Saturday, June 12, 2021

Dolphins!!

Last night at sunset and this afternoon. 

No lucky photos yet.. just crappy phone-camera snap with lousy timing. But I'll keep trying! 

Day 39/12

We are definitely not in the doldrums we have been sailing in a nice strong breeze since yesterday afternoon.

It was a tough night. Very dark, with no moon and heavy cloud cover. Plenty of rain before midnight, not too much after. The seas were very confused and not tiny. The wind was 17-22+. We stood 2-person watches and it was good to have a buddy. Nobody left the cockpit and everyone was harnessed & tethered all night. And we were happy to see the dawn.

It was cool to see how much sail trim we can do by feel. The boat performed well.

We sailed the main on the first reef (shortened a bit at the foot) and the staysail (the smaller of the triangle sails on the bow). I suspect we averaged 8 knots through the water on our preferred course toward Hawaii Island.

Now, at almost mid-day, and over 11° North latitude, the skies have cleared significantly, the waves are trying to find a more consistent pattern and we are all getting accustomed to the new rhythm.


Love & Light,
~e.

Friday, June 11, 2021

Day 38/11 Sailing Again!

Ok!
I think it's real...
I think we are out of the ITCZ & the doldrums. (What a depressing word.)

We've had steady wind speed and direction for an hour and a half.

And it's pretty favorable.
We can sail at about 1/2 the windspeed on our preferred course! Hot Damn!
We are back in the saddle, baby!

Thanks for all those good vibes! Keep 'em coming!!
Love, light, & fair winds,
~e.

Day 38/11


Still stuck in the zone.

Luckily, the engines are running well. (Thanks to all the blood sweat & tears.)

We are getting down to half of the fuel stores. It computes. 

We are running sails and engines in a southerly, light wind scenario. Hoping to just sail soon. 

Jeff is getting itchy. 
Itchy to get going. 
He talks to the air. 
(We are all doing FINE. Just Fine.)

Jeff is also getting hives when he goes in the engine room from all the petroleum products.  We are all taking turns. 
Love,
~e.

Stuck in the Zone - midnight musings


We have been running the engines in a low-to-no-wind situation for over 12 hours; since noon yesterday.


Now at 3am, we may have finally hooked up with a breeze.


Fingers crossed.


((And a picture of one of yesterday's flying fish casualties))


Love and light,
Fair winds!
~e.

Thursday, June 10, 2021

Navigation Instrument Display



Here is a picture of the main navigation display from earlier today.


Those scary red blobs, aren't actually scary. They are rain clouds; if they are pretty dense (precipitation-laden), they return a radar signature. They've been blossoming (as Torsten put it) all day. (Insert heavy eye-roll, emphasis mine.) The concentric circles around the boat icon are 2 mile increments (changable: you can zoom in or out while the radar is sweeping.)


The dialog box at the top is showing our direction and distance to our next waypoint, the SW side of Hawai'i, the Big Island. 326.8° on the compass and 864 miles. (It also shows a constant recalculation of the estimate travel time & arrival... I NEVER look at that.) 


The thin blue line diagonal from bottom middle/right to upper left is the track from one waypoint to the next.. in this case, 002WPT to 003WPT... our goal is to stay a bit to the right of the line if we can. ( To give ourselves a cushion, like choosing a more comfortable ride in a swell.)


The boxes in the bottom left are:

Trip Log: 1529 miles

Heading: 342.0°

GPS position:

Latitude: 6° 15.5' N

Longitude: 148° 36.3' W

COG (course over ground) 351.5°

SOG (speed over ground) 7.6 knots


Trip Log was zero'ed at the marina; that's the number we check everyday at 5pm.


We are more than half way!!! 


Why isn't the Course and the Heading the same? Excellent question! 

Idk. But I can tell you that heading is a magnetic compass reading. COG is a GPS calculation. 


We also have separate gauges for wind angle/speed. And customizable readings. Plus the autopilot screen (which also has a bunch of info... some of it the same)

There's a quiz tomorrow. (Jk)


Love & Light,

~e. 



In the Zone

It's a gray, flat light day. Good size mixed swell. Variable winds, lots of rain clouds. This is the part of the Convergence Zone that they call "the doldrums." Lovely name.


We've reluctantly come to terms with the fact that we did not get obscenely luck and get to skip this part. (Not an easy pill to swallow, after all the models looked SO GOOD! Sigh)
Weirdness abounds in the ITCZ just like everyone said. Rain pops up out of nowhere, and vanishes just as quickly. We'll catch a lively breeze out of the West?? Which makes no sense.
More than once I've been at the helm, looking around at the sea and the sky, looking at the instruments, remembering the models, and just dumbfounded. I just don't know what to do, to make the most of the nonsense.


We've all decided that when in doubt, just head toward Hawaii, even if we motor.
We do have to monitor our fuel consumption, and regularly check on the engines.
For example, Jeff replaced a belt on the port engine, this morning. We pulled water out of the fuel separators on both engines yesterday. It's part of the deal.


Love and light,
Fair winds!!
~e.