Thursday 24 November 2011

Looking back over the last six months ( more photos to be posted soon)


Looking back on the last 6 months of voyaging.

It has been a great voyage which at times has presented challenges but no major problems.

Once in the South East trade winds North of Rarotonga it was generally pleasant easy sailing with the wind usually aft of the beam and shorts and T shirt weather. The only dangers were from the rapid increases in wind strength around rain squalls. We could see them coming in the daylight but more care was needed to keep a good weather eye at night.  Reef passes in places were a little tricky especially when the GPS did not coincide with the chart (which could be several hundreds of metres out of the true position).

We enjoyed all the islands we visited but some were more special.  Aitutaki had an ideal small sheltered harbour and the people were very friendly.

Suwarrow was definitely the highlight of the voyage and a place we had planned to visit for ages.  It was so isolated – no airstrip, no cargo shipping calling in. You could only go there if you had your own yacht.  The book ‘An Island to Oneself ‘ by Tom Neale describes his years on Suwarrow living as a hermit – it is well worth a read.
The wild life – particularly the bird life was amazing.

Samoa was a totally different type of experience tied up to a pontoon in a Marina in the capital Apia. We stayed longer than expected as Denise had to have a root canal filling but we explored the island and enjoyed our stay, including visiting the former home of Robert Louis Stevenson. Many yachties had themselves tattooed here and certainly it seemed like most of the population, including the women , had at least one tattoo.
In Savaii, the smaller of the two Samoan islands, we had a quieter time.

Wallis Island had a beautiful large lagoon with one main island and several smaller ones on the margins of the lagoon.  If we had spoken French I think we would have enjoyed our stay even more as English was not much understood,

Fiji was great especially Savusavu in the north and our port of entry.  The Fijians are such a cheerful bunch of folk. The Indians perhaps a little more reserved but still very friendly. We are certainly hoping to go there again in the future.

Having a good crew in Ted for the Auckland to Rarotonga and Fiji to Auckland legs of the voyage worked out very well and we had a lot of joking and yarning. We both enjoy the challenge of being at sea and making an ocean crossing.

I have written a few notes more specifically about Katipo which may be of interest to sailors reading this blog.

The whale
 There were many excellent sailing days on the long first leg to Rarotonga although the collision with the whale was a concern lest there were any structural problems caused which we had not been able to identify.  In fact later, when we could dive under the hull, we found a ‘ding’ under the port hull, and also a small longitudinal crack under the strong wooden laminated fore main beam which probably was caused by the sudden unyielding impact on Katipo. Good job we were not sailing a keeler!

The Parachute
The experience in bad weather of being held bow on to the parachute sea anchor mid ocean on two occasions was most interesting and very successful. It proved much easier to deploy the parachute than expected but took a while after the bad weather to get it back on board.

What we had not anticipated was the force exerted on the small trim tabs (like a small rudder attached to the back of the main rudders and linked to the self steering wind vane). We initially lashed them amid ship but when surging backwards as a wave struck before the parachute ‘kicked in’ and pulled us forward, the load on them caused a bolt to shear on the arm at the top of the trim tab. After that we let them swing with the seas with no further problems. The tillers were lashed amid ship using thick rubber bungy straps.
Like the trim tabs, the rudders were under quite a load and this caused some wear on the pintles - however not enough to be a problem for the rest of the trip.

We used the parachute because of very big seas and very strong head winds.  We could have sailed on but would not have made much progress and it would have been very wearing on crew and boat.  Another reason was that a glue join in the base of the engine box which is between the hulls, had opened up and when pounding into big head seas caused sea water to squirt through the crack into the engine box. Unfortunately the leak was in a position impossible to get to from the top.  Shay and I later repaired the leak in Rarotonga harbour by lying on our backs in the dinghy under the centre deck while screwing a patch into place.  This fixed that problem for the rest of the voyage.

Sails
The sails, though twenty three years old, held up well. The new large furling reacher proved excellent in light winds.

One improvement next time would be to consider a roller furling head sail because with hanked on sails we often sailed under-canvassed. This happens because you may be  sailing along fine,  then a squall comes through and you reduce sail, then because it looks like more squalls could be imminent you do not put up more sail because it is a fair amount of effort.   If you had a furler you could wind the sail in and out frequently as required. It could be easily done from the cockpit.

Anchoring
We used a 20 kg Bruce anchor with 20 metres of 10mm chain and 100 metres of 18mm nylon warp. We often had to anchor in water up to 18 metres deep.  We were lucky to never drag anchor and never got the chain or warp tangled round a coral head or other obstruction.
I think 30 metres of chain would be even better – I often imagined that the warp might be quietly chafed through under the water while we slept.  An electric powered anchor winch would have made life easier but on the other hand winding in the anchor by hand keeps you fit.

Engine
The 20 Hp Kubota diesel did well, starting every time at the first turn of the switch.  It proved only just adequate to enter a couple of the passes in the coral where swift outgoing currents tried to drag us out to sea again.

When ocean crossing we rarely motor preferring to save fuel for any emergency situation should it arise like losing a mast etc

Chart Plotter and instruments
We had a fairly old Navman chart plotter and instruments .  Our speed over the ground by the GPS was usually faster by a half to one knot than the boat log recorded.  We estimated our corrected voyage distance to be a total of 5,500 nautical miles. 
We also had a back up chart plotter program on our lap top, a hand held GPS, and a sextant.

Beam lashings and Rigging Lanyards
The four crossbeams are lashed onto the hulls in a total of sixteen places.  No adjustments were needed although I did tweek a couple of the frapping lines. They probably would have been ok anyway.

The standing rigging stainless wires were attached to the hulls with lashings and I did not need to tighten these during the voyage.

Water and supplies
We had no water maker but had no trouble obtaining good water in the places we visited. We carried the water in 15 litre plastic containers which were easy to fill by taking them ashore in the dinghy.  What we should have organized before we left New Zealand was a rain water collecting system – maybe by putting a lip around the roof of the central pod.
Extra water for washing clothes or ourselves would have been good.  Denise would have liked more fresh water for hair washing!

Washing up dishes in sea water proved fine, especially with washing up liquid designed for us e with sea water. We did not do this of course in ports where the water was probably suspect!

We stocked up with plenty of basic supplies in Auckland and these lasted well. We bought more as we needed them and plenty of fresh fruit and vegetables. We tried some foods we had not had before like arrowroot – a root crop and the unusual soursop fruits. There were inexpensive excellent snacks available in the islands like Taro and also Cassava chips.



Health  
Cruising is generally a healthy life. Denise had bad luck injuring her wrist in a fall on a slippery boat ramp and earlier having to have a root canal filling. I lost some weight and came back fitter than when I set out.
We had mosquito screens which we could velcro into place on open hatches at night.  They were used mainly in places like Samoa where we were tied up in a marina or near the shore. Generally at anchor in a bay the breeze kept mosquitoes away.
I noticed that minor wounds seemed to take much longer to heal than when onshore.  This was particularly so when on the longer ocean passages – perhaps because one is wet and salty much of the time!



Wednesday 9 November 2011

KATIPO is home again !!

We picked up our mooring buoy in the estuary at Shelly Park at about 1.00 pm today after a long cool night sailing in winds from 14 to 28 knots from near Bream Head to Waiheke Island, where we arrived off Gannet Rock at dawn. From there we motor-sailed the last few miles into a fresh SW wind to home.  Denise was waving from the end of the sandspit, it was great to see her. 

Denise, Ted and I had a hearty lunch  and had a few laughs together. Then Ted boarded the local ferry to take him into Auckland and home.  Ted has been an excellent fellow to sail with.  He has covered many sea  miles over the years and has much experience.  He is someone you can rely upon and is not one to panic.  Thanks Ted for all you contributed  to this voyage and the earlier leg from Auckland to Rarotonga.

Later in the day Lee, Angela, and grand children Zoe and Olivia came to welcome me home.  Lee helped when I moved Katipo into her usual mooring place in the estuary outside our house. Shay and Jo arrived from Auckland City and Shay helped us tidy up on board. I had a yarn to Tim on the phone so quite a family home coming.

My  neighbours gave a gave a cheer as Katipo sailed in and held up a welcome home banner - fantastic.

What next ??  lots of catching up to do and some painting on our house. A few jobs to do on Katipo.
 I will certainly be writing a short summary about the voyage in the course of the next few days - the high lights, changes to be made etc.

Tuesday 8 November 2011

sand flies by the thousand

Coordinates:35 46 S 174 37E
Bearing:150
Boat Speed:4
Wind Direction:SW
Wind Strength:13
Sea state:lumpy

Crew health: great

late yesterday the wind dropped and we motored into Bland Bay which is between Tutukaka and Cape Brett , a pleasant small bay. We anchored overnight and today it has been light variable wind as we sailed slowly along the coast . We are currently approaching Bream Head. Yesterday after I had sent the blog we were invaded by an immense cloud of thousands of sand flies which settled all over the boat . They did not bite us but were everywhere - most have blown away today - most odd,

Caught two barracuda today, they certainly have fearsome teeth - we did not fancy eating them and put them back into the water.
With the winds as they are it is still too soon to give an ETA

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Monday 7 November 2011

Katipo is underway again heading South

Coordinates:35 14 S 174 24 E
Bearing:135 M
Boat Speed:3 knots
Wind Direction: NE
Wind Strength:5.2
Sea state:calm

Crew health:great

Ted and I have been watching the weather hoping for a fresh northerly blow but it seems a way off and we decided to depart from Opua this morning in a very light SW wind.
We sailed out to Cape Brett and motor sailed between the rocks on the Cape going inside Tiheru Island ( the dog ) and Otuwhanga Island. As I look back we can still make out the hole in the Rock which is so popular with the tourist boats.
We have the big red reacher up and are hoping the wind holds.

We had an interesting time yesterday afternoon having a few drinks on one of the boats of two retired, American single handed sailors who met West Indies and have been buddy boating ever since.
Today as we sailed out of Opua we saw a fellow Wharram catamaran sailor , Sam, on the Tiki 46 he had built. She was beautifully finished and looked great.

We are not sure when we will be back in Auckland - if the wind holds we will carry on sailng overnight - if not we will find somewhere to anchor like Tutukaka.

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Saturday 5 November 2011

Opua - outboard engine trouble

It has been cold windy day here in Opua as it has been in much of New Zealand. Ted and I were going to go ashore today to get some victuals from the supermarket. The outboard motor on the dinghy has been starting first time for months but today I yanked on the start cord time and again with no go. I cleaned the spark plug , I changed the plug for another one not new but should have been ok . We checked the fuel flow and everything else we could think of - still no go. Meanwhile the gentle breeze had risen to a brisk 20+ knots. I decided to row in to shore, which is some way, to buy a new spark plug from the chandlery shop. It was a hard row but they had some in stock. Back to the boat - new plug in - "it will go this time " I confidently said to Ted ! No luck - so it looks likely we will have to get it sorted on Monday.
One tends to take the outboard for granted and it is not until it stops working that you realize how handy it is ! Still it is really a luxury - Joshua Slocum managed just fine without one!
There seems no chance of an easy sail down to Auckland in the next three days , a high pressure system is moving across from the West to the East of NZ slowly. But as soon as the Westerly or Northwest winds kick in we will be off.

I intend to write a short summary or overview of the trip, highlights, lessons learned, any extra gear or changes to make next time etc later.

I will write again on the blog as soon as we get underway again over the next few days .

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Friday 4 November 2011

Lazing in Opua but poised for the next leg of the voyage down the coast to Auckland

What a change of lifestyle - one day sailing at sea on watch every 3 hours at night and every 6 during the day, trying to get enough sleep if conditions are rough, physically working hard changing sails as required by the wind speed and direction , cooking below in a constantly moving galley, watching for shipping especially near the coast. Also checking the boat for signs of wear or tear - a worn lashing, a loose bolt, chafe on a sail etc.

Now at anchor in Opua all is suddenly changed - we can relax more, have a yarn to fellow cruising sailors on shore, cook in a quiet, still galley, go buy fresh bread and fruit and the daily newspaper. This morning I had a great hot shower after going to see the folk in the Marina office. I was told that we would have to move from the pontoon on the edge of the marina as catamarans are too wide to be near the fairway. So we cast off and are now anchored nearby, only a short dinghy ride to the shore and facilities.

Life is not too lazy however as the boat has to be sorted and tidied up . ropes coiled here, water from spray through a hatch when opened on passage to be cleaned from the bilge there, and lots of soggy clothing, towels and so forth to be washed. Fortunately there is an excellent laundromat next to the marina office here so I have just returned from washing and drying two big loads. Because on this voyage most of the time we had the wind just forward of the beam there was a lot of spray flying and one tends to run out of dry clothes. The passage from Auckland to Rarotonga on the other hand was for many days with the wind aft of the beam of the boat, so there were dry decks , no spray and less wet clothing.
We are currently waiting for favourable winds for the trip down the coast to Howick - no point having to sail to windward when the wind is likely before too long to go
to a more northerly direction - it brings to mind that old saying of "gentleman don't sail to windward'.

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Thursday 3 November 2011

Opua

Had a pleasant sail in the sunshine today with a NW wind , caught a small Tuna for the next couple of meals and then there in the distance we spotted the hills around the Bay of Islands, FANTASTIC ! It has been a great trip since last May but now it is very exciting to be home again. I will probably crash soon as not much sleep in last two days. We are tied up at a pontoon on the outside edge of the Marina in Opua. We have sorted everything with customs , biosecurity and immigration. We have given up our last few onions , a tomato, half a cucumber and have had some chick peas and honey confiscated. The guys were very pleasant though and of course are very busy at this time of year with so many overseas boats arriving.
Ted and I are celebrating our safe arrival with a bottle of Warrior Cove Sauvignon Blanc which we found stowed in the bilge of the starboard hull - our first taste of alcoholic drink in 10 days.
More notes about the trip tomorrow

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Wednesday 2 November 2011

getting closer!

Coordinates:33 26 S 174 18 E
Bearing: 166 M
Boat Speed:5.9 Kn
Wind Direction: WNW
Wind Strength:26kn
Sea state: confused seas and steep cross swells

Crew health: great

Fish caught: two lines out as I write

After quite a few grey miserable wet days on this voyage today has been fantastic . I came on watch from 6 am till 12 pm and it has been bright sun shine , not a cloud in the sky , a clear horizon 360 degrees all round - it makes you feel like you are in the middle of the world. On top of all that a fresh 14 to 20 knot breeze and skimming along. The wind has recently been gusting to 30 plus so we have reduced sail somewhat now - the motto is get there with no damage, broken gear or ripped sails - speed is not everything.

Denise and I met many cruisers over the months and that philosophy seemed to predominate. There were one or two gung - ho types but most were very careful to wait till good weather windows with light winds and most seemed to sail very conservatively. Many were on small incomes and boat damage can be expensive or impossible to fix in remote places. Then there is the inconvenience of waiting for replacement parts if you are at a bigger port etc.

The plan is to check in and clear customs at Opua then sail down the coast to Shelly Park, Howick as soon as the winds are right and we have had a chance to relax, tidy up the boat and dry things out.

Hoping for a tuna for tea !

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Tuesday 1 November 2011

A wind change

Coordinates 31 29 S 174 13 E
Bearing:164
Boat Speed: 6
Wind Direction: NE
Wind Strength: 17
Sea state: moderate swell

Crew health:excellent

A wet , dark cold night with fairly big seas smacking into the hulls as we sailed in 25 to about 35 knots . Today less wind but much cloud and rain . However about an hour ago the forecast change to a NE wind happened quite quickly which is great - suddenly no flying spray , wind aft of the beam and an easy sail with mainsail and a poled out staysail wing and wing. It is so much better and we can have some hatches open and start to dry out again!!
I am about to down load the next 4 days weather forecast - hopefully it will be a good one and we can continue to make good progress towards Opua

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