line miles. We\’re safely snugged on a mooring with some locals
    who asked if they could come out in the dark and windy night and help us!
    They also had three babies in the dinghy with them. Only on St. Elsewhere…:-)

    We\’ll update the blog in the morning. Crew is showering and bed!…
    KIT,
    Scott and Nikki

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2013/06/02 08:05
    LATITUDE: 17-04.42S
    LONGITUDE: 004-45.13W
    COURSE: 331T
    SPEED: 8.7
    MARINE: YES
    WIND_SPEED: 28
    WIND_DIR: SE
    WAVE_HT: 0.5M
    WAVE_PER: 11
    SWELL_DIR: SSE
    SWELL_HT: 3.8M
    SWELL_PER: 11
    CLOUDS: 40%
    VISIBILITY: 12
    BARO: 1022.9
    TREND: 1
    AIR_TEMP: 21.1C
    SEA_TEMP: 22.8C
    COMMENT: Beach House -EN ROUTE – Namibia to St. Helena Island – Day 8 – 177 nm

    Yesterday started a bit slow for the first 10 hours, but after that, things gotta\’ rockin\’..
    We\’ve surfed as high as 14 knots.

    Looking at the weather files, the guru\’s said 15-20 knots. I said, more like 25++
    I was right. We went to the second reef right at dark and the staysail on the pole to windward.
    The squalls hit us and we had 42 knots for 10 minutes before it backed off to the mid 30\’s…
    It\’s calmed a bit in the last 10 hours, but still the odd 30 knot reading pops up.
    We\’re 86 miles from the NE end of the island and will likely be in just after dark.
    We have good info provided by \”Sunflower\” for the approach, so we may get to sleep on a mooring tonight.
    Trip feels a bit like coming out of New Zealand….big swells!…The odd 4 meter ones are now common.
    KIT,
    We\’ll report our arrival.
    Scott and Nikki

  • Namibia to St. Helena…..Day 7

    Namibia to St. Helena…..Day 7

    May 31st, written the morning of June 1st, 2013 (WESTERN HEMISPHERE) Time: GMT/UTC

    Good morning everyone! It\’s blowy outside. Yesterday, the winds were again light and we flew our full main, big reacher to starboard and genoa to port on the spinnaker pole. The winds were supposed to be coming from the SSEast by yesterday morning, but a squall line came through and the winds were from the SSWest. In the lighter winds, this was okay as it kept us reaching on port tack, but a bit beamy to the still SWesterly swell out of the Southern Ocean.

    At 2 p.m. local time yesterday, we crossed the PRIME MERIDIAN! We are now back in the Western Hemisphere. I wrote a friend last night that it seemed strange to be in southern latitudes and western longitudes and NOT be in the South Pacific.

    About 4 p.m. the winds finally clocked around to the SSE then SE during the night. We\’ve had a single reefed main to starboard and the staysail (which is half the size of the genoa) out on the pole to port. Winds have been 18-27 knots with a few gusts in the low 30\’s. In other words, we\’re going pretty fast again. The new increased speed gives a chance to be at St. Helena around sunset tomorrow, but we\’ll see how it plays out between now and then. We should be able to see the island at least 20 miles out as it\’s tallest peak is 588 meters (just under 2,000 feet).

    One of the interesting things we\’ve discovered is that despite our steering now working fine, our starboard rudder is still slipping relative to the port one.
    We thought we had this licked, but apparently not. I noticed that the auto pilot was over steering consistently to port about 7 degrees. This is not normal. The auto pilot rarely favors steering to one side more than 1-3 degrees. Hence, I went to look at the rudder alignment which is in the engine rooms. What I found is that effectively, for several days no less, we\’ve been \”pidgeon toed\” on the rudders. The port was trying to steer left due to the fact that the starboard was trying to steer right. I\’m sure this did NOT speed us up in the light air conditions we experienced for the first days.

