Month: October 2019

Please Make It Stop

This post is rated NFM (Not For Mom!)

If you read Captain Dan’s article from yesterday you read about the sporty start we had on our first day out of Fiji. The thing is, I read his account and just don’t feel he gave you a complete picture of what really transpired. No, he gave his typical straightforward, nonemotional account. So, let me tell you how it really was out there.

We left Momi Bay on the southwest side of Vitu Levu under a beautiful sunny sky. The bay was very calm but we could see that just outside the pass there were some decent sized swells. OK, no big deal….as long as they are not short frequency. Several miles away on our starboard side was a fuel tanker headed our way. We were both headed to the same pass through the reef only he’s doing just over ten knots and we’re doing five. Everyone knows these things don’t slow down or stop quickly so I was a bit on edge. To me the pass just didn’t look wide enough for both of us. Of course you know what they say about women and our ability to judge distance. We could see on the plotter that he would be passing us in about twenty minutes….just about the time we would be in the middle of the pass. Yes, Jilly was a bit on edge. Of course Dan said I was being nonsensical and I should just relax. Chances are he was right.

Before heading out of the pass we threw up the mainsail. We knew it would be a lot easier inside the bay. With the motor on and the tanker closing in on us we made our way to the pass. The tide was going out so the currents in the pass were rather strong. There were standing waves and whirlpool upwellings that were pushing us around like a toy boat in a bathtub. Believe it or not I wasn’t the slightest bit concerned about that as we’d been through atolls that were far, far worse. I just kept looking back at that tanker as it got bigger and bigger in our rear view. She eventually passed us just under two tenths of a mile to our starboard side. That’s a little too close for my taste but I do have to admit that Dan was right and I really had nothing to be nervous about.

When we hit open water the beautiful calm we experienced in the bay turned into 20 knot winds with 2.5 – 3 meter swells and they weren’t long pretty rollers either. In fact, the sea was rather choppy and a bit confused. Almost immediately we decided we’d need to put a reef in the main. This requires that we turn into the wind and swell. It’s my least favorite maneuver in seas like this because the boat rises high on the crest then slams into the trough of the waves. It’s hard to keep her in that position for long. While I’m doing that Dan is on deck hooking into the mast and tying the reefing lines down. If I fall off to much the boom could come slamming across the deck and throw him overboard so it’s a very intense moment. Since we’ve just started this journey we don’t yet have our vests out so he’s not clipped into the jack line making can me a bit more on edge. So here were are less than forty-five minutes into this trip and I’m already at my second stress point as I’m trying to control Dazzler while not taking my eyes off Dan. Fortunately Dan is quick to get the reef in and hurried back to the cockpit. I turn the boat back to our course while he starts working on the jib. Once the jib is flying Dan takes over the helm and I head below to settle in for the long trip.

It’s only just before 10 a.m. and I’m already thinking how much I’d like a beer to settle my nerves. Of course there’s no drinking underway so I’ll have to play some games or read to take my mind off the situation.

Now I realize that we’ve spent five months in Fiji making short, calm water passages so I do understand that I’ve probably lost my edge a bit but as I’m being bounced around like a pinball down below I’m wondering why we chose this particular weather window. I can’t sit around the table because we are on a port tack which means with every crash into the swell I’m being tossed out of my seat. I don’t want to go to the bunk because I want to be able to hear what is going on in the cockpit so I carve out a small space in the quarter berth at the nav station and curl up with my iPad. This puts me at the bottom of the companionway stairs so I can hear everything going on outside.

Of course I’m having a hard time concentrating as with every crash of a wave against Dazzler’s hull the boat is vibrating and if you’ve never been in rough seas on a boat, let me tell you something, the sounds down below can be truly frightening. There’s creaking and growning and even sometimes shrieks and I’m not just taking about what’s coming from me. Dazzler speaks a language all her own out here and it’s not always pleasant. Having logged over 15,000 miles on her I’m no stranger to her eerie cries but I will never get used to them.

After being crammed in the quarter berth for about a half hour I decide I’m going to try again to sit around the table where I can stretch my legs. I just get myself tucked in and wedged between the table and wall with pillows when I hear the loudest crash I’ve ever heard out here. It feels like a car hit the wall behind me and I’m tossed forward out of the seat. For a moment I thought we hit a container or whale or something. I let out a high pitched scream and looked toward the cockpit. The doors were closed and the hatch was halfway open. Before I can even call out to Dan I see a flood of water coming through the half open hatch.

I raced across the salon cussing like a, well, sailor while looking for towels. I’m grabbing iPads and phones off the nav station and tossing them into the galley to get them out of the flood on the desk. There’s papers and logbooks and other things there that are now sopping wet. Dan yells down to ask if I’m okay and somewhere between “Son of a bitch and holy hell” I manage to mutter, “Yes.” I spend the next fifteen minutes cleaning saltwater off of the radios, switch panels, pillows, floor, walls you name it. All the while I’m bouncing of the walls and stairs which will not doubt end in a Picasso of black and blue marks all over my body. I yell up to the cockpit, “I hate this! This is NOT the cruise I signed up for. I’m never making this passage again!” Poor Dan! I’m sure it’s not the cruise he signed up for either and now he’s got a screaming woman making it worse. Sorry my love.

