Saturday, November 29, 2014

Down Wind Sailing?

Well our bags are packed, we're ready to go....
Winds from the north, 20 to 15 knots..... could it be? Downwind sailing at last is here for us?
Been in the Canaries this last week preparing for our passage to the Caribbean. New crew onboard - Lyle, Mitchel and Willy. The five of us set sail this morning in a few hours. We expect to be less than 3 weeks on passage to Antigua. We will be better blog keepers we promise with Canary pictures and the story when we arrive there just before Christmas. Cress

Friday, November 14, 2014

Outta here!

 Gibraltar to Morocco!

Well my goodness- it took A LOT of upwind sailing - but we are finally out of the Med - through the Straights of Gibraltar and on the African continent - in Morocco at last! Once again though, we are waiting out some rainy weather and high contrary winds in Tangier (not exactly yacht friendly!!) before hopping down the coast.

We (the girls - now including my niece Anastasia) did manage to get off the boat for a road trip yesterday while Cress minded the boat - mainly because we are the 5th boat rafted up to a mangy dock behind an out of service ferry! Also, Cress had one of those nasty jobs to do yesterday fixing the head pump - guess that's the price for having the harem crew doting on him ;-).



In any case, we are ready to set sail as soon as possible - maybe tonight or early morning and make time down the coast.We opted to skip Casablanca when we heard the population is 4 million - after being in Tnagier a mere 1 million and being constantly accosted in the medina (not a pleasant experience at all) - but still would really like to see Marrakesh and the desert and the wild, wild, west coast of Morocco.





Otherwise, all well on board!

These photos are from the blue town we visited called Chefchaouen - on the mountains about 2 hours east of Tangier.

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Safe in Gibraltar!

Update.
Fabulous sail today. Having beat our brains our short tacking the coast of Spain day and night,against 20 and 30 knot headwinds, (under power and sail), this morning we hit the far western end of the Med and caught a break with a long single tack beat down to the rock! Gibraltar! We did it Turkey to Gibraltar. We left Turkey, October 4th, arrived here November 8th. One heck of a lot of upwind sailing!
Tied to seagull-shit festooned dock for tonight, too tired to care or go ashore! 
Details to follow.

C

The Harem Crew rocks


Ahem…..
…….

…Ahhhemm! 
Which one is the squash? (hint - none of them, its a carved Halloween melon
Ask Barb)
.........
Testing…testing one, two, three….. four.
Hmmm, well it still seems to work….
……
Well, Hello!
Some of you may have been wondering where is Cress's voice in all of this on the blog. Where is the Captain!?
Indeed, maybe you haven't noticed, and that's okay, but I certainly have been wondering!
You see, I am the lone man on a boat load of four. All three of our crew are, shall we say, 'mature' women, each quite practiced in being in command all on their own. And taken together on a boat? Well, they practically don't even need a captain!

Ellen, Barb, Irena, left to right
They are impressive. They show up for watch at every ungodly hour and in every kind of weather, on time and in good spirits, dressed sensibly no less. Like a trio of Broncos they hang on and steer without complaint while the salt water runs down the back of their jackets and the boat bounces through the short Mediterranean chop. They take sailing orders without complaint or question, and learn quickly which of the endless ropes to cleat, release, pull, wrap, coil, etc… And -- this is what separates them from the more macho crew we have had the pleasure of - they also clean, tidy and organize below until the boat is in Bristol shape. And each meal from their galley is a feast fit for any time or place. They plan and shop up all the food, organize it in our fridge and freezer, and serve it up each meal with wine and we practically eat off white table cloths, almost.

And they get along. They stand watch together, cook together, clean together, do their toe nails together, talk, talk, talk, even sleep together (well not in that way of course, but you know how much more comfortable women are bunking in together). They flow. Doubtless you have pondered how seamlessly a school of fish cohere and move as a singularity, or the wondered at the way a flock of birds fly together, as if a single intelligence. And so we have it on Conversations. I suppose it helps that Irena and Barb are sisters, and that Ellen and Barb go way, way back, and that all three then share a common life history of Winnipeg winters and Whiteshell Lake cottage summers.  They practically finish one another's sentences! And, they are, perhaps, the best crew I have ever had!
Can one man manage?
Wuat's a guy to do?


So boys, a new standard has been set. Lyle, Mitch, Willie, the bar is high. The challenge formidable. When we go from an all-woman crew to an all-male crew to sail across the Atlantic in December from the Canaries

Irena will be there to witness our glory or our ignominy. Let’s show them how men!