Author: kerri

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2012/11/20 11:20 LATITUDE: 28-47.71S LONGITUDE: 032-04.71E MARINE: NO WIND_SPEED: 9 WIND_DIR: ENE CLOUDS: 90% VISIBILITY: 10 BARO: 1012.4 AIR_TEMP: 29.4C COMMENT: Beach House -DOCKED- International Wharf, Richards Bay, South Africa

    Beat the weather in. We had 20-28 knots last 15 hours. The barometer is dropping! Safely tied up. Welcome to Africa!

    Drop us a note, love to hear from you. Scott and Sailor Nik

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2012/11/19 07:04 LATITUDE: 25-58.83S LONGITUDE: 034-05.61E COURSE: 191T SPEED: 6.9 MARINE: YES WIND_SPEED: 3 WIND_DIR: ESE WAVE_HT: 0.0M WAVE_PER: 0 SWELL_DIR: S SWELL_HT: 2.8M SWELL_PER: 6 CLOUDS: 80% VISIBILITY: 10 BARO: 1010.9 AIR_TEMP: 25.6C COMMENT: Beach House – MOTORING – Maputo Bay to Richard\’s Bay, SA

    New blog posted at: www.svbeachhouse.com

  • A little bit of stress for the end of the ride…..

    A little bit of stress for the end of the ride…..

    19 November 2012 (Eastern Hemisphere now on +2 UTC)

    Dear F&F,

    We left Linga Linga yesterday morning and had no trouble getting out of the estuary. We headed south into the SSW head wind, but it didn\’t seem too bad and we found the current. Unfortunately, we soon lost the current and the seas and wind built right on our nose.

    Eventually, we gave up the pounding and headed toward Inhaca. A look at the weather showed we have 48 hours to get to Richard\’s Bay if we proceeded, but a few issues have come to light.

    First, BOTH engines are only giving us 75% power. I don\’t know why? I have changed both sets of filters on both engines and turned on the priming pumps. No more than 2350 on each engine. Second, if we don\’t get to Richard\’s Bay on this weather window, we might be stuck at Inhaca for a week!

    We also have not reacquired the current… Paul Teanby of Peri Peri sent me coordinates and I wrote one down wrong. So, with our course adjustment we should get back into the current in about 5 1/2 hours. My calculations of 6.5 knots gets us to Richard\’s Bay well ahead of the weather event. But then Murphy was an optimist!

    As long as this engine speed can be maintained we\’re good. The wind should start to come back up behind us (currently we have none), late this afternoon. By then, we hope to have found the current and we\’ll take it right to the beach. With those to good things hopefully to come, we should be good. Do you hear a little trepidation in my voice?….:-)

    Okay, the last 200 miles of the previous 10,000 may be the hardest. Let\’s hope not!

    KIT, Scott and Watch Commander Nikki

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2012/11/17 13:02 LATITUDE: 23-44.12S LONGITUDE: 035-23.66E MARINE: NO WIND_SPEED: 25 WIND_DIR: NNE CLOUDS: 30% VISIBILITY: 15 BARO: 1011.6 AIR_TEMP: 27.8C COMMENT: Beach House ANCHORED -Linga Linga Point – Inhambane Bay, Mozambique

    We came in to Linga Linga as the conditions in the bay were way too bouncy. The SSEasterlies are not expected till 9pm-12am. Hence, here we stay. Lovely spot with it\’s own WRECK right in front of us. There are two resorts on this point. One is called, \”Castle of the Sea\” in Portuguese.

    The entry was as Des said it would be. We came in one hour after low tide. Least water was 3.1 meters about 10 feet UNDER the hulls. This was a very brief time, perhaps 30 seconds. Never shallower than 16 feet anywhere else. Mostly in the 20+ and up to 60 feet. (The previous is for Dave of Sunflower). Dave, if you want some more waypoints…email me!

    The strong SSE is supposed to last only about 4-6-8 hours? We\’ll be off in earnest tomorrow on the rising tide around 6 a.m. KIT, Scott and Nikki, anchored in Africa!