    When I re-aligned the rudders, a simple matter, the boat seemed to go a bit faster and the autopilot stopped favoring a course correction to the left.
    As we \”hand steer\” when reefing and doing similar maneuvers, I\’m now wondering if fluid at the wheel is not leaking back getting them out of alignment?
    I\’ll consult Denver and crew at Meridian Technologies in Cape Town via email and see what they think. We have not tried manual or electronic alignment systems yet; this may be on our horizon (quite literally). The good news is that the steering is working, no air bubbles seem to be in the system and it\’s just another one of those \”boat bites\” that we long distance sailor types have to deal with. Just as good a news, the refrigerator continues to work with the backup thermostat.

    We\’ve received a nice email from our friends on \”Sunflower\” who were at St. Helena a few weeks ago giving us all the local contacts and details. Thank you Dave & Kathie!!

    Not much more to report other than it\’s exercise day and that should be quite a challenge in the now a bit more boisterous conditions.
    It looks like we\’ll do about 170 mile day; Miss Piggy is starting to stretch her legs a bit…
    Position Report up in half an hour…
    Feel free to drop us a note,
    KIT,
    Scott and Nikki

  • Nambiia to St. Helena……Day 6

    Nambiia to St. Helena……Day 6

    May 30th, written the morning of May 31st, 2013 (Eastern Hemisphere…for about 5 more hours!!!) Time: GMT!

    Miss Piggy\’s new light air trick:
    Yesterday started off with light winds which finally picked up to 14 knots. This allowed us to sail again, but not more than about a 6.2 knot average.
    The problem was not so much our speed, as our course. The angle of the wind (to keep it strong enough) has to be moved forward on the beam (by moving the boat of course) to get enough apparent wind speed to get going. This angle required we sail almost due west. St. Helena is NW! So later in the day, I tried an experiment which I\’d been threatening to do for awhile. I put the big reacher on the same side as the main sail starboard (or right in our case), and the genoa on the spinnaker pole to the port (or left side) of the boat. This allowed us to maintain as good or BETTER speed and sail 15 and sometimes 20 degrees closer to our course! We looked like a Gull Wing going down wind with a mainsail up!

    We sailed this way all night in light airs and calming seas and were able to stay within 5 degrees of our desired heading and maintain about a 6.5 knot average speed.

    While trying to get some sleep yesterday, I was listening to a block (pulley) making noise on deck. I went to get some lubricant to spray in it and when I went into the port hull, I noticed a potential disaster. Our refrigerator was not working! The digital system gave an error code of \”0\” and I went to the manual to find out what it was. The answer was a bad temperature probe or loose connection of the probe. I checked, it wasn\’t loose. When we first set up the system, it had a manual thermostat and I told the tech to leave it in \”just in case\”. Well…8 years later, \”just in case\” showed up. I removed the digital and replaced it with the manual T-Stat probe and we were back in the refrigerator business! Yeah! This early in the trip. This would have been a bit calamitous. We are using the T-Stat control inside the box and it\’s working just fine. Nikki said that I was literally – \”Thinking outside the box\”….:-))) By the way, the block doesn\’t squeak anymore…..

    This morning started out with a bang! A squall line popped up off our port quarter with the first rain we\’ve seen. Winds jumped up to 30 knots, so I had to wake Nikki a bit early and we took down the big reacher. We\’re still working our way through the squall lines as I write. The winds shifted to the SW which was NOT expected. We\’re waiting for our next weather GRIB when I send this and it should show us a persistent shift to the East Southeast over the next 12-18 hours. Welcome to Mom Nature. Funny how she doesn\’t always agree with our interpretations of her behavior.

    Also of note, the autopilot compass seemed to go wonky during the squall. I changed on the fly to the backup and we seem to be again, just fine. Our boat icon on the Chartplotter (big fancy GPS system) started to spin in all sorts of directions. I haven\’t figured that one out, but it doesn\’t really matter. A bit like the fridge. If it works…go with it.

    So I promised today\’s lesson would be the PRIME MERIDIAN. Here goes.
    For those of you who don\’t know. Latitude lines are all PARALEL to the equator which is itself a line of latitude; specifically zero degrees latitude.
    BUT, the line running north and south are NOT parallel lines and were arbitrarily picked to start at the Royal Greenwich Observatory in England. Nikki and I took a photo there with our feet in each hemisphere; east and west.

