YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2011/05/20 00:00 LATITUDE: 27-23.19S LONGITUDE: 179-25.73W COURSE: 021T SPEED: 9.2 MARINE: YES WIND_SPEED: 25 WIND_DIR: 118T WAVE_HT: 1.0M WAVE_PER: 8 SWELL_DIR: ESE SWELL_HT: 3.5M SWELL_PER: 8 CLOUDS: 40% VISIBILITY: 20 BARO: 1027.3 TREND: 1 AIR_TEMP: 22.2C SEA_TEMP: 21.1C COMMENT: Beach House – ENROUTE – Savusavu, Fiji. If we can make Minerva before losing light tomorrow, we will try and enter the reef. If not, we may pass. 172 nm today, our best and we are flying. On schedule to due well over 200 nm day for tomorrow. Minerva Reef North is 223 nm to go. We are on the WEST SIDE of the Date line. 1/2 way point to Savusavu.
Author: kerrizane
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POSITION REPORT
YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2011/05/21 00:06 LATITUDE: 29-56.96S LONGITUDE: 179-07.13E COURSE: 024T SPEED: 5.7 MARINE: YES WIND_SPEED:26 WIND_DIR: 120T WAVE_HT: 0.5M WAVE_PER: 8 SWELL_DIR: ESE SWELL_HT: 2.0M SWELL_PER: 8 CLOUDS: 100% VISIBILITY: 15 BARO: 1027.3 TREND:-1 AIR_TEMP: 20.0C SEA_TEMP: 22.2C COMMENT: Beach House – ENROUTE – Savusavu, Fiji. Day 3 – 152 nm distance. Just found the \”trades\”. 30 knot squall ESE. 380 nm to North Minerva Reef. 2 Reefs, no headsail till the squall passes. All okay, Kate still finishing up \”Day Skipper Course\”. We\’ll attend sail drive leaky seal in Fiji…somewhere…:) Barometer, choppy and dropping. We\’re abeam to the east, the central Kermedecs. They\’re 100 miles East of us.
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Sailing….
May 20th, (Eastern Hemisphere) 2011, 8:30 p.m local time
Conditions: Very nice, very comfortable 31 deg 28 min South 178 deg 20 min East Wind: 12 knots SSE Swell: 1.5 meter SSE Barometer: 1025 and rising Heading: 011 True Speed: 5.5 knots (got light tonight, windy ahead) Temp: 65 deg F – 18.3 deg C Water Temp: 71 deg F – 21.7 deg C (definitely warming up) North Minerva Reef: 470 miles to go Savusavu, Fiji: 850 miles to go Day: 2 1/2 at sea, sailed 160 miles. A bit better than yesterday and keeping us on average of 150 miles/day. This is my conservative figure. With more consistent winds, we\’d easily be doing 180 miles/day without pressing. Maybe \”later\” in the trip.
\”Sailing\”…..Christopher Cross
Dear F&F, (posting \”live\” to the website \”ship\’s log\” section).
Today was a day. When Kate woke from her off watch at 8 a.m. this morning, we set the full main sail and genoa on a starboard reach. The wind had quit the previous night and we motored for about 8 hours. It was clear, warming, calm seas and ideal \”Beach House\” sailing conditions. \”Beach House\”, aka: \”Miss Piggy\” has been floating down the waves with aplomb today. We\’ve been averaging 7 knots since early this morning. As I started to write this, the wind has backed off as the central part of the windless high pressure to our southwest gets closer. As we move north, the winds will shift to ESE and strengthen with a low pressure system off to our East (which will continue to move east). The tradewinds per the boat reports ahead are 20+ knots in the Minerva Reef area, ESE; which is now only 470 miles ahead.
We will be less than 100 miles from the Kermedec Islands tomorrow night. These are a small group of three islands which are a New Zealand National Reserve. You must have a permit, very difficult to obtain to go ashore. The diving in photos and video I\’ve seen is exceptional.
The \”Orange Iceberg\” returns: When we first took delivery of \”Beach House\”, now 7 years ago, my Dad and Cindy were on watch in the Mediterranean. They both woke me in almost panic. \”Scott, come look at the horizon, there\’s an orange iceberg\”. I was half asleep, so I adjusted my eyes and with the binoculars could see the Moon rising on the horizon, a brilliant orange color. I told Kate this story as we\’ve had full moon nights and low and behold, tonight through the clouds, the \”orange iceberg\” returned. Maybe Art and Cindy are watching out for us tonight…..
Kate awoke me at 7:30 p.m. local time as she\’d spotted a ship on the horizon. She was concerned about a crossing/meeting situation with \”heavy metal\”. We assume this was a large fishing vessel as he was doing weird turns and such. We tracked him with our Radar and \”mini ARPA\” system. This told us that the other vessel would never get closer than 3 1/2 miles.
