Monday 30 November 2015

Messages to the crew (Part 6)

Hannah Ganly

Richard hope all well. Reading blog every night. Obviously no fishermen on board. Big wind here.
Robert & Sandra

Jeffrey Ryan

Hi Alpaire,

Really enjoying reading your daily blog and watching your progress on the tracker.
The weather here in Dublin is very wet and stormy (Turkey shoot was cancelled on Sunday) so envious to  hear of the improving conditions for you !!

At this stage you must be really well settled into  a routine and find the days flying by...........hopefully you will land an elusive fish before the trip finishes!

Well done on 3rd place ..........good to see the competitive spirit!
(presume an earlier reference to  Peter Pan was actually Des)

Seaya


Jeff

Alpaire Day 7

We are now a week at sea on Alpaire. I am sure that you think that a lot of us have been at sea all our lives. We covered 150 miles noon to noon, (that is velocity made good to our destination VMG). Our actual distance through the water was more. We measure the distance to go to St Lucia to calculate VMG. Our actual through the water distance was more because we are sailing at an angle to the direct route in order to increase our speed. That angle depends on the wind direction.

This is fabulous sailing, the skies are mainly blue like the sea, winds are F3 to F4 from astern and the fish are flying. We had very few rain showers in the last 24 hours. Dress code is shorts and teeshirt. Sam had a saltwater shower using a special German shampoo (of the Wahoo and Yahoo family). Being the Sabbeth, Des allowed the rest of us a freshwater shower. Anybody contemplating the ARC should have a water maker and a generator. One of the boats on the SSB net reported that they made 60 litres of water. Alpaire's water maker makes that quantity in 20 minutes. Strange thing is that we can only hear the large boats close to us. Fingers crossed, pride comes before a fall.

We are at 36 degrees West. Every 15 degrees is one hour of time difference (360 degrees divided by 24 hours). I was curious as to the time of sunrise. I consulted the Pocket Universe App on my iPhone, 08:43 at UTC/GMT -2.

When it rose in the morning we noticed lots of sea birds. We were excited by the equation (birds = fish). They seemed to be taking one look at our lure and concluding that we were amateurs, no need to waste time, these guys are not going to catch anything. But we had a direct bite, probably a marlin or an orca. This morning our yellow squiddy bait, hook, spinner and everything had been taken. It could also have been a direct strike by a 10/10/20 bag! Des is still doing a technical analysis of the broken line. He wants to consult Sherlock Holmes when we get back.

All well on the good ship Alpaire, greetings to all.

Saturday 28 November 2015

Alpaire Day 6

The fair ship Alpaire continues to enjoy settled weather with occasional showers during the day and 15 knots from the NE. The day time temperature is circa 25 degrees. Night watches are now in shorts with a jacket for the rain which we get at some time each evening or night. We are maintaining our Westerly course waiting for the wind to go more East. Then we will gybe. At the moment our detailed routing calculations suggest tomorrow morning at 07:35 should be the opportune time. (our = Jan somewhere in Europe we think, and me). The exact timing depends on how long a forecast period is covered by the weather grib. Predicted meterological events in ten days time have the same probability of 1 as wind shifts in tomorrow's forecast. As you will appreciate this is an exact science and practitioners are never wrong.

We made 163 miles noon to noon and are now 1695 miles directly from our destination.

We did not get to see Jupiter and pals before dawn as there was a big raining cloud this morning . They let us know of their presence with a bit of lightening. We can see the extent of the rain in the cloud and its movement relative to us on the radar. We were able to sail a more Northerly course to avoid the worst of it.

However Venus and Tinker Belle have competition as we have our own Bimbo on board. Yes, procured for us by Angela, Jo, and Margaret, in that well known den of iniquity - el Corte Ingles. Bimbo is a stowaway and shares the forward cabin with Sam and me. Sam is the ship's doctor and is adamant that Bimbo is not good for our health - (long life white bread). Des specialises in Bimbo sandwiches and served them toasted today. For the technocrats it is one minute and 23 seconds, any less than that its hard cheese, too long a bit carcinogenic.

Last night the fish came to us. We had two flying fish on deck this morning. We think that the collective noun for flying fish depends on what they are doing at the time.
In the water, it is a shoal,
In the air, it is a flock
In pairs, it is bait, or a meal!

On the SSB radio net one boat reported that they had caught eight fish so far. They brought live squid as bait. They caught another big un as we spoke. I thought that he said a marlin but that was the name of the boat. They were planning to get out the golf clubs to deliver the coup de grace, Mulligans allowed.


All the best from Alpaire, we are enjoying 8 knots in 16 knots of breeze sailing 270 True, due West into the setting sun, and it is steak for dinner, again!

Alpaire Day 5

The wind deserted us yesterday evening. A large cloud, nine miles across, with lots of rain around mid-night put a dampner on the wind as well. We had four to six knots of breeze for about six hours. At least it was still behind us. We covered 137 miles from noon to noon. A 200 mile run is just an aspiration (one of Des's many dreams). The swell is now a lot less as well and the motion of the boat is easy.