  • Getting busier around here……

    Getting busier around here…..

    16 November 2012 (Eastern Hemisphere)

    Dear F&F,

    We sailed all night and ran out of wind per usual by 9:30 a.m. BEFORE I would start the port engine, I wanted to check on my Rube Goldberg. Good thing too! I used one clear plastic hose OVER the main fuel tank hose and hose clamped (Jubilee Clamped for our UK friends). This was good. This clear hose had a plastic reducer to a smaller hose which I clamped to the priming pump. When I looked at my \”Goldberg\”, I saw the plastic reducer had melted in the diesel fuel!

    So, I had to re-do it with some bronze fittings. Just as \”Rube\”, but more durable. We\’re back in the port engine business!

    We\’re beginning to close the coast of Mozambique and are starting to see several cargo ships on the AIS. As we go by Inhambane, we expect to see lots more vessels. About 10:30 this morning, I got a little nervous when we were on a reciprocal heading with a 50 meter rust bucket fishing type vessel. He was 3 miles abeam of me and suddenly turned toward me. I immediately made a 140 degree turn to starboard to keep our distance and pass as quickly as possible, port to port. He then turned back to his original course. He did this again. I responded as above, he turned back to his original course again. He did this a third time and I did not respond. He turned back to his original course and we both proceeded away from each other. This was in a current area and this could be some fishing technique (most likely?), but it did get my attention for awhile. I\’m sure it was nothing and we\’re all a bit jumpy since the \”Quest\” incident last year…. There have been no bad guy reports this far south that I\’m even aware of.

    We did use both motors to go away faster and we still are with 148 miles to Inhambane, Mozambique. This may be a stop for us tomorrow? We\’ll let you know re: weather. It\’s the second of three \”Hidey Holes\” on the coast. We would be in a remote area and not go to the mainland of Mozambique. It\’s about 350 miles north of Richard\’s Bay. We\’ll let you know…. A brief Southerly may effect us if we proceeded directly. Not sure until tomorrow\’s weather report. Checking with Paul from Peri Peri Radio to get his opinion as well.

    It\’s a lovely day, motoring away! Should be in a fast current pushing us, anytime soon. Now it\’s just a bit positive. We\’re still 80 miles offshore, so it\’s strength will be closer in.

    No wind now, and I mean NONE! The pattern is, wind in the late afternoon and all night, not much during the day…. This will start to change a bit as we get south of Inhambane and the South African weather pattern starts to take hold.

    KIT, Scott and Nikki the Navagatrix

  • What a difference a day makes!…..

    What a difference a day makes!…..

    15 November 2012 (Eastern Hemisphere)

    Dear F&F,

    Yesterday\’s engine room antics were a great crest fall when the engine started and ran for 10 minutes and then failed. Ken Dickenson of Norfolk, UK and Dave Blanding of Shawnee Mission Kansas (\”Sunflower\’s home port) kept telling me about AIR and BLOCKAGE. With all due respect to Rube Goldberg, I FIXED IT!!!

    First, the prefilter system WAS leaking AIR and couldn\’t be stopped, so it had to be removed from the system. This is where Rube Goldberg came in. For those of you who don\’t know who Rube Goldberg was…Google it!, but here\’s the short story. Rube was a guy who always wanted to make a better mouse trap. Some of his designs looked like the schematic from the space shuttle. In other words, he over complicated a simple problem and he worked his own ways to make things work.

    So to get the pre filter out of the system, I had to use plastic hose reducers, lots of hose clamps, two different sizes of hose to reduce the main fuel line to the priming pump. The NEW pump is in line and assisted in priming, but is not necessary to run the engine. So once I got all this set up, I removed the fuel hose from the ENGINES lift pump and turned on the electric priming pump. The pressure in the primary fuel filter housing went way up (it has a pressure gauge) and NO output. UMM??? So I removed the outbound fuel hose to the engine lift pump from the primary fuel filter to see if it was blocked. I went to look inside the primary filter side and saw the line was completely blocked! But with what? Turns out, that when I was in Fiji, the \”boys\” had the hose on and off so many times they stripped the inner lining and it balled up. We\’ve wondered since Brisbane why we couldn\’t get full RPM out of the port engine. Now we know why! I kept the hose piece I cut off. You cannot blow air through it. It apparently got worse and worse and eventually starved the fuel from the engine.