    Lines of Longitude run north and south and cut the earth like an orange being sliced top to bottom. This lines are NOT PARALLEL and get closer to each other constantly as they go north and south of the equator until them meet at the poles. So in a funny way, if you were at the north or south pole, you could walk in a circle around it and say you\’d \”been around the world\”. These lines of longitude are referred to as \”meridians of longitude\” and one is the PRIME MERIDIAN. As I said, arbitrarily picked. It had to start somewhere.

    Longitude: Why Greenwich? The Brits ruled the known universe at the time and they said so. The French tried to make it Paris, but alas, the Brits got their way in the end. As a bone to the French, instead of now calling it Greenwich Mean Time. It is called UTC or \”Universale Time Coordinae. Forgive my French non spelling on a US keyboard! We just call it coordinated universal time. In other words it\’s where time begins. But not really. It\’s actually the mid point between both the time of day and an arbitrary coordinate system so we know where we are. Time really begins on the other side of the world in Fiji/Tonga. As the new day starts there, England is exactly 12 hours later.

    We all know about the time difference between the USA and Europe and the world basis not only TIME, but the delineation of the Eastern vs. Western Hemispheres.
    England is in both hemispheres. Alexandra lived WEST of Greenwich and Nikki lived EAST of Greenwich.

    When we left Los Angeles, we were in the northern hemisphere and western longitudes. Once at the Galapagos, we were in the southern hemisphere and western longitudes. When we reached Fiji (the opposite side of the world to Greenwich, England. We changed to the Eastern Hemisphere where we\’ve been ever since.
    HOWEVER, in less than 5 hours, we\’ll cross back into the Western Hemisphere as we will be DUE SOUTH of Greenwich, England.

    Ironically, the place where it\’s zero degrees latitude and zero degrees longitude is in the South Atlantic Ocean in the \”arm pit of Africa\”. The arm pit is the slang term for the big giant bight off Africa\’s west coast. That spot will very shortly be 1180 and eighty miles due north of us in about 5 hours.

    Later in this sail, we will cross the equator off Brazil and be back in the Northern Hemisphere as well….but not just yet; we\’ve a few miles to go for that one.

    So, if I\’ve totally confused you good. Go to Google and look it up. Feel free to ask any questions for as you know…..There will be a test in the morning!…:-)

    It\’s official, another not very fast but mostly very comfortable day – 150 nm. Wow, you\’d think we were a \”monomaran\”…:-)
    KIT, position report will be posted shortly,
    Scott and Multi Hemispheric Sailor Nikki

    Current Position:
    19 deg 43 minutes South
    000 deg 26 minutes East

  • Nambia to St. Helena….Day 5

    Nambia to St. Helena….Day 5

    May 29th, written morning of May 30th, 2013 (Eastern Hemisphere, but not for long!) +1GMT

    Just as I sent yesterdays blog, the wind shifted back to the south and came up at 12 knots. We set the full main and reacher and had a lovely day sail.
    Just before dark, the winds picked up into the teens and we\’ve been off to the races ever since. There is maybe a bit of a lull this afternoon predicted, but after that, it\’s building winds to the barn (St. Helena).

    The swell is up at 3.0 meters (10-11 feet) with the renewed winds. It\’s mostly a SWesterly swell so it\’s a bit beamy. Still, being a wide fat boat (Aka: Miss Piggy), it\’s lots easier on us than a \”monomaran\” which goes rolly polly in this stuff. Dave and Kathie of \”Sunflower\” have frequently posted in their daily position reports about the lack of enjoying the \”roll\” on their boat.

