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  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2011/05/23 00:00 LATITUDE: 19-29.99S LONGITUDE: 177-36.52E COURSE: 332T SPEED: 6.0 MARINE: YES WIND_SPEED: 25 WIND_DIR: 101T WAVE_HT: 1.0M WAVE_PER: 8 SWELL_DIR: ESE SWELL_HT: 3.0M SWELL_PER: 8 CLOUDS: 70% VISIBILITY: 18 BARO: 1014.5 TREND: -1 AIR_TEMP: 27.8C SEA_TEMP: 27.8C COMMENT: Beach House – ENROUTE – Lautoka, Fiji. 194 nm day 07 run. 15 miles to abeam Kandavu Island landfall. 95 miles to Navalu Pass entry, 114 miles to Lautoka. We are under 3 reefs, no head sail to slow for the next 20 hours. We will enter Navalu Pass at first light tomorrow, check in Lautoka by afternoon. Kate still cooking and finishing Skippers course. It\’s now tropical warm at 81 deg F, water 80 deg F. Almost there. Still very windy, big swell. We should have protection from the swell once by Kandavu Island in about 3-4 hours. USE Sailmail address to respond.

  • Galileo…..

    May 24th (EASTERN Hemisphere again!), 2011 – 10 p.m. local time.

    Conditions: 21 deg 20 min SOUTH 178 deg 19 min EAST (zig zagged the date line). Wind: 25 East Swell: 3 meter ESE (more East). Heading: 340 deg T Speed: 8.5 knots (a bit bumpy again, but quite livable) Barometer: 1017 Day 6 run: 182 nm

    122 nm to Kandavu (first outer island of Fiji for us). Should see it before dark tomorrow. 228 nm to Lautoka, port of entry, Western Fiji – Viti Levu Island. Expected Landfall, Thursday, May 26th mid day local time (same as New Zealand).

    \”Galileo\”….Indigo Girls

    Dear F&F, Tonight is a clear sky \”high pressure\” night. It brings to mind the astronomer \”Galileo\”. He was convicted and condemned for \”telling the truth\”. It\’s an introspective song dealing with our fate, re-incarnation and reliving our mistakes or the those of others who\’ve gone before us.

    The BFH (aka: big fat high) that we left New Zealand on with it\’s big Southerly winds is still our dominant weather phenomenon. It was as good as it gets leaving New Zealand in the late Fall to head to the tropics. The wind has started turning to the East as well as the swell due to the BFH moving Eastward 1500 miles to our South. It\’s still blowing a blue streak out there, we\’ve two reefs in the main sail and the staysail up on the port side.

    We had to stow the spinnaker pole as we had to start being concerned about losing our hard fought for \”Easting\”. The wind is actually slightly ahead of the beam, we\’d sure like last nights dead run back (wind right astern). We did cover 200 nm from 7 p.m. last night to 7 p.m. tonight.

    On the radio tonight, I heard old friends Joan and Chuck on s/v \”Tender Spirit\”. Joan was joking last week that despite the 1200 miles we were behind them in arriving in Fiji (they are coming from Majuro in the Marshall Islands), they had little wind and we had lots. She said, \”you\’ll probably beat us anyway!\”. I didn\’t believe it then, but now I do. They\’re still 250 miles out and so are we. We have wind, they have little and we\’re lots faster to begin with. So goes sailing on big oceans.

    So tonight as I stare at the Universe above and all the glory of the stars in the heavens, I think of Galileo and how he was light years ahead of his time. And condemned for it…. Here\’s to you Galileo, \”King of night vision, King of insight\”….

    Short tonight, more tomorrow…. Scott with sleeping culinary Kate (She\’s really a good chef. Tonight was shrimp curry)

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2011/05/24 00:09 LATITUDE: 22-25.27S LONGITUDE: 179-03.28E COURSE: 328T SPEED: 7.5 MARINE: YES WIND_SPEED: 21 WIND_DIR: 104T WAVE_HT: 1.0M WAVE_PER: 8 SWELL_DIR: ESE SWELL_HT: 3.5M SWELL_PER: 8 CLOUDS: 40% VISIBILITY: 20 BARO: 1017.6 TREND: 1 AIR_TEMP: 25.6C SEA_TEMP: 24.4C COMMENT: Beach House – ENROUTE – LAUTOKA, Fiji (change of port for engine room leak repair). 181 nm Day 6 run. 7pm to 7pm will be over 200 nm!.. We hit 18.9 knots today! Kate still studying Day Skipper and Diving Course. Expect A.M. arrival on 26 May (Eastern Hemisphere Date). 295 nm to go.

