4/10/11 (Not sure if this one posted correctly from yesterday so I’m sending it again, sorry if it’s redundant)
Position: 08 degrees, 36 minutes North; 119 degrees, 11 minutes South
We’re making good time and saw a 24 hour run of 155 nautical miles today. We’re consistently doing around 7 knots (I even saw 11 knots last night as we slid down a good size wave) but we’re paying for it a bit. The wind is up in the low twenties which is no big deal, but there is a very confused sea which is making life a little uncomfortable. Wilson can’t get the boat in a groove because just as we start sliding down a nice swell, a cross swell from a different direction bumps us sideways resulting in a huge roll first to one side, then the other, then back again. This process is almost constant since yesterday evening. It means you can’t stand, walk or otherwise do anything without either grabbing something with both hands or wedging yourself between two parts of the boat, or both in order to keep from flying across the cabin or cockpit. In fact, I’m sitting sideways on my bunk with my back against the wall and my feet firmly placed against the side of the cabin in order to write this.
By the way, we did pass 1000 miles today around 1230.
So, instead of Ann waking me this morning a little before sunrise for my morning watch, I was treated to a splash of water that came through the porthole on a particularly deep roll. Nice sunrise though. Lots of tradewind “puffies”, little cumulous clouds that have flat bottoms at about a thousand feet and rise about another thousand.
Saw a little lightning last night off in the distance. We’re nearing the ITCZ, which right now has been moving around between about 5 and 7 degrees North. Another day or so I imagine and we’ll be dealing with navigating a path through it and on to the equator. In the meantime, ITCZ means we’re going to start seeing squally weather with lightning, wind, rain, etc-oh wait, we’re already getting some of that. 😉
Ann has a cool new boat project; refuse reduction. Or more specifically refuse volume reduction. Organic and paper goes over the side, but plastics, foils and such have to be stored somewhere and our experience has been that they just take up valuable space. Ann has found that a pair of scissors does wonders. I’m sitting looking at a one gallon zip lock bag full of colorful looking bits of plastic that have been cut up. Mostly Fresca bottles (for our Charisma’s!) and juice boxes but when you cut them into one inch squares, they fit in about one tenth the space (maybe less). And they are kind of decorative too with all the pretty colors and shapes! (With the large ziplock bag half full I have “reduced” 5 plastic bags, 2 Fresca bottles, 6 snack wrappers,1 paper towel bag, 5 tea/hot chocolate wrappers, 1 box juice and the preformed lettuce box. Not bad!)
That’s about it for now. No fishing today. I had the line out this morning, then thought; “what the hell am I going to do in these waves if I catch something?” and brought the line back in. Oh, and no bath either. I was looking forward to a bucket bath, but it’s too rough out so I had to settle for a “handi-wipe” bath. Cooking suffers when it’s rough as well. Dinner’s going to be “basic box” tonight since it’s no fun cooking when the boat’s rolling through 60 degrees and you’re getting thrown around the galley (both Ann and I have bruises all over where we use parts of bodies as cushions while trying to keep the hands free for slicing and dicing and such). So, I’m going to sauté some green beans leftover from last night with some bacon bits Ann bought by mistake (the packaging looks like salad with all the pictures of lettuce on it) and the whole bunch is going to get dumped in a pot of Mac and Cheese. But it will taste really good, ’cause everything does out here. And we will be balancing this with our new favorite no lettuce salad – ¼ cubes of a jicama, carrot, green apple and mango. Splash this with the juice of half of a lime and we are scurvy free too!
sounds like Ann may be a bit board or getting a bit CRAZY!!
When I saw on the weather charts – wind from NE at 20 knots and main wave direction S at 6 ft, I figured you’d be living in a washing machine for a while. Hang in there. It’ll be a lot calmer in a couple of days. The major swell will continue to come from the south for several more days, but when the wind dies down it will be much gentler.
Keep an eye out for those squalls. The radar is great at night for seeing them, and dodging them before they hit you. On my passage we forgot to do that till we got hit by a huge squall one night. Live and learn. You’ll see parades of squalls marching in a line and try to cross between them, like running across a highway between trucks going 60 MPH. 🙂
As for those boobies. They haven’t gone anywhere. They live on the ocean most of the year and only go ashore to nest. They are just smart enough not to try landing on your rigging when it’s rocking so wildly.