Once my mess was under control I stepped up the stairs and looked into the cockpit. I see Dan leaning across to the deck moving things around, I asked him what’s going on and it takes him a second to gather his thoughts. He finally sits down under the dodger and tells me the entire cockpit was flooded with water like a bathtub. For the first time I saw a bit of concern and stress on his face. This puts me over the edge. Fear has now taken over and gripped me to my core. I look into Dan’s eyes and the tears begin streaming down my face, I can’t stop them. He looks at me with such helplessness because he knows there is nothing he can do about this. We have to ride this out and it’s going to be miserable for a while. He smiles at me with his handsome smile and says, “This is sailing Babe. It’s all good. Isn’t it fun?” As usual his comedic way of handling things makes me smile. It didn’t take away the fear but it did make me stop and take a breath. I know Dan is a highly competent sailor and would never put us through anything we can’t handle. I also know that Dazzler is made for this type of bluewater sailing. She can handle it. She’s a tough old broad. She actually looks like she likes it when we crash through a wave and the sea comes frothing up several feet on either side of her bow. It’s as if she’s saying “Look at me! I’m beautiful and strong! Just look at me!”

I also knew going into this that there are parts of this trip that will seriously suck! This trip is not for the faint hearted sailor. No, this is one for those who truly love sailing and are willing to take the bad with the good. Many cruiser wives refuse to even do it. Their husbands get crew and the women fly to New Zealand. But, I’m not one of those women. We are a team…Dan, Dazzler, Grape Ape and I. Okay, okay, so I know it’s time for me to put on my big girl britches, hoist up my bootstraps and dig in. I’m here for the long haul.

I won’t kid you. The rest of the day was still a tough one for me. I had moments where I just started crying. I tried to keep them from Dan as much as possible. He had enough to deal with in the cockpit. He didn’t need to be worrying about my sanity too. Two more times before the day was out we had water douse the cockpit so much that we ended up with it down below. Apparently the scuppers on the hatch are just too small to handle such large amounts of water coming in at one time.

The rough seas and high winds remained pretty consistent throughout the day. The winds reached up to 30 knots at times. I would poke my head out every once in a while to get some fresh air. We had to close up everything so it got a bit steamy down below. Twice when I came up we were seeing part of the pumice raft floating by. A couple of months ago an underwater volcano erupted near Tonga, it sent tons and tons of pumice to the surface. A cruiser I met at Musket Cove was one of the first to come upon it. It was several miles long and wide and in places it was so thick you could walk on it. That’s not something you want to take your boat through. If you’re running the engine it can foul your prop and clog your water intake. And the pumice is so sharp that it can literally grind the paint off your hull and cut into the fiberglass. That’s not a good thing. (Google 2019 pumice raft to see it. It’s amazing!)
While I wanted to see this with my own eyes I also didn’t want to see it. Fortunately what we saw was just ribbons of it scattered about the ocean. Sometimes we saw patches as wide as four or five feet square but that was few and far between. Of course after the day we’d had I was saying more prayers that this wasn’t just the beginning and that we weren’t going to encounter a large swath of it. Seems like at least that prayer was answered.

It was too rough to do any real cooking so we had leftover steak from the night before. I made Dan a steak sandwich or rather I made him a beef slab on a bun. I guess I should have cut it up but by this point in they day I’d had it. I slathered a little mayo on the bun and tossed on a whole slab of steak. I wrapped it in a paper towel put a granola bar with it and called it supper. Later he said he felt like some rabid animal tearing the flesh from a fresh kill. I told him that at least he got a bun. I literally stood at the sink in the galley with a slab in my hand tearing it apart with my teeth.

By the time feeding time at the zoo was done I was exhausted. It was time for me to go down for my pre-watch nap. The first night is always the hardest and as expected I hardly slept a wink. Before I knew it my watch was due so I donned my foulies, grabbed my Coca Cola, granola bar and apple and headed to the cockpit. This was going to be a rough watch. Dan said that four or five times an hour water was either slamming up against the port side and over into the cockpit or racing down the starboard deck hitting the winch box and pouring in on that side. Either way I’d be sitting under the dodger on the deck hiding out. It was too wet to have an iPad on deck and too rough to hold it anyway. For the next four and a half hours I would be sitting in the dark playing hide and seek from the ocean.

What does a person do for all that time? Well, I wrote this article in my head. I started to put a mental list together of things I want to get when we go to the states this year and I sang every song I could think of. Yep…I sang hymns, children’s songs, show tunes and even Christmas carols. And for the last hour and a half I not only dodged saltwater coming into the cockpit I dodged giant raindrops as we sailed through a few squalls, Oh yes…I also did an awful lot of talking to Mother Nature, Neptune and God asking them all to please calm the seas and make the rest of our passage go smoothly.

Yes, it was a really rough day out here and I feel better knowing you now have the full story. Hopefully I will be able to sleep and tomorrow will be a better day. Have I told you lately how much I love this sailing stuff?
By the way, where is that bottle of rum?