We have company here with one boat to the North all night and during the day. He is carrying a spinnaker, gybing back and forth, but usually is within 3 to 10 miles of us. At one stage last night we were struggling at 3 knots but he was doing 8 even though it was a clear sky and he was only 3 miles away! On the SSB radio call some said that they were using their engine. They must have a lot of diesel.

We are still sailing North of due West (280 degrees) on the fastest course that suits our rig. The direct course to St Lucia is 257 degrees true. The weather gribs are suggesting that the wind will get fairly light here in the next few days so that early tonight we may gybe and head sharply South. We will make our decision on the latest available forecast. Our direct distance to go is circa 1830 miles, in a straight line.

When the rain cloud passed we had a beautiful peaceful night with the moon again providing great light. Then before dawn we had Jupiter, Mars and Venus in procession exactly aligned and following the moon. The Ancient Greeks would have concluded that this miraculous configuration was a potent of things to come. Why were those three gods marching in formation? What was up? Fortunately Mars was not first - that would surely have meant war! We decided that it was the dawning of the age of Alpaire. Check it out if you get a clear sky in the morning. Better still write the lyrics!

We got our answer at 09:30 this morning. The swivel shackel attaching both jibs onto the swivel for the furler at the top of the foil parted. Both jibs came down. So Peter Pan had to take to the air and follow Venus into the sky to retrieve the furler. We were back in action with both jibs within 90 minutes. We also had time to address some wear on the jib sheets and on the topping lift. The latter is particularly curious because it comes out of the front of the mast with no allowance for the fact that the pole can be set almost at right angles to the center line of the boat.

Todays competition is to identify Peter Pan. I think that Ellen McArthur has a soul mate.

We had tuna for lunch at last, but out of a tin. We have concluded that the Wahoos are slippery customers just like their first cousins - the Yahoos in the Law Library! Aonghus you might forward this to Patrick O'Reilly as we had to guess his email and it bounced. We promise no more insults to your bretheren in return.

We are still using a yellow squid and a fishy thing. We put the lines out at dawn and will run them through the night. We have also had a full range of speed. So even if the Yahoos are a bit slow....

We think that Ria is correct. The bird was a long tailed skua (stercorariuslongicaudus, page 167 Collins guide to Birds of Britain and Europe).


Happy ship, all ok here.

Friday 27 November 2015

Messages to the crew (part 5)

Tim Carpenter

Hi Finn,
Nice day 4 update.
Been tracking your progress and see you are been persued by a very calm patch ...keep the vmg up!
missing nothing here in  Dublin, nice damp soft weather followed by tropical rain.
but then you are closer to Saint Lucia than to Dublin bay.

See team Brunel should be in st Lucia in the next 60 hours if she keeps her speed up!

Great to see you are holding your 3rd place.

best


T & D

Alpaire Day 4

Another good run yesterday, 180 miles, noon to noon. The max wind speed was circa 27 knots during the night. We had rain showers until about 4 am, but no real wind gusts. He had rolled the main because of the gusts we experienced the night before. We set it again at 5 am because the rain showers had died out and it looked as if we were unlikely to get any strong gusts. That proved to be the right call. We gybed a few times to maximise our VMG (velocity made good towards St Lucia).

The full moon came up shortly after dusk. It was a beautiful sight, slightly orange in colour, occasionally covered by cloud. Eventually the sky filled with cloud but the moonlight was strong enough to give good visibility. We are wearing long sleeves and a waterproof jacket on watch at night. The temperature is very pleasant, about 22 degrees.

The remaining cloud burned off this morning and we had a beautiful day. Wind is a bit less at 12 to 17 knots from slightly North of East. The dolphins made an early appearance. We are getting very interesting weather information. The stronger winds are on the more Northerly route. That is expected to change in a few days and the routing software says we should all then gybe onto port and head South quickly to find stronger winds later. The timing will be critical. Too late and we will be left behind in 6 to 8 knots. We notice on the daily email of boat positions that the boats in the racing class are implementing that strategy.

This afternoon the sky clouded over and it is fairly humid. We can expect rain and perhaps squalls into the night.

Can anybody identify a white bird a little smaller than a seagull but black and white underneath with a long thin tail like a spear and pointed wing tips like a tern? Des thinks it is a frigate bird?

Ria advised us that "Bjorn used to make the lures - he would make a squid from the finger of an old kitchen glove. It had to be a yellow glove. With yellow squids we caught tuna, wahoo, spanish mackeral, dorado. Any other colour, we caught nothing. The right speed is important. At 8 knots you might be sailing too fast. We tended to catch fish at 5.5 to 6.5 knots." Thanks Ria your email arrived just in time, and provided another set of excuses for Sam and Des. Immediately Sam sprang into action. Des did not want to sacrifice a rubber glove even though as Richard says we would have ten lures, if we pretended that they were one armed squids. The compromise was bits from a yellow shopping bag. I think that we should have saved the bag for the next time we get back to El Corte Ingles! We also managed to get our speed right when the wind dropped at lunch time. Perhaps feeding time for the wahoos is different than for the crew.