    Last night was a sort of a milestone. \”Beach House\” (the boat, not crew) actually finished a circumnavigation of the earth! For those of you who don\’t know or need refreshing, the boat was built in Sette, France and launched on April 15th, 2004. Sette is at longitude 003 degree 42 minutes East. At midnight last night, we sailed through that longitude and hence by one metric, \”Beach House\” (the boat, not crew) has been around the world. The first third was on the deck of a Dockwise ship, but that\’s nit picking!..:-)

    Cindy, my Dad, Paul Spicer and Dave Robertson were to sail with us across the Atlantic. We were weathered out and from Gibraltar had to sail back to Mallorca and ship the boat from there to Ensenada, Mexico. It was actually a great time; my Dad taking all of us on the \”Wine/Fish and Cheese Tour\” of Southern Spain. Every night, we stopped in a little marina and my Dad went straight to the nearest fresh fish restaurant, treating everyone in tow.

    We also passed our half way mark yesterday around noon and currently have 560 miles to go. Our speed of course picked up dramatically last night, seeing many readings above 8 knots. Looks like a 165 nm for the day as the early part of yesterday was still pretty slow.

    We\’ll position report within the hour. Tomorrow\’s lesson class…\”The Prime Meridian\”!…stay tuned.
    KIT,
    Scott and Nikki

  • Namibia to St. Helena……Day 4

    Namibia to St. Helena….Day 4

    May 28th, written the morning of the 29th, 2013 (Eastern Hemisphere – but not for long!) +1GMT

    Yesterday morning found us having had a slow night\’s passage and the winds were fading and shifting to the east southeast.
    This meant gybing and sailing slow or just sailing slow toward Antarctica..!

    Hence, we threw in the towel around noon and have been motoring for the last 18 hours. We\’re directly on course and just under half way in still very calm conditions.
    The sea has become a bit choppy, but the swell is down. The winds have shifted to the NW! but are not blowing more than 10 knots. We expect the wind to shift to the Southeast and start to pick up steadily for the rest of the trip starting late this afternoon or at latest, by midnight tonight.

    It\’s very pretty out here, we\’ve still a lovely large wanning moon, the skies are clearer and were getting good night stars. It\’s warming up – 20 deg C (70 deg F) and only 8:15 a.m. A big bonus is that it\’s dry and no longer damp outside at night. The exercise program is going well and Nikki is getting stronger. (Hey Jak, when Mum gets back to OZ…keep kickin\’ her butt!….:-).

    Everything is working well. The mysterious rubber smell has gone away in the port engine room. We think it was the remnants of an old alternator belt.

    There are three boats behind us on this trip. One trying to get out of Cape Town with no success, one awaiting a window in Walvis Bay and one about 400 miles behind us. That would be s/v \”This Side Up\” (cute uh?). We met Mike in Bali last year. He will most likely have a blustery passage as the new winds arrive from astern.

    Yesterday, I took a photo with Nikki holding the LARGEST flying fish I\’ve ever seen. Yes I\’ll post it if there is internet in St. Helena….
    Cheers all…
    KIT,
    Scott and Nikki

  • Namibia to St. Helena….Day 3

    Namibia to St. Helena….Day 3
    May 27th, morning of the 28th, 2013 (Eastern Hemisphere) +1 GMT

    Yesterday, we planned on gybing north, but the heading was taking to Angola!..NOT where we want to go.
    So we experimented with the big geneker (reacher) on the pole and tacked downwind a bit to play the shifts.

    We\’ve had mostly winds in the 10-12 knot range and as such…this is the slowest sailing day ever for Miss Piggy.
    I think we\’ll do around 140 miles for the day. However, it IS the most comfortable trip I\’ve ever been on at sea.
    The winds are calm…and so is the sea.

    This is all likely to change in the next 24-36 hours as the high pressure system that is just to the south of us will move further east and intensify.
    This will bring the winds. Near the end of the trip, most likely a bit more than we\’d like.

    We are just north of our original rhumb line (direct route from where we started) and when Nikki gets up, we may yet again roll up the sails and motor for several hours to the NW to see if we can find the wind or gybe if it shifts and keep sailing?

    The sun is rising, it\’s exercise day (around noon) and just the pure enjoyment of this boat ride – Slow, but lovely is a pleasure.