  • Magic Carpet Ride…..

    23 May, (Less than 20 miles from the Eastern Hemisphere), 2011 – 9 p.m. Local Time

    Conditions: 23 deg 54 min South 179 deg 30 min WEST Wind: 15 to 25 knots, ESE Swell: 16 feet, 4 meters ESE Heading: Changed course to 315 T, we\’ve changed ports to Lautoka, Fiji (near the repair yard in Musket Cove) Speed: WOW!…9 – 16 knots! Average 10 knots. One reef in the main, genoa out to starboard on the new spinnaker pole. We\’re on a Magic Carpet Ride. Barometer: 1019 steady.

    \”Magic Carpet Ride\”…..Steppenwolf

    Dear F&F, This is what it\’s all about, we\’re flying. We decided to forego the Minerva Reefs as it didn\’t work as to timing, weather, etc. With a 4 meter swell, it would most likely have been very uncomfortable inside the reef at high tide and I\’m anxious to get the small leak in the port engine room fixed as soon as possible. So now instead of arriving at the most EASTERN port in Fiji, we\’ll arrive at the WESTERN most port. It\’s okay and we can work our way back easily enough. It will give us a chance to apply for the Lau Group visitors permit in Suva on the main island of Viti Levu as well.

    We\’ve heard that Musket Cove can take us out on their trailer and Kate wants to go to the \”two dollar\” bar which is a local famous hang out as well. While the repairs are going on, we\’ll start the practical of her diving course at Musket Cove. Kate did the first two DVD modules today and we\’ll go over them together tomorrow again. We put the kayak back in it\’s rack where it jumped out. Discovered that the pounding of the last two days broke the little water maker off it\’s mounts. Cleaned water out of the starboard hull from a wave that visited us through the bathroom window and hung the wet clean up towels up to dry.

    Now that the waves are behind us, this is type of sailing all we crazy ocean going boaters dream about. It\’s a bit scary, but incredible all at the same time. The power of the waves behind us, picking us up and racing down the face is exhilarating enough, but the fact that the boat feels like we\’re at the dock is even more amazing. No bouncing, no muss, no fuss. This is literally \”Beach House\’s thing\”. I wish you could all take turns and be here to experience this. 9-10-14-16 knots!… It\’s like a Disneyland ride. Our strategic positioning to get east early is really paying off right now. At this rate, we\’ll be off the southern island of Kandavu in 36 hours, Lautoka in two days with a morning arrival on the third day from now, our Thursday. Everything as we know can change in the blink of an eye, but for the moment, this moment is a \”Magic Carpet Ride\”…..

    KIT, Scott (Kate\’s lasagna tonight was exceptional!)

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2011/05/23 00:17 LATITUDE: 24-35.62S LONGITUDE: 178-41.41W COURSE: 002T SPEED: 7.1 MARINE: YES WIND_SPEED: 22 WIND_DIR: 126T WAVE_HT: 1.0M WAVE_PER: 8 SWELL_DIR: ESE SWELL_HT: 3.5M SWELL_PER: 8 CLOUDS: 40% VISIBILITY: 20 BARO: 1019.3 TREND: 1 AIR_TEMP: 24.4C SEA_TEMP: 23.9C COMMENT: Beach House – ENROUTE – POSSIBLE COURSE CHANGE TO LAUTOKA, Fiji. 175 nm for Day 5 run. We will skip Minerva Reefs as to poor weather conditions and expected arrival after dark. Kate has started PADI Open Water Dive course modules on DVD. Investigating fixing leak at Musket Cove near Lautoka, WEST Fiji. Estimate arrival 27th May. 475 nm to Lautoka, Fiji. Will keep you all updated. We are IN the Tropics. Scott with wide awake Kate!….:)

  • Catch the Wind…..

    May 22nd, (Staying with this date though we are currently in the WESTERN Hemisphere), 2011 – 11:30 p.m. local time

    Conditions: 26 deg 13 min South 178 deg 15 min WEST Wind: ESE, 25-35 knots Swell: ESE, 3.5 meters, bumpy! (Kate\’s getting the adventure she came out here for!) Heading 020 True Speed: 6.2 knots THREE Reefs and staysail (This afternoon we had two reefs and were going 9-11 knots, too bumpy on a beam reach). Temp: 70 deg F – 21.5 deg C (we\’re in the aura of the tropics for sure). Water Temp: 73 deg F – 22.8 deg C Barometer:1022 and choppy 172 nm Day 4 run 124 miles to North Minerva, we\’re over 1/2 way to Savusavu 560 nm to Savusavu, we may divert to Suva for haul and repair of leak. Yet to be determined.

