jamesjermain
Active member
Have just returned from Corunna having crossed Biscay in a little Moody 46. The passage included about 90 percent light headwinds. The skipper, understandably, decided to motor-sail to keep up a reasonable average speed. We therefore spent 52 hours under power - is this a record?
I have to say I was as close to being bored as I have ever been on passage: Biscay was as benign as I have ever seen it. The other crews on the YM Biscay Triangle Rally, of which we were part, felt almost cheated.
Among incidents reported from oher boats were: refuelling-at-sea manoeuvres, very close encounters with whales, masses of dolphin, huge swarms of baby Portuguese men-of-war, a lightening-str-ke near miss, fishing nets round props, and the sinking of a Russian submarine trying to break through the Plymouth exclusion zone. One boat caught 8 tuna in a day.
<hr width=100% size=1>JJ<P ID="edit"><FONT SIZE=-1>Edited by jamesjermain on 03/08/2004 12:22 (server time).</FONT></P>
I have to say I was as close to being bored as I have ever been on passage: Biscay was as benign as I have ever seen it. The other crews on the YM Biscay Triangle Rally, of which we were part, felt almost cheated.
Among incidents reported from oher boats were: refuelling-at-sea manoeuvres, very close encounters with whales, masses of dolphin, huge swarms of baby Portuguese men-of-war, a lightening-str-ke near miss, fishing nets round props, and the sinking of a Russian submarine trying to break through the Plymouth exclusion zone. One boat caught 8 tuna in a day.
<hr width=100% size=1>JJ<P ID="edit"><FONT SIZE=-1>Edited by jamesjermain on 03/08/2004 12:22 (server time).</FONT></P>