22.07.1N 029 07.7W @1300UT 30/11/2018
Daily Run 203nm
Tune of of the day: "Bat out of Hell"
Meatloaf
Sorry that the blog is a little late today, it's been a somewhat full on
24hrs - and not because Iain gave us food poisoning!
Let's start with what you're all eagerly waiting to hear about - Iain's
lunch. The crew will agree that his sausage and egg open sandwiches were a
resounding success. Aided by Sous Chef Minkey, the BLT inspired open sandwich
filled a hole and didn't come back up again. Great relief to all!
Confidence bolstered, Iain now progressed onto a sausage & egg
breakfast this morning and even went a little riske by adding toast and baked
beans. There now appear to be no boundaries to his new found enthusiasm
for cooking now and he is promising to provide further
culinary masterpieces, provided it is based on sausage, egg and
beans..
The afternoon of sailing saw us pounding along at some of our top
speeds so far towards the Caribbean and we continue to move up the position
rankings in our class. Come sunset the wind was steadily increasing, and entered
"beast mode" after dark. We were doing everything we could to drive the
boat hard and fast, and resist reducing sail but by 3am, the gusts were too much
and we decided to take in some sail and slow down before we broke
something. This certainly helped stabilise things a little but we all had
to endue our toughest night a sea so far - uncomfortable sea swell that threw us
all over the place and had the boat pitching and rolling. The boom
shuddered as we fell off the front of waves and the sails flogged. Down
below the noise was horrendous and no one got much sleep.
Finally, as dawn broke, the conditions started to ease and then our next
drama began. Mark, who had been on watch started his rig checks just
before handing over to the upcoming watch. He suddenly noticed that the
clevis pin (a vital pin that keeps the boom attached to the mast) had worked its
way loose in the night and was about to drop out. All hands on deck for an
emergency stop before disaster struck - if that pin had come out the boom would
have uncoupled from the mast, causing goodness-knows-what in term of boat damage
and, almost certainly, putting us out of the race. Yet again, all the
crew scrambled out of their bunks bleary eyed and, once again, went into
fix-the-problem actions. With Mike in his safe place, behind the wheel,
Mark, Minkey, Ben and Iain worked to reposition and secure the pin before
we reset the sails, gybed the boat and started to put some more South West
direction into our course. This time, rather than chest beating, we merely
sat in quiet reflection about what had, all in all, been a very hard
night until someone suggested putting the kettle on.
Anyway, now settled on our way again, and in calmer winds and a much
smoother sea, the crew, all rather exhausted have spent a quiet day of catching
up on sleep. Mark has started fussing about mess and Ben has started
complaining about how hot it is getting, both of which are positive signs that
normal routine is becoming restored. Mike still hasn't change his
boxers. Iain, once again had a day of firsts - cooking at sea
(well, cooking anywhere, actually) and swinging a rubber mallet at a clevis pin
in his underpants in the pre-dawn half light.
Theia Crew
Today's "firsts" for Iain
- Cooking (anywhere)
Daily Stats
Max boat speed: 13.5kts
Dolphins spotted: 0
Gybes: 2
Tubes of araldite glue used: 2
Flying Fish on deck: 0
Buckets of vomit:
Zilch