    \”Catch the Wind\”….Bob Dylan

    Dear F&F, This has been a passage full of wind essentially from the start. The last 24 hours has been another story all together. (Sandrine, you were right to sit this one out as a first big sail!).

    Starting at 6:30 a.m. this morning, we\’ve had re-enforced trade winds as predicted from 25-35 knots, briefly squalls to 40 knots. Two days from now, it should be gone…(touch some wood..quick!…:))

    This is serious sailing. You don\’t want to have to do sail changes and maneuvers in the dark. If anything were to seriously break, it would be a challenge to deal with it. Our large kayak broke out of it\’s restraints but landed in the perfect spot and we\’re just leaving it on the deck over the starboard head. I have no idea how it could have escaped the two stainless steel bars restraining it. They haven\’t moved, but the kayak escaped!

    It\’s Mr. Toad\’s Wild ride for sure, it\’s why crazy ass sailors come out here. I however, would prefer less than 25 knots at all times. If you want to take the plunge from the tropics to New Zealand and sail back out, you go in understanding that this is the way it\’s gonna be.

    A sailing friend once told me, \”Scott, anyone can get to New Zealand, but only the sailors leave\”. I knew what he meant then and I\’m experiencing it first hand now. As \”weather windows\” go, this is about as good as it gets. Remember, it\’s almost winter here and last night it was 44 deg F – 7.2 deg C in Auckland! It\’s 70 degrees right now outside. The temperature difference alone lets you know; we\’ve got weather!

    When you look at a map of the world, you\’ll see that \”Beach House\” essentially took a deep \”V\” course leaving Tonga last September and we\’re now crawling out literally, figuratively and emotionally on the opposite leg out to Fiji. Back to the warm winter tropics of the South Pacific. Tropical sailing is about the \”Endless Winter\” versus the famous film, \”The Endless Summer\”. Summer here means Cyclones (Hurricanes) and we want nothing to do with those beasts.

    Rhythmically, I write and watch the bilge pump in the port engine room cycle on and off on the light panel. I\’m beginning to think the leak is not the sail drive skirt but rather perhaps a de-lamination of the engine\’s mounting bed from the hull. The unexpected and prolonged sit \”on the hard\” in Gulf Harbour may have contributed to this. If so, we\’ll still have to haul and have the transmission removed, a bit of glass work and all will be good. Quite interestingly, when we were going 10-12 knots earlier in the day, pressing at a clip that would have sailed us at 240 miles for a day\’s run, the leak stopped. When we slowed, back it came.

    When we checked in with the Pac Sea Net tonight, they thought we\’d disappeared as we had to do the third reef tango. Whenever it\’s time to do something like, cook, shower, get on the radio, etc. That\’s the time the wind God\’s always make their presence known as to whose in charge. Kate was in the shower, I was on the radio and 40 knots descended upon us in exactly the above scenario. I had to hurry Kate out of the shower, dropped the radio and with wet hair a flying, Kate took the wheel, rounded us up while I reefed and we made it just before the next blast. Then of course, we got to second guess ourselves as the wind dropped down briefly to a mere 22 knots. I told Kate I didn\’t care if the wind backed off for the night, I wanted it to be comfortable and she agreed that cooking was truly SAFER with less sail and speed on. Never fear, the 25-35 has been pumping all night, currently 30 as I write. It was the right call, glad we did it. The Pac Sea Net controller was Jane tonight and she just assumed we had sail change issues and took our report later in the program. We\’ve moved up to #10. Single handers always go first.

    So as you can tell from this report, we\’ve \”caught the wind\” or should I say, it\’s caught us….. 32 knots now. Just threw our first flying fish of the trip off the deck.

    KIT, Scott with of course sleeping Kate

  • POSITION REPORT

    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.

  • Night Moves…..