    Having cut it away and remounted it, the fuel came out the engine lift pump side like an artery. It also easily came out of the engines secondary fuel filter with the bleed screw open. It started right up and has been running under load for the last hour and a half. Mystery solved. The other good news is that while running this engine, the alternator is charging and I don\’t have to use up fuel running the generator to just charge the battery system. Also, if it\’s really hot we can run the little Air Con unit, the water makers and run the washing machine all while motoring and charging. Life is better!

    The unhappy part of the day is that the wind is coming exactly from where we are trying to get to at 15 knots. The seas however are not bad. The wind is expected to back around to SSE sometime late this afternoon and when it does, will go close reaching again.

    Thanks to all of you for your suggestions on the engine issue, especially Ken and Dave!

    19-34S x 038-18E, motoring at 6.3 knots against the wind with a now neutral current. This should improve over the next 12 hours.

    KIT, Scott and Reading Nikki (who of course was extremely helpful to the Captain in the engine room!)

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2012/11/15 06:30 LATITUDE: 19-22.26S LONGITUDE: 038-39.81E COURSE: 212T SPEED: 5.9 MARINE: YES WIND_SPEED: 7 WIND_DIR: S WAVE_HT: 0.5M WAVE_PER: 4 SWELL_DIR: SSE SWELL_HT: 1.3M SWELL_PER: 5 CLOUDS: 25% VISIBILITY: 15 BARO: 1018.2 AIR_TEMP: 30.6C COMMENT: Beach House -EN ROUTE -Madagascar to Richard\’s Bay, South Africa Day 3 – 155 miles. At least respectable. We\’re now motoring on the starboard engine following the pattern of wind at night, none during the day. Expect 15-20+ SSE this evening and all gone tomorrow. We\’re 2 days from Inhambane, Madagascar\’s \”hidey hole\”. We\’re in a pushing (south flowing) current of about 1 knot. We\’re staying a bit East today so we can sail toward the SW when the wind comes in later. Too bumpy to work with the engine. Checked the fuse and swapped voltage regulators on the 24 V alternator. No luck. Decent sail last night. Nikki\’s cooking…:-) KIT, Scott and Niiki

  • What a day!…..

    What a day!…..

    14 November 2012 (Eastern Hemisphere)

    Dear F&F,

    Yesterday – we ran out of wind in the late afternoon and motored on our one operable starboard engine until 3:00 a.m. when the wind came back up from 13-18 knots. Prior to the arrival of the wind, it was calmest night at sea I can recall. It was so calm, if we\’d dropped the sails and drifted, we would have thought we were tied to the dock!

    We had a lovely evenings sail and around 10:30 a.m., the wind slowly shifted from SSE to the E and then to the NE and essentially quit. We again motored for much of the day. We attacked the port engine fuel starvation problem with earnest. VERY FRUSTRATINGLY, we got it to start on 4 occassions, but it would never stay on for more than 10 minutes under load. We had all manner of issues. The pre-filter was leaking air, the new priming pump wouldn\’t prime, one of the old ones did, but leaked. We had great fuel flow and finally, without either the prefilter or the priming pump in the system, I could not get fuel to flow to the secondary fuel filter EVEN when using the manual priming lever. I think we may be beat on this? I\’ll try again tomorrow, but I think that the engines \”lift pump\” must be bad (as I cannot even get the manual pump part of it to prime) and that we were just running on what was in the engines secondary filter for awhile an running out of fuel…?

    If anyone out there has any ideas, please email us!