Kate is doing an exceptional job in the galley, absorbing the sailing and may start the theory part of the Scuba class tomorrow. She\’s got a few more modules in her \”Day Skipper\” class but is getting a little burned out on it. A change of pace may be in order.
Well, the boat speed is back up to 7 knots and……..we\’re sailing.
Scott with sleeping Kate (she\’s supposed to be asleep, it\’s her off watch!).
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Dark Star…..
May 20th, (Eastern Hemisphere), 2011 6:45 a.m. local time.
Conditions: Motoring, awaiting Kate\’s watch and we\’ll set sail on a starboard tack beam reach 32 deg 49 min S 177 deg 35 min E Wind: SSE, 15 knots Swell: SSE – 2 meters Temp: 63 deg F, 17.3 deg C (warming?) Sea Temp: 68 deg F, 20 deg C (definitely warming) Heading: 015 true Speed: 7.5 knots (both engines) Auckland: 260 miles ago North Minerva Reef: 560 nm to go.
\”Dark Star\”….Crosby, Stills and Nash
Dear F&F, Last night was very dark, gray and overcast. Just as I came of watch a series of small rain squalls appeared off our starboard quarter (back right hand side for those of you who don\’t speak boat). I told Kate that these were the \”see through\” kind, not the dark heavy black we may encounter as we near the low to our north. Not much wind or rain in them, but often the precursor of major wind shifts. Indeed this is exactly what happened.
At first we had no wind, rolled up the sails and put on the \”Iron Genoa\’s\”. Just an hour ago, the new wind filled in markedly further to the SSE from our yesterday\’s SSW. We\’re due south of Savusavu and slightly west of the Minerva Reefs. We should be able to do a nice fast blast reach with the main and genoa which will set right after sunrise.
The swell is still up to 2.5 meters on occasion, but quite flat. That will change soon! The sun has risen behind the clouds, but right now, it\’s just a \”Dark Star\”…..
Scott with sleeping Kate. (Have you noticed with a crew of two we don\’t see much of each other on long passages?)
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Stones in the Road…..
May 19th, 2011 (Eastern Hemisphere) not yet one full day at sea….
Conditions: 34 deg 56 min S 175 deg 56 min E Wind S 15-20 Sea SSE 1.5 meters Cloud 30% Baro: 1026.6 rising Heading 035 true (reaching up for speed and strategic placement of winds expected ahead) We\’re under canvassed and will add sail during the day. Distance traveled: 118 nm 707 nm to North Minerva Reef
\”Stones in the Road\”…..Mary Chapin Carpenter
Dear F&F,
We\’ll as this sail is sort of a bit of a shake down and find the bugs. We have!
Our AIS system has packed up, no big deal, that\’s why we stand watch Our Autopilot\’s \”Go To\” feature has disappeared, no big deal, the auto pilot is steering to a course just fine Alarms on our new electronic system have been so annoying that I\’ve had to disconnect them, also no big deal. One \”mini big deal\”…Our port sail drive skirt is leaking. This is where our transmission actually looks like an outboard motor and goes through the bottom of the boat. There is a double rubber seal to keep out Mother Ocean….she\’s having a bit of her way with us. The bilge pump, (one of six electric we have) kicks a liter or so of water out of the water tight space every 10 minutes and is very easily keeping up. This may have to be addressed in Fiji? I actually carry a complete spare transmission aboard and as many of our followers may remember, I had to change a transmission on a sand bar in El Salvador two years ago. (Carmina, I am thanking you again for the good times, assistance and hospitality you showed us while at your home in Guatemala).
So a few bumps, a fast start, a slow first night with a beautiful full moon…AND, a couple of \”Stones in the Road\”…
For you position report followers, I put out an official one on this sail, every day at noon local, 1 a.m. in the UK….
Scott with soon to awake Kate for here 8 to noon watch no footer
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She came in through the bathroom window…..
May 18th, Eastern Hemisphere, 0200 UTC, 2 p.m. local time.
Position: Hauraki Gulf 36 deg 25 min South 175 deg 01 min East Heading 020 True Speed 6.5 knots (taking it easy, staysail only) Wind 31 knots, SSW Sea 1 meter (protection from land), it\’s gonna get big once we clear North Cape and are exposed to the full force of the \”Tassie\”. (North Tasman Sea). 60 deg F, 15.5 deg C Clear Sky\’s, Barometer 1019.5 steady, but choppy Depth 100 meters, 300 feet
\”She came in through the bathroom window\”…..Joe Cocker
Dear F&F, Well, this is our \”weather window\” and the way it blew and rained this morning, I felt like the Joe Cocker song and we were in the shower! It\’s a bit of a Goldilocks and the three bears window. Too soon and papa bear will eat you (big wind!), too late and mama bear will swat you with a Nor\’easter in the face. We think we\’ve gone with Goldilocks, you\’ll know soon!… Some of the boaters who\’ve done this trip many times said, \”this is as good as it gets mate!\”. Hope they\’re right. This trip has seen much grief come to some boats, but with weather guru Bob McDavitt as our spirit guide, we should be good. The next window could have been a month out. Didn\’t want to sit and wait for that one. More cold and rain would not have been good for the disposition of Captain and Crew.
