Saturday, May 30, 2015
Magical
Finally!
Friday, May 29, 2015
Where Art Thou Wind?
As for life on board we are all having a good time. We have two fishing poles out trolling off the back of the boat but no bites yet. Did some laundry ad hung the clothes on the life lines to dry. Every other day I come off a watch at 15:00 and relax with a Dark n Stormy since there is about 14 hours before I come back on. We have been visited by Dolphins at least three times yesterday and a pod of pilot whales went by us this morning. Both yesterday and today sea turtles have floated past us. Through the AIS on the GPS we can see boats that are in our vicinity. There was a sailboat that is not part of the ARC fleet that was ghosting us for a couple of days but we lost them when we decided to motor sail North to find wind. For a few day a huge boat, the He Hua Hai, 243m x 43m was keeping pace with us just over the port horizon but stopped yesterday. We then saw a tug, the Alp Winger, show up so we surmised that it had some sort of problem and called for a tow. As we turned North we could just see the very tops of the two vessels over the horizon as we went past.
Last night was another gorgeous sunset but we have yet to see the green flash. At that time the sea was absolutely flat, almost like glass, with just a slight swell, since when is the North Atlantic so benign?
Note: a quick flash of excitement, we finally got a bite on the fishing pole but before Tefo could come out and grab the pole the the line ran to the end and with the quick jerk that made the fish got loose. Out goes the line again...
Monday, May 25, 2015
Afternoon Snack
Saturday, May 23, 2015
Dark n Stormy
Dark n Stormy
Thursday, May 21, 2015
on the Way
Also be lighter than the north route
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Friday, May 15, 2015
Pixie Dust Has Landed!
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Land Ho!
Bermuda Lights!
Day 6
While there is no or little wind the seas have picked up again so the ride is a bit rock and roll, during lunch in the cockpit one wave hit and a jar of salsa slid across the table, jumped over the side and down my leg. I have one more watch left, from midnight to 3am.
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
Day 5
Today has been a beautiful day with much calmer seas than the last few days. Unfortunately that was accompanied by zero winds so we are now motoring. Judging by the radio reports ( there are two radio check ins a day) many others are also motoring.
Yesterday was a rough day with a few squalls but overall not too bad. Luckily I have not experienced any seasickness. Yesterday and today have been sitting in the cockpit reading.
Had a request via a comment on Pixie Dust's blog about what kind of boat I'm on. It's a 1980 Morgan 46 center cockpit sailboat. It's about 46' long and has a beam of 13'. It's quite comfortable. The aft head even has a bathtub! We have all the water we could want as there is a water maker that takes the seawater and converts it to drinking water at a rate of about 12 gallons an hour. There is a hot water heater so we have hot water showers.
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Day 3
Continuing along with the repair of the day theme Joe had to troubleshoot why the propane switch by the stove wasn't working, ended up being a bad solenoid so now we have to manually turn the tank on then off when using the stove.
Dawn made a nice and spicy soup along with cornbread that she made in the Omnia stove top oven. We had a good laugh when the lid was removed. Since the stove wasn't gimbaled the batter went to the lower side according to our heel so we had a ring of cornbread that was about two inches thick on one side and a half an inch on the other.
Joe ran the water maker and the generator so he filled the hot water tank and we all had nice hot showers.
Monday, May 11, 2015
Day 2
I had my first night watch last night, midnight to 3am. I have not felt scared or nervous so far on this trip, I completely trust Captain Joe, but the first half hour of the watch I was terrified. Couldn't see a thing especially forward if the boat just hurtling ahead in the dark. Once my eyes got used the darkness and I draped my sweater over the Garmin plotter I could see more easily forward and was able to settle in to an easy watch. I just lifted the sweater every ten minutes or so for quick peak besides, it was the other instruments I had use more than the Garmin and they all had night lights.
Sunday, May 10, 2015
Day 1
At 10:45 we left the dock and motored out into the main channel where the other boats were starting to congregate for the noon start. Starter horn sounded and we were off, next stop Bermuda!
As soon as we went past Jost Van Dyke Island we set a course straight to Bermuda, should be a starboard tack the entire way.
We settled into a watch schedule of two three hour watches starting at midnight followed by a four hour watch from 0600 to 10:00, two five hour watches then another four hour watch end at midnight , you generally have 12-14 hours between shift.
Most of the time between shifts is spent talking, reading, cooking, eating and cleaning.
We have making good time, averaging about 6.5 knots on either a close haul or a close reach. Winds have been fairly steady between 18-20 knots form about 60 degrees. The autopilot takes care most of the work with just occasional sail trim. Seas have been a bit rough at 3-5 foot waves and the occasional higher swell. Have not been seasick yet!
Friday, May 8, 2015
Links
We are so excited about our up coming Atlantic crossing! As you all know we will leave Nanny Cay Marina with two additional crew members on May 9th. We will sail 6-7 days to Bermuda, spend a few days then May 20th we will restart for an ~ 14-16 day sail onto the Azores. After a week of discovering these beautiful islands we will proceed from Santa Maria June 14th on a 7 day sail to Lagos Portugal.We have three tracking devices on board. Our trusty SPOT is still active and we will try to push it twice a day. The rally is providing a tracker called Yellow Brick. You are able to see the entire fleet by going to this link. http://www.worldcruising.com/arc_europe/event.aspx and choosing fleet viewer on the left hand side.The last option is our Iridium GO tracker. This track can be found at http://forecast.predictwind.com/tracking/display/PixieDust. This tracker updates hourly.We intend to post short blog messages that will be posted to Facebook. If you happen to not be a Facebook type you may find anything we post here: http://pixiedustsails.blogspot.comThrough our Iridium Go we are able to receive email while underway. The address is pixiedust@myiridium.net. We would love to hear from you!
If you follow SV Pixie Dust on Facebook you will see the SPOT postings on the Facebook page, if not then us the Fleet Viewer on the world cruising site above and look for Pixie Dust.