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Maalu IV - Day 12 Random Jottings



I can't believe that we are now into our 12th day at sea. We are less than 1250 miles from our destination and possibly looking at arriving in St Lucia towards the end of next week. That will not be a day too soon as the persistent strong winds and high seas are tiring although we are making excellent progress towards St Lucia. We gybed today, a process which took three of us over an hour to perform, and are now pointing directly at our next port.
One casualty of the high seas has been our celebration for reaching our half way point which we did a little over 24 hours ago. The planned celebratory dinner with champagne has been delayed as cooking in these seas is extremely difficult and the idea of adding alcohol into the mix was deemed totally foolhardy! Currently I am using the frozen food which I had prepared in Las Palmas for meals.
Maalu IV continues to look after us very well however any moment of inattention allows the waves to pitch us off balance and we are all collecting an amazing array of bruises. Iona's unique watch system has us all well rested even if it is a challenge to sleep in a boat that often feels more like a tumble dryer. Despite all this morale is high and we are starting to make plans for our time together in the Caribbean.
We continue to be chased by squalls as we cross the high seas. The crew have been renamed as the squalls do appear to treat each of us differently. Jono and I are the "squall busters" having experienced the strongest gusts of wind at 39 knots. Iona is the "squall magnet" as she gets more than her fair share of drenchings and Nicholas is the "squall dodger" as he has got much less wet than the rest of us. We are now very familiar with the pattern; the squall becomes visible on the radar or by sight, the leading edge arrives with strong wind which may change direction from the prevailing wind and then the rain starts, and boy does it rain! We are all in full wet weather gear for night watches as it gets pretty cold when we are wet. Squalls have gone from being exciting, to a minor inconvenience and are now a total pain. Oh goody, they get more frequent as we get closer to the Caribbean! The only upside to the squalls are the glorious rainbows that appear.
Conversations between yachts on VHF radio have become a real source of excitement. In the early days it was clear that ship to ship calls were between crews who knew each other. Information was exchanged about weather forecasts, sail plans and prospective routes. As the fleet spread out, and VHF only works on line of sight, new friendships are forged as we call, and are called by yachts in our vicinity. One of these new friendships is with Mary Doll, who we have crisscrossed tracks with since the first night, and today passed within half a mile of her after 1642 miles at sea!  It is reassuring to hear that her crew are experiencing the same as us and are making very similar decisions. We are now sailing parallel courses only 10 miles apart. We are looking forward to sharing a rum punch with her crew at our mutual destination.
 
Challenge of the day - Jono has broken out the Christmas playlist!
Highlight of the day - surfing at 15.4 knots down a wave!
 
 
 
 


m_RainbowMaalu

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