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Calash - Day 18 – Wednesday 8 December 2021



 

A lot more not a lot over the night watches. 7.5 knots average in rolling seas; not too conducive with sleep, but steady progress.  Just boring, mundane sailing – hoorah!!

Entertainment was provided by Norris who refrained from departing despite encouragement from some crew members.  Jamie, our vegetarian medic and general lover of all things organic, continued to care for the glorified white budgie, providing a wee box for him to rest and feeding him water and our precious sardines and tuna.  Norris has made a few attempts to enter the cabin in search of adventure, but is generally kept away by Alan or I acting as ‘gull-keepers’.  We feel he needs to move on with his life, but is acting like a post university child, returning back every time you think he’s flown the home!  Hopefully, he’ll take flight when in sight or smell of land.

 

24 hour progress – 175 nm – cumulative 2722 nm

 

More of the same in the afternoon.  Antoine was happy sailing west towards our destination.  Norris was making the occasional excursion off vessel, but always returning shortly thereafter.  He had developed more cunning in finding open hatches to get into the galley.  This required Colin to perform his gibbon impersonation in an attempt to sweep the intruder back on deck.  Thankfully, Jamie was there to lightly pick Norris up and deliver him back to his post at the stern.

So, with vessel set, Norris cornered and weather fairer, what was there to do?  Our journey had been eventful enough to stave off any boredom, but the reading, chatting, sea gazing, Blackadder watching and other such activities had been exhausted.  It was time for some fruitless nonsense to accompany this blog.

It has occurred to me that there may be some folk who are not familiar with all the sailing terms used in the blog.  It’s probably something that should have been done at the start, but the inclusion of a glossary now seems appropriate.  However, after nearly 20 days at sea, the mind begins to wander and for those who know me (and those who don’t, but have probably realised) will vouch that my brain works in a somewhat childish and twisted manner.  Hence, I give you…The Naughty-Cool Glossary.  It’s probably appropriate to put in a disclaimer at this point.  For those of you who take offence at anything, you are advised not to read on.  For those of you who read on and still take offence, I suggest you unread the bit you’ve read and move on to the next term.  If you still take offence, I’m really sorry and I suggest therapy, outlandish rage or grow a sense of humour.

Anyway, probably best to apologise in advance for inflaming your senses, as a minimum, and just carry on ignorantly.  For full affect you may need to cross-reference some of the terminology.  I give you…

 

The Naughty-Cool Glossary

 

Anchor - a weight to hold you down (e.g. wife, husband, partner, bank manager)

Autopilot - computer controlled device that determines where you go (e.g. Antoine or HAL in 2001 Space Odyssey)

Baton - stiff rod

Baton box - somewhere to put your baton

Bearing - the consequence of doing what you’re doing

Bilge - a load of sheet

Bimini - swimsuit for a small car

Boom - noise your head makes as you hit it again when entering the yacht

Bow - nod respectfully to someone in front of you

Bowline - a queue of people nodding

Cabin - somewhere to be thrown against walls and get no sleep

Canopy - posh little snacks to accompany grog

Cleat - a snack for Clive

Clevis - a clever device

Cockpit - PC Police interjection - use your imagination

Code Zero - a secret mission that no-one understands, that normally ends in disaster

Compass - something to prove you are lost

Crew - workers whose responsibility is to say “aye-aye Skipper” and work on their sun tan

Cunningham - nobody knows what this is

Deck - somewhere to inspect in order to get away from the rest of the crew

Downhaul - vomit overboard

Fender - Sam

Furling - a small furry animal

Galley - somewhere to take perfectly good ingredients and turn them into something inedible

Genoa - a place in Italy where they make sails

Goose Neck - something shaped like a bent giraffe’s body part from shoulder to head

Grog - something likely to result in rudder failure

Gybe - turn ahead of wind to avoid any recrimination

Gybe (crash) - very fast gybe after a particularly smelly release

Halyard - somewhere to get the Autopilot fixed

Hatch - a sneaky way for Norris to get into the galley

Head - a place to recycle and lose weight

Heading - where you are going with no relationship to where you want to go

Helm - German Autopilot

Hull - a place you find yourself where you would rather not be

Jack Stay - don’t move Jack

Jib - a task or short project in South Africa

Keel - a position you find yourself just before you fall over

Kicker - something to take if the grog’s not working

Knot - a measurement of speed slightly more than something else

Lazy Jack - Jack, you’re bone idle

Leeward - where Lee comes from

Locker - somewhere to put things but never find them again

Mainsail - most expensive sail

Mast - erect member near cockpit

Motor - sensible means of propulsion (unless your name’s Greta)

Port - opposite side to starboard

Preventer - condom

Reef - item to smoke that makes things smaller

Rudder - the complexion of someone the morning after a night on the grog

Sail - an environmentally sound means of propulsion that is inherently unreliable except in its predictable failure and consequential expense

Shackle - dirty laugh

Sheet - use your imagination

Shroud - religious piece of wire

Skipper - egotistical manic who thinks he’s in charge

Spinnaker - unfathomable piece of kit that when used will inevitably end in disaster

Spray Hood - device to avoid head seat getting wet

Spreader - someone laying on the deck

Starboard - opposite side to port

Stay - something that goes somewhere else

Stern - a look you give someone who is trying to get past you under motor

Tack - indiscriminate turn when you don’t know where you’re going

Traveller - indiscriminately move from side to side

Uphaul - vomit

Vang - Romanian pointy tooth

Wheel - something for the Autopilot to play with

Winch - a cry of pain when you hurt yourself again

Winch Handle - something to blame for the winch that normally has no direct relationship to the incident

Wind - botty burp

Windward - from whence the wind comes (danger zone)

Yacht - efficient means of disposing of high amounts of income

 

So, that’s what you do when you really have nothing else to do!

The remainder of the day was taken up with sailing (oh, yes!). And supper – tuna bake – no lack of effort here.  And night watch, which was uneventful.  However, we were beginning to get concerned about Norris, who was showing less and less inclination to take flight and seemed to be resting a bit too much.

 

Clive the cabin boy standing by…

 



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