    May 21st (Eastern Hemisphere – but not for long!), 2011

    Conditions: Bumpy!… 28 deg 57 min South 179 deg 43 min East Wind: 23-30 knots ESE: We\’re in the trade winds now, re-enforced by the South Pacific Convergence Zone fronts to our north. Swell: ESE, 2.5 – 3 meters Temp: 66 degrees F – 18.9 degrees C Water Temp: 69 degrees F – 20.5 degrees C 2 Reefs and staysail Speed: 7.6 knots Heading: 25 deg True 290 nm to North Minerva 725 nm to Savusavu (we\’re just under 1/2 way)

    \”Night Moves\”……Bob Seger

    Dear F&F, Well, we had a nice sail today in calm conditions until noon. I saw a squall crossing the southerly wind from the east. This is often the harbinger of a general change in the wind pattern. Kate was making lunch and I told her we needed to reef before the squall got here which was happening fast. She said, \”two minutes\”. I said, \”We don\’t have two minutes\”. She came up on deck and took the wheel while I went forward to reef the main. JUST IN TIME! 30 knots blasted us and it would have been ugly with the full mainsail. We waited awhile to see if indeed this was the \”new wind\”, actually the trade winds and indeed it was.

    We later put the staysail up and have been in a beam sea ever since. It\’s not the most comfortable sea to have, straight from the side, but that\’s what we expected as we got further north. We\’ve been in 23-30 knots ever since screaming over the wave tops.

    So tonight, we moved into the aura of the tropics even though technically that won\’t happen till we\’re just north of the Minerva Reefs. We\’re heading to North Minerva on the assumption that we\’ll be able to make a stop there, but conditions will dictate that. We will also cross the International Date line before morning and go into the Western Hemisphere albeit briefly. The Minerva\’s are in the Western Hemisphere, but Fiji is back on the East side of the dateline. Even if we don\’t stop at the Minerva\’s, we\’re gaining easting in the easterly wind to allow us to fall off the wind to a more comfortable angle later in the sail.

    Here on night watch, we\’ve got to watch our \”Night Moves\”. In these conditions, we hope our preparation has minimized outside, foredeck exposure as it\’s really lumpy out here tonight. The seas will build to 3 with occasional 4 meter sets soon per the weather charts.

    Kate\’s still pounding away at the \”Day Skipper\” course, I\’m listening to the IPOD and reading. The bilge pump is still easily keeping up with our tiny leak. I\’ll have to fix it in Fiji which will require a quick haul out….oh joy!…:)

    Raoul Island is 70 miles directly east of us and we\’ll change navigation software chips tomorrow as the Minerva\’s are on our South Pacific Chart. Raoul and the Kermedecs are on our New Zealand chip and we\’ll be by them in the morning so we won\’t have to worry about going \”bump in the night\”…..

    Three other boats are making this journey that we hear on the Pac Sea Net radio group at 0300 UTC. They all left ahead of us and have reported the same conditions we have now.

    \”Hey, wasn\’t the world supposed to end today?\” \”No, that happened a couple of months ago. Yeah, I remember…..\”

    KIT, Scott and Kate, bumping along, conversing and listening to song

  • 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.

  • Werewolves of London…..

    May 20th, (Eastern Hemisphere), 2011, 9:30 p.m. local time

    \”Werewolves of London\”….Warren Zevon

    Dear F&F, I thought I\’d share a small world story with you. The song title has even more meaning as it\’s the last night of the full moon tonight.

    Though I have not yet had the time to catch the original website up to sailing INTO New Zealand, I\’d like to share a small world story.

    Last September, Paul Spicer, born in Essex in the UK sailed with me from Tongatapu, Tonga to Opua, New Zealand. That was a very challenging sail (I think Paul and I used the word intimidating!) which included us putting our our para-anchor for 40 hours in the North Tasman Sea. We had swells up to 24 feet (8 meters)!

    Paul is an ex-pat, now US citizen living in Redondo Beach, California. Paul was a patient of mine and we have been in touch re: sailing/cruising for many years. Paul also sailed on the maiden ocean voyage of \”Beach House\” in April of 2004 in the Mediterranean.

    So, it turns out that Kate is also from Essex! They lived only a few miles apart (though Paul hasn\’t lived in Essex since the mid 1970\’s). Sorry to date us, but that would have been before Kate was born!

    So Essex wins the day. In with Paul, out with Kate, the UK has been well represented aboard \”Beach House\”. Our next crew, Sandrine is originally from France! Aren\’t we international? Anyway, \”Beach House\” was born in the south of France, so it only makes sense. Two Brits, two French girls, what\’s a Captain to do?….:)

    KIT, Scott with of course, sleeping Kate!