Until next time…
Jilly

Live The Plans You Make

Rated NFM (Not For Mom)


The time had come for us to get Dazzler ready for her 1200 or so mile passage southbound to New Zealand. All systems checked, serviced, inspected an evaluated for passage. The land of Fiji flat water sailing had come to and end as well. My game face is on and it’s time to put on our big boy pants and get into a good mindset to make this passage. Jilly always knows when a passage is near. She calls it my passage face. Hell yeah! Two souls are at risk under my watchful eye. Serious stuff Maynard!

There are some who know this passage too well and others that are novices. Although, the fact that we have completed a passage to New Zealand last November from Tonga and then back to Tonga last April in NO way makes us any kind of expert. We put on our foulies like everyone else. One leg at a time. For the last few weeks I’ve been pawing over weather GRIB files and pretending that I know what I’m looking at like a man obsessed with cute little wind arrows and chart graphics. Hell, all those arrows and I didn’t even see any Indians!

The stars were starting to line up into what looks like a good departure and passage window. We have hired a weather router to assist us on this passage as well and a firm date for departure is confirmed. It’s is amazing the difference in weather models. They either look similar or are 180° from each other. Which one do you use? The answer is all of them. You can never have enough input to make a weather related decision.

We had cleared Fiji Immigration and Customs and were ready to go. Now the game of hurry up and wait. We positioned Dazzler in Momi Bay for our departure. All systems are now go for launch. Wait a minute! Do I remember how to sail in the big water? It seems everywhere we’ve been for the last several months we motored or motor sailed and the passages were mostly short hops on flat water. Hummmm! Well, it must be like riding a bike. Right?

As it turns out, once we cleared the channel through the reef we were met with our first task in the Big Water. 2.5-3.0 meter swells in 18 knots of wind. As Jilly would say, “Bamm! Sausage!” Here we are, no easy re-introduction into sailing with flat seas or warm 15 knot trade winds. Nope! We were instantly back in the big game. Every move in the cockpit is slow and methodical as we orchestrate a sail plan change from full main to a double reef and the staysail was rolled into a triangle half its fully deployed shape. That’ll do Donkey! Oh I forgot to mention the passage through the reef we had just come through, we had a large tanker following us from a mile to our stern. The tide was going out during our transit and there were some unusual currents, upwellings and standing waves. But, nothing like atolls we’ve experienced before.

Okay. Back to the passage. While settling into passage mode there were cries from the cabin of “I don’t want to do this. This isn’t the cruise I signed up for. I want this all to stop. We’ve never had anything this rough before.” I guess flat water sailing can become your Achilles heel when you transition back to the big water, so to speak.


I have to admit that if I have a choice I, like many of my friends, would chose flat, long, rolling, following seas, a 15 knot wind on your quarter, writing your name in the ocean from the downwind rail and cocktails with little umbrellas on the aft deck. This wasn’t going to be one of those times. Nope!

As the day progressed the winds built into the mid twenties and then up to the low thirties with the swell remaining constant in size, yet closer frequencies. I’m not going to lie to you, I was wondering why we didn’t just haul Dazzler out in Fiji and forgo this passage. You know I’m not a spring chicken anymore. LOL! Our vessel insurance requires that Dazzler be south of 27° South for cyclone season and we still have a car to deal with in New Zealand. So, here we go.

Everything was starting to settle out and we were getting set into our passage routine. You know close all the hatches, drink plenty of fluids to stay hydrated, watches and the peace of the sea. The peace was still roaring at 30 knots and then it happened. The big one. The mother of all swells decided to slap us square on the beam. We got doused with water. Sea water was everywhere. The cockpit was like a bathtub. Jilly yelling up from down below, “Jesus! There is water everywhere.” I expected to see Dazzlers floorboards floating around when I looked down the companionway, but it wasn’t as bad as I thought. Jilly was there crying and saying she didn’t want to do this anymore. And, next time she’ll fly to New Zealand, etc…which didn’t sound too bad to me right about now. But, stiff upper lip and all that, Right?

The forecast isn’t for these strong winds for the whole journey and in fact we will have some periods that we will have to turn on the auxiliary engine to keep our speed up. I’ve heard it said that passages to New Zealand are not for the faint of heart and not about the journey. But rather to get there. Don’t waist time trying to be a sailing purist. Just get there to avoid the potential weather transitions.

Weather on a good forecast is usually good for about three days. After that changes can and do occur. It can go either way. Better or worse. I like the better myself. Luckily for us we download weather twice a day or more via our Iridium Go. Very remarkable device. Although it’s slow it is very reliable. We have a back up for downloading weather and that is the high frequency radio. But, linking up to land based stations and unsuccessful downloads become problematic. I literally have spent a few hours attempting to linkup with a station and obtain a successful download. The HF radio is a valuable tool for communication. Every nation including our own wants to have their own regulations for use of the HF radio. Luckily there is an international system in place that helps regulate usage worldwide for good, bad or indifferent.

Anyway, that’s my story from the cockpit on our first day of passage to New Zealand.


Cheers!
Captain Dan