    About 880 miles to go. I suspect by day 5 we\’ll find the breeze….and maybe a bit too much after that.
    Of note – we did indeed cross the Tropic of Capricorn yesterday afternoon…whooo
    KIT,
    Scott and Nikki

  • Namibia to St. Helena….Day 2

    Namibia to St. Helena…Day 2

    May 26th, written the morning of the 27th, 2013 (Eastern Hemisphere) +1 GMT

    Yesterday morning, the winds went light; too light to sail. We tried in vain to use the spinnaker for a few hours, but we just weren\’t getting anywhere. If we go less than 5 knots for very long, on come the engines. The issue is a forming high pressure center to our south which is a bit too close. When you get near the center of the \”highs\”, you get no wind. So, we bagged the chute (spinnaker) and set course with the engines toward the NW. This would take us away from the shortest distance to St. Helena (toward the north), but get us away from the high pressure center.

    After four hours of motoring, it worked and we were able to fly the full main and genoa poled out to port all night. It\’s 7:15 a.m. local time as I write this and we\’ve a return of fog and drizzle. The surface visibility is still a few miles and frankly, we don\’t expect to see another vessel from here to at least very near St. Helena. We of course keep watch and are not complacent.

    We\’re on schedule to do about another 160 nautical mile day. This is actually what my planning was based on, but a bit slow for normal \”Miss Piggy\” style. (Miss Piggy is Beach House\’s nickname for those of you who don\’t know!).

    We did our weight workout/exercise routine yesterday afternoon. It takes about an hour plus and gives us a good workout. Might as well stay in ship shape out here. We do this every other day. Doing the wash, charging the batteries, making water; the usual boat chores.

    Today, of note, will be one of our three geographic milestones on this voyage across the Atlantic. They are: crossing the Tropic of Capricorn, crossing the Prime Meridian and crossing the equator back into the northern hemisphere. We\’ll just take the first one\’s explanation for this blog today.

    Tropic of Capricorn:
    Many people don\’t know what the Tropic of Capricorn and the Tropic of Cancer represent or where they are?
    So I\’m glad you asked, here goes.

    First, these are two imaginary lines, located about 23 1/2 degrees south (Capricorn) and north (Cancer) from the equator.
    What they represent astronomically is as follows. During the course of a full year, if you were to drop a \”plumb bob\” (straight down hanging line) (What do the British call a plumb bob?) from the sun to the earth, the course of travel of the sun would touch the equator twice/year and the two tropic lines once each.

    So follow the bouncing ball. On roughly March 21st each year, the sun is directly over the equator and in it\’s course of travel is headed north. The course of travel (of course), isn\’t really the Sun\’s movement, but rather the earth\’s movement with our \”tilt\” as we travel around the 365 day revolution. This tilt, is the exact number of degrees (about 23 1/2) which defines the two Tropic lines.

    This is why we have summer in the middle of the year in the northern hemisphere and winter in the southern. On roughly June 21st (The Summer Solstice), the sun\’s plumb bob, touches the Tropic of Cancer in the northern hemisphere indicating the \”first day of summer\” in the northern hemisphere or the first day of winter in the southern hemisphere. Hence, in the Southern Hemisphere, it would be their \”Winter Solstice\”.

    On roughly September 21st, the sun re-crosses the equator. This is the first day of spring in the southern hemisphere and the first day of fall in the northern hemisphere. To complete the fourth point, when the sun\’s plumb bob touches the Tropic of Capricorn here in the Southern Hemisphere, it\’s the first day of Summer in the south and the first day of winter in the north. This happens on roughly December 21st each year. In short, the \”Tropics\” are between these two imaginary lines and at some point every year, the sun\’s plumb bob is directly over all latitudes in between. It\’ also why Santa Claus wears shorts in Australia and South Africa!….:-)

    Lastly, The names of the two Tropic lines comes from the two constellations they are \”in\” when the sun\’s plumb bob \”touches\” them on the 21st of June and 21st of December. The constellation of Capricorn is behind the Sun (as viewed from the earth) on roughly December 21st. and the Tropic of Cancer is behind the sun (as viewed from the earth) on roughly the 21st of June. I always remember which is which by my following make believe saying.
    \”I live in the northern hemisphere and I don\’t want to get \”Cancer\” from the Sun\”. So now you have a little trick to remember which is which too.