    The other trauma of the day was that the clew of our mainsail ripped out. Fortunately, it happened during the day and when the wind was only 7 knots. I had to go out to the end of the boom in the bosun\’s chair and guide the sail around the boom mandrel while Nikki rolled it up from the furling system at the base of the mast. We now can only use the main up to the first reef for the duration of this trip. Shades of the Galapagos to Marquesas voyage.

    Also, until mid day today from mid day yesterday, we had a 1.5 knot current AGAINST us. This was making our slow speed dismal. Around noon, we finally either got north or west of the counter current \”gyre\” out here and are now enjoying a .5 to .75 knot push. Dave from \”Sunflower\” and Paul of Peri-Peri Radio emailed me with the latest \”real time\” current chart of the Mozambique Channel from buoyweather.com. This aided us on where to sail to escape the current.

    The wind came up around 4:30 p.m. and we\’ve currently 15 knots from the SSE, close reaching to the SW. We\’ve still a long way to go, but we are getting there.

    Yes, we feel we\’ve been snake bit, where\’s the snake bit kit?… The seas are comfortable, the wind is in from Africa and night three begins.

    KIT, Scott and Offwatch Nikki

  • South Africa or bust?….

    South Africa or bust?….

    12-13 November 2012 (Eastern Hemisphere)

    Dear F&F,

    Okay, did all the last minute checks…THE WEATHER looks good, we\’re off….sort of.

    First thing, the port engine won\’t start. It\’s a fuel starvation problem. The filters look awful, so does the fuel. The fuel we picked up in Indonesia and Hellville may be coming back to haunt us. Changing the filters (both primary and secondary), cleaning out the lines with compressed air did not help. We have a boost pump and it doesn\’t seem to be working? So I changed it with two different spares. Same thing. Not sure what\’s going on but I\’ll keep trying to brain storm it and come up with a solution. I would not go into the \”inside\” of the \”hidey holes\” with only one engine. Hope I won\’t have too.

    Next we discovered when motoring on just the starboard engine that our house battery alternator is not putting out a charge. This has been masked by the other engines operable one. Good news is we\’re getting closer to South Africa where I can get all this fixed!…:-)

    We have a small air conditioner that cools one cabin and can\’t use it now without the generator and it is VERY HOT out here.

    So we finally ESCAPED Cape St. Andre which was no small feat! The winds kept heading us into the cape and I finally (again), had to motor out for about an hour to get around the dangers. After that, the wind kept going from NNW all the way to SSE (anti clockwise). We tacked to go straight North West of all directions, but the wind then again continued to go around the circle. In the last 24 hours, we have sailed the boat on every possible wind direction.

    We passed the island of Juan de Nova this morning. It looked a lot like Salomon Atoll at a distance. We\’ve used the geneker and the spinnaker today, but as I write, we\’re motoring. The current is giving us a 1/2 to 1 knot push which is good. The wind prediction is to remain light for a few days, but hope springs eternal.

    The south swell has been uncomfortable all day long, but it is finally settling down.

    Just spoke with Dave and Kathy on Sunflower who just arrived at Baly Bay. They\’ll be a few days behind us. At the rate we\’re going, they may catch us.

    We\’ve just about 900 miles to go to Richard\’s Bay. Could take another week at this rate.

    KIT, Scott and Cooking Nikki

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2012/11/13 05:57 LATITUDE: 16-49.09S LONGITUDE: 042-46.03E COURSE: 233T SPEED: 6.9 MARINE: YES WIND_SPEED: 8 WIND_DIR: NE WAVE_HT: 0.0M WAVE_PER: 0 SWELL_DIR: S SWELL_HT: 1.2M SWELL_PER: 6 CLOUDS: 20% VISIBILITY: 15 BARO: 1017.3 AIR_TEMP: 31.7C COMMENT: Beach House – EN ROUTE – Madagascar to Richard\’s Bay, South Africa ABEAM Isla Juan de Nova

    We\’ll catch up on the blog asap….. Now motoring on one engine (port engine is not working)-that\’s why Miss Piggy has two!…:-)