We were the third of four boats to leave Gulf Harbour today and got 40 knot gusts as we left the bay. Glad that\’s over with. Predictions are for 15 knots over the next 24 hours starting this evening. Hopefully it will be correct. The good news is that it is right on our \”six\” as they say in the airplane world; right behind us. Kate and I played, put up the staysail on the new spinnaker pole. She did great. We have only our staysail up and it\’s enough in this \”breeze\” to keep us at 6-7.5 knots. The odd 30 knot plus gust confirms this is a smart idea. We expect that at dinner time tonight (4 pm for we watch keepers), we may get to add a bit of main sail and then we\’ll be doing 8+ knots. Partly, we\’re also waiting to clear the two barrier islands of the north Haruaki Gulf; Little and Great Barrier Islands. We\’ll clear them around sunset.
First day\’s are always a bit nerve wracking and this one to me should be, but so far doesn\’t seem to be. Kate is very excited. I had to send her down for a \”power nap\” so she can get into the rhythm of the 4 hour on/off shifts we started at noon today. She\’ll have the midnight to 4 a.m., I\’ll have the two night shifts on either side of her. During the day, we keep the schedule, but it\’s a bit looser in terms of watch standing.
Kate has pre-prepared 35 meals. It\’s all heat and serve, she has been very organized, efficient and terrific in the galley as well as everywhere else.
Wanted you all to know we finally got off the dock. Said our farewells to friends in New Zealand and leave with desire to get to warmer climate. I need to move on for a whole lot of reasons. Within 4 days, it should be considerably warmer.
KIT, Scott with sleeping Kate.
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POSITION REPORT
YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2011/05/16 20:40 LATITUDE: 36-37.42S LONGITUDE: 174-47.30E MARINE: NO WIND_SPEED: 15 WIND_DIR: SSW CLOUDS: 90% VISIBILITY: 5 BARO: 1016 AIR_TEMP: 13.3C COMMENT: Beach House – Preparing to depart within 4 hours. Last front to pass by the time we depart.
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Kentucky Woman…..
Tuesday (Eastern Hemisphere), May 17th, 2011
\”Kentucky Woman\”….Neil Diamond
Auckland, New Zealand: Wind 8-20 knots, SW. Barometer 1011 and slightly rising. Temperature: 58 degrees F, 15.2 C. Rain Squalls. One cold front down, one to hit us in the morning, then off we go. Expect a fast passage with winds from the SW turning S, then SE, then ESE later in the program.
Dear F&F, Well tomorrow is \”jump day\”. We had a lovely dinner with friends Chris and Sandra Biggs. Returned the car, checked out with Kiwi Customs and got our routing/weather report from NZ Weather \”Guru\”, Bob McDavitt.
Luck was with us as the water maker part arrived just in time for Dave Holmes from Enertec Engineering to install it and now both of them are online.
On the way back from Chris and Sandra\’s house, \”Kentucky Woman\” was playing on the radio. I thought how odd. This song about a small southern state in the USA is playing while Chris, Kate and I were driving for the last time down Whangaparaoa Road. The song would have meant little to either of them for obvious reasons. But it made me feel both at home and out of place. Gulf Harbour in someways feels very much like home and in other ways I have no idea how I got here. The surrealness of the entire scene is something I think given the circumstances of my life (for those of you who know me well) was like being in Alice in Wonderland or Mr. Toad\’s wild ride. Things are so different today than I would have even possibly expected just a few short months ago. Today for you in the USA would have been Cindy and my 18th wedding anniversary. I tried to just have the moment yesterday here on the 18th, but I could feel all of you at home experiencing the day with me again.
I hope all of this wasn\’t a \”you had to be there\” to understand what I\’m feeling moment?
We\’ll start the daily blog (essentially live) tomorrow and put position reports on the website as well. Wish us well. Love and Hugs to you all, KIT, Scott with Kate…..last night in New Zealand
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Anniversary…..
May 16th, 2011
Dear F&F,
\”Anniversary\”….\”The Little River Band\”.
Auckland, New Zealand: Wind SSW 18-35 knots. Swell in the Tasman Sea 6-8 meters SSW (18- 25 feet). Temperature 61 deg F, 16.6 C. Squally….
Today is May 16th, 2011. Today would have been our 18th anniversary. We always called it our \”Humaversary\” after the Humuhumunukunuku a\’ pua fish. You know it as the trigger fish. It was our favorite due to it\’s behavior and color. We first found this fish together on our dives in Hawaii in the mid 1990\’s.