    As you\’re now an expert, there will be a test in the morning and you also now know why I\’m not going to explain the other two geographic milestones in this blog! It would take too long and I don\’t want to bore you…..YET!…:-)

    The notable feature for us as a practical matter is that it should start to warm up soon after we get north of the Tropic of Capricorn. It\’s not a magic line, but where we expect a warming trend to last the rest of this crossing. We understand it\’s fairly warm at St. Helena Island…we sure hope so. Fog, drizzle and 13 deg C (59 deg F) isn\’t our idea of warm tropical cruising.

    KIT,
    Position report will be up in an hour. I expect yet another sleepy day of about 160 nautical miles….We\’ve about 1000 miles to go!
    Scott and Sailor Nikki

  • Day one to St. Helena and bye bye Luderitz…..

    Day one to St. Helena and bye bye Luderitz…..
    May 24th-25th, 2013 (Eastern Hemisphere) +1 on GMT

    We wanted to get checked out of Namibia early in the day as it takes lots of time to organize and do last minute \”boatie\” chores before departure. We also had plans to have dinner out at Barrels Restaurant, a local pub style place with a good reputation with Steve and Pat of s/v \”OZ\”. (Clearly, we\’re not in Kansas anymore Dorothy!).

    Of course, yet again, Immigration was the only mini hassle in the ointment. It\’s funny how it\’s never customs, but always immigration that seems to be the bigger deal. The young lady assumed that if you were on a \”boat\”, it\’s just like a \”ship\” but smaller. You know, we have 20 crew back onboard doing all those last minute chores and when we get back, we can just turn on the motor and leave…..NOT!

    She wanted us to come back just before we wanted to leave. I explained to her, that there is several hours worth of work, Nikki soothed both her and me when she blurted out that we would leave in three hours. This assuaged our \”jobsworth\” (as our English friends say) and she stamped us out.

    We then did indeed start the last minute departure chores of food shopping, etc. When we got back to the boat, Steve said he\’d pick us up for our dinner ashore and hence I could put the dinghy away which actually takes quite awhile; to get it ready to go to sea. We always carry the dinghy on the stern davits with the motor attached. MOST boats have to take the motor off, lift and store their dinghy\’s on deck. This is a great savings of time for us, but still, the dinghy has 4 ways it\’s held to the boat to prevent chafe, etc. so it takes….time.

    We went in for our last supper in Luderitz and did indeed have a lovely time at Barrels where we met Heiku and Diane. They own the local charter cat business and had previously sailed around the world on there schooner which is still moored at Luderitz. Heiku sounds Japanese, but it the masculine form in German of Heike! We learn something new every day!

    We had socked in fog at 8 a.m. when we wanted to leave, but everyday here is like that and we waited till 9 a.m. and had about 7-10 miles of visibility…Good enough to go. Today there is a fishing tournament in Luderitz and literally it\’s the biggest event of the year and the town is closed. Glad we checked out yesterday! We also discovered why we did not have internet the last 18 hours we were here…. The power has been shut down since last night. Remember….we ARE in Namibia!

    The weather was cooperative, the winds a bit light, the seas calm. We started with a full main and geneker and by dark, had enough wind for the genoa poled out to windward on port tack. This is how we\’ve been the last 24 hours, varying winds of 12-20 knots, boat speed 5-9 knots depending. Mostly in the 6 knot boat speed range.

    Last nights highlights were passing two sets of what we believed to be dredging vessels. That would be dredging for diamonds!

    The first set was the 50-60 foot variety, but the second set was no less than eight \”factory ships\” at around 250++ feet. They were lit in a pattern I\’ve never seen. A green light over a white light over a red light. It\’s not in the navigation rules. Nice we had a full moon and good visibility as we sailed through them like a fence.

    It\’s nice to start a passage off like this; calmly. The wind predictions are that by tomorrow, it will start to get \”breezy\”; the good news is it will be from pretty much right behind us.

    We did a pedestrian 160 nautical miles – for Beach House, just a leg stretch…
    KIT,
    Scott and Sleeping (off watch) Nikki