Tell Margaret that we are looking forward to her chicken dinner tonight.

Find below an update of the ARC fleet today:

Magarite: diverting to Cape Verde to fix vang and boom.

Calypso: taking on water through their transom door. Sailing south to calmer waters to assess and make repairs.

Duffy: Dismasted this morning following a strong gust and broach. All crew and the boats watertight integrity are ok. Yacht 'Marlene F' assisted with the transfer of 180 litres of diesel. Duffy are now motoring to El Hierro with emergency VHF antenna in use. YB Tracking increased to positions every hour and the coastguard have been informed. No further assistance required at this time.

Mark and Ria thanks for the emails. I (Finn) was a bit too cautious about the use of our credit. Emails are great from family and friends. We timed the text only ones, ie no attachments, and they send receive very quickly, so unlikely to cost much.


All well here and the best to everybody at home.

Thursday 26 November 2015

Messages to the crew (Part 4)

Sand McAllister Really great watching you on the app! Hope you're having a great time dad!
Sarah McAllister Hope you are taking pictures!!
Suzanne McAllister Sounds amazing dad! Following you on the app! Xxx
Alex Mcallister What about the sea sickness?
LikeReply17 hrs
Breda O'Mahony Back strand very calm ! !!!




Richard Force five message came through but my reply not delivered xx Jo


John Leckey

To Uel and Alpaire crew, best wishes from John, Barbara and all the members of Arran Yacht Club.  Monitoring your progress and great to see you in 3rd.  Remember to keep your dagger board up!!  BTW, just had a lovely pint of Guinness - cool and creamy, yummy, yummy. 

Day 3 update and fleet update

We had a great run and sailed 193 miles from noon yesterday to noon today (as the seagull flies)  Only another 2,125 miles to go! No seabirds at all.

The steak for supper is likely to be four legged. Neither of our fishermen could earn a living from it. They say that it was the pod of 40 unruly teenage dolphins playing at the bow that was their handicap, ie they frightened the tuna and doradoes away.

The last few nights we had fabulous light from the moon. Even though we had some cloud cover, it was thin and visibility was very good. We had a few squalls of 30/33 knots during the night. We are making 8 knots plus and the squalls are from aft so the impact is equivalent to 22/25 knots.
Today started bright and sunny but it became overcast with showers and squalls (35 to 38 knots) in the afternoon. We have rolled our main. Water evaporates from the surface of the sea during the day due to the heat of the sun. That humid air cools at night time giving the short lived showers and squalls, which are downdrafts with the rain. We can see the rain on the radar and have plenty of warning. I wonder if the rain squalls will be less tonight in view of the overcast afternoon?

We are running a three hour on and six hour off watch system. One crew changes every 90 minutes. So we have adjusted and fresh eyes on watch at any time. The first schedule ran from 18:00 on Sunday to 18:00 today which if left unchanged would then repeat at that time. (3 hours on plus 6 off repeats at 18 hours, so we let it run for 3 days as 72 divides by 9). We change the sequencing today and will run the new one for another 72 hours. Watches and SSB radio calls are all on UTC (GMT). The ships clock will be changed every four days to adjust for the change in daylight as we travel West. Our meal times are based on the ships clock.

No more boats to be seen on the AIS. We are all alone on the wide wide sea. Dermot B says that return emails are ok provided no pictures or video attachments and that it is telephone calls on the Sat Phone that really eat the credit. So the odd email is good.

Fleet update:
- Luna Rosa: Reported at 0848 UTC 24/11 their danbuoy and horseshoe buoy were lost overboard in position 27,17.390 N 020,56.513 W. All crew are well. The coastguard have been informed.
- Vahine, Oberon and Hanse Sailor have all departed Las Palmas.
- Adventure: retired from ARC following rudder problems.
- Jolly Red: diverting to Cape Verde, Mindelo for engine repairs.
- Southern Child: diverted to Tenerife for boom repairs. Plan to depart soon.
- Laissez Faire: technical issues with SSB Radio. Cannot perform net controller duties.


All ok here, a happy ship.

Wednesday 25 November 2015

Messages to the crew (Part 3)

John Bateson

Hi Richard and the crew, Skipper included of course.

You appear to be leading your class – very good.

May I suggest you try ‘Down-Wind Tacking’ – It is essential with multi-hulls to take advantage of their boat speed – but I have found it also works to advantage with mono-hulls as well, However if you are already making max hull speed running dead before then it will not particularly help, but if not making max hull speed considerable gains improvement in course made good can be made.

Good luck and less of this ‘fishing lark’ – that is all extra Drag!! Wait until you are becalmed for that!
All the best


Rachel Leckey
Following you on the tracker... Come on not winning yet! