Gludy
Well-Known Member
Hi everyone.
Despite me being a raggie now I know some of you follow our fortunes and misfortunes so i thought I would give an update.
We left South Africa heding for St helena then Grenada - a 5,800 mile trip that we managed to do in 29 days of sailing so we averaged 200 miles a day, which by sailing standards is good!
On the other hand we faced major problems with the boat and had everything from electrical meltdowns where undersized cables had been used to the steering detaching itself because nobody had done more than hand tighten the nuts!! So it was an eventful journey when we learnt a lot about the boat and for the last 6 weeks in Grenada we have had pretty well non-stop repairs which continue to this day but the light is at the end of the tunnel and the boat is fine part from a series of really stupid mistakes which can all be put right..... it feels as if this has a five year saga to get a boat that is right!
Life in Grenada is very relaxed - we have now decided to lay the boat up from July to October in a boat yard here and return to the UK. The hurricane season and insurance restrictions pretty well force this on us this year.H
We had no big seas at all in a total of 6,200 miles from Port St Francis and rounded The Cape of Good Hope in calm conditions. In fact had we placed a cup of water on the cockpit table in Cape Town and left it there we would not have spilt a drop on the entire trip to Grenada. We met bad seas between islands here, 15 foot holes close together and much worse than anything in the crossing.
My boat travels from A to B faster than a displacement or semi-displacement power boat of the same length cruising in long distance mode. Our worst day in the crossing was under power 177 miles and the best under sail 250 miles. Our power range is 2,400 miles and we use about a litre every 2 miles when under power..
So my pilgrims progress journey is almost over - at least once this new boat is put right and we face a new season over here, I hope it will be - a working boat to cruise the world in.
I started the Atlantic journey as an absolute novice raggie and I finished it just as a novice - I have a lot to learn, despite having now clocked up 7000 miles - the truth is we would not even change sails for 3 or 4 days at a time, hence in some ways the experience of a crossing is limited.
We plan to cruise the Windwards then over to the San Blas islands and the western Caribbean countries before in a few years heading west across the Pacific. But all plans can change - that is part of the freedom.
Despite me being a raggie now I know some of you follow our fortunes and misfortunes so i thought I would give an update.
We left South Africa heding for St helena then Grenada - a 5,800 mile trip that we managed to do in 29 days of sailing so we averaged 200 miles a day, which by sailing standards is good!
On the other hand we faced major problems with the boat and had everything from electrical meltdowns where undersized cables had been used to the steering detaching itself because nobody had done more than hand tighten the nuts!! So it was an eventful journey when we learnt a lot about the boat and for the last 6 weeks in Grenada we have had pretty well non-stop repairs which continue to this day but the light is at the end of the tunnel and the boat is fine part from a series of really stupid mistakes which can all be put right..... it feels as if this has a five year saga to get a boat that is right!
Life in Grenada is very relaxed - we have now decided to lay the boat up from July to October in a boat yard here and return to the UK. The hurricane season and insurance restrictions pretty well force this on us this year.H
We had no big seas at all in a total of 6,200 miles from Port St Francis and rounded The Cape of Good Hope in calm conditions. In fact had we placed a cup of water on the cockpit table in Cape Town and left it there we would not have spilt a drop on the entire trip to Grenada. We met bad seas between islands here, 15 foot holes close together and much worse than anything in the crossing.
My boat travels from A to B faster than a displacement or semi-displacement power boat of the same length cruising in long distance mode. Our worst day in the crossing was under power 177 miles and the best under sail 250 miles. Our power range is 2,400 miles and we use about a litre every 2 miles when under power..
So my pilgrims progress journey is almost over - at least once this new boat is put right and we face a new season over here, I hope it will be - a working boat to cruise the world in.
I started the Atlantic journey as an absolute novice raggie and I finished it just as a novice - I have a lot to learn, despite having now clocked up 7000 miles - the truth is we would not even change sails for 3 or 4 days at a time, hence in some ways the experience of a crossing is limited.
We plan to cruise the Windwards then over to the San Blas islands and the western Caribbean countries before in a few years heading west across the Pacific. But all plans can change - that is part of the freedom.
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