The translation of this in Hawaiian is \”Nose like a pig, put together like a puzzle\”. I always thought it was apropos of Cindy. Little did I know…. I loved her cute nose, the puzzle is well…..a puzzle.
Tomorrow we will check out with New Zealand Customs, finish housekeeping, return the car and say goodbye. We\’ll have a last NZ dinner with Chris and Sandra Biggs at their home and depart Wednesday morning (your Tuesday in the Western Hemisphere).
The weather is predicted to calm for a bit then, but will build steadily as we head north. The swell will be long period and large, but the \”seas\” not predicted to be breaking off the tops too bad. This is \”Beach House\’s\” bread and butter condition. The good news is, it will be behind us. It could be a fast and blustery passage to Fiji. Currently, we\’re thinking \”pass\” on Minerva Reefs due to probable \”re-enforced\” trade winds when we would arrive. That means 25 knots or more! If so, c\’est la vie. If it works, we\’ll stop at North Minerva. This window is narrow and lots of boats will be leaving with us. The next one is not predicted to occur until sometime in June. So…here we go.
Savusavu, Fiji is 1205 miles in a straight line (which of course we won\’t sail) and should take around 7-9 days to get to depending on if we stop in the Minerva\’s.
Six boats are going to leave on our \”window\” from just Gulf Harbour. Perhaps 30 or so from all of New Zealand. We are lucky that due to bad weather, the Auckland customs dock was damaged so they have agreed to come up to Gulf Harbour tomorrow and check us out. This saves us a 35 mile round trip in the wrong direction. Additionally, they have agreed we can depart the next day which is virtually unheard of here. Usually you have to leave immediately upon check out. I told them I didn\’t want to do that as to have a full day of daylight before night watches began to get our \”sea legs\”. They understood.
So I write you with a mixed heart. Glad to move on, glad to leave this part of my life behind. New Zealand and all the people I\’ve met here have been wonderful, it\’s just sad that the circumstances did not allow me to enjoy it more….Perhaps I\’ll return again another day with a lighter heart.
Hugs to you all, Look for our live blog to start on the 18th here in NZ, your 17th of May in the US and UK. KIT, Scott with Kate
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If I were a plumber and she were a lady…..:)
May 15, 2011
Dear F&F, Hopefully Bobby Darrin, author of \”If I were a carpenter and she were a lady\” won\’t be too plussed about my liberties with his song title. (See paragraph below).
Current conditions: Auckland: 21 knots, SE (a first!), 57 degrees F, 14.2 degrees C. Rain and squally and rough outside the harbor. The backside of the low pressure system is starting to leave us. The incoming High Pressure system is very high and will have very strong winds (30+) knots as it approaches. A 1032 mb high is going to drive the wind from here to Fiji.
It appears our \”weather window\” is back for Wednesday, but we will get re-enforced trade winds about 500 miles north of New Zealand. At least it will be warm up there. Re-enforced means 25+ knots. Prediction is right behind us at 15 knots on Wednesday, a good get away wind. Tomorrow Kate will finish shopping and I will REALLY clean up the boat and get the packed stuff off to LA.
Today we loaded the final fuel, did massive laundry and checked weather. Kate cooked and did more organization. We had a lovely dinner at a Southern US Cuisine restaurant, \”Jambalaya\” owned by two American ex-pats. They wanted Mike to know they found the okra for the gumbo….Mike take note!
I tried to clean up the boat and was side tracked by adventures in plumbing….read on.Adventures in Marine Plumbing:
Our water pumps both seemed to fail at the same time today. I thought that was odd? They both just kept running and running a sign that the variable sensors for water pressure have failed. So, I turned off all the water valves, and took apart Kate\’s bed to retrieve the spare pump. I put it in line AND…..broken right out of the box.I noted that the other pump though seemed to work and I was okay with that as we only needed one. Then I opened the hot water valves and the now \”good\” pump started to run again. I quickly realized that Kate had forgotten to make absolutely sure she\’d turned off the hot water recycling valve in the shower and that answered the mystery of the \”broken pumps\”; we were just recycling our hot water around and around. When I went to put the (thought to be bad one, that wasn\’t) back in the system. The plumbing started to leak. ANOTHER \”O-Ring\” failed. Replaced, 2 hours chasing noisy pumps, and we\’re back in action. However, we did learn our spare was bad and we\’ll try and pick another one (or two) up tomorrow morning.
The weather window that is appearing is the first in over a month. The next one is most likely not to appear until at least the first week of June. Colder then than now (It\’s fast approaching winter here) and who knows what quality that window will be. Right now, the weather guru\’s say Wednesday. Let\’s hope for the best….
KIT, Scott with Kate