December 22, 2024
Image Courtesy of Oman Sail
Image Courtesy of Oman Sail

52 knots, or Force 10 on the Beaufort scale – conditions that translate into a simple word: “storm”! Caught almost by surprise after hundreds of miles spent under a glorious sunshine and fair winds, the crew aboard Musandam found themselves lowering the sails in a hurry just off Wellington, and had to run without any canvas (bare poles) in order to withstand the fierce gust! With that force of wind, the simple fact of crossing the trampoline between the central hull and the float is a struggle, and one can only do it on all fours, fingers clenching the net. Fortunately, Musandam had clear waters before her bows and could escape without having to worry about altering her course – a real stroke of luck in such a narrow passage.

Charlie’s log, Tuesday 3 February: “The passage through the Strait as we headed further and further south the wind started to funnel though between the north and south island reaching a steady 35kts at time – with just 3 reefs in the mainsail and no headsail we were in a safe mode, we sailed on past the entrance to Wellington before reaching a point 3nm SW of ‘Windy Point’  – the name should have given it away, 35, 40, 43, 47, 50, 52 kts of wind screaming though the rigging, and getting pummled on deck with spray, whiped off the sea’s surface and hurled into our wet weather gear. So we scrambled to get the main down and sail under bear poles dead downwind (luckily out to sea). We continued like this and the wind dropped to 30 kts again then 25, and we kept heading SE towards Cape Palliser.”Prior to that shaky episode, Musandam had enjoyed unexpectedly pleasant conditions – we take a look back at the week preceding their Cook Strait passage.

Had the men aboard Musandam secretly signed up for a pleasant cruise in the Southern Ocean, managing to secure a “sunny conditions guaranteed” option through a very special travel agency? Looking at the emails sent from the boat at the beginning of last week, one could certainly have gotten that impression… As Charlie wrote last Wednesday, “It’s hard to believe that this is the Southern Ocean, we are 44 degrees south and the temperature on deck is 14 degrees celsius and here at the chart table it’s 20 degrees.” Having spent just over 20 days at sea, the international crew had a comfortable 570-mile lead over the 80 days pace boat and was making great progress under the sun towards the southern tip of Tasmania, skipper Loik Gallon enjoying his sessions at the helm – surfing on majestic waves and making the most of the trimaran’s speed potential.

On Thursday (day 22 – January 29), Musandam found herself some 750 miles south of Adelaide (capital of the state of South Australia), sailing at the heart of the Roaring 40s and still blessed with glorious sunshine – “Looking at the satellite pictures that download automatically on board”, explained Charlie, ” there is a corridor around 170 nautical miles wide and we have just been sailing down it, clear skies, nice wind, great direction”. Yet the tactical gybe to head towards the Cook Strait was occupying the thoughts of the strategists on board, and the anticipated windshift to the SW was expected to provide the opportunity for a change of course… which incidentally meant getting out of that perfect corridor and moving into more disturbed conditions, complete with squalls, temperature drop and slightly deteriorating sea state. It would have taken more to really affect the crew’s morale, and in one of his typical contemplative emails, Charlie perfectly summed up the joys of being at sea: “There are so few things you do for this long without having to do normal day to day stuff, shopping, putting the rubbish out, fill the car up with fuel, paying bills all the things that are going on every day in normal life that we just don’t have to do. Yet we do go shopping – I open a new food bag and put it into the storage bags (our kitchen cupboards), we do put the rubbish out – we tie up the rubbish bag and take it to the sail locker for storage, we do fill the car up every 5 days or so – I fill the generator’s fuel tank from the main tank, it’s just that it’s all here to hand. So sorry for everyone that is doing the normal things in life today, especially those people who are doing it for us, we will be back to reality really soon, just let us indulge ourselves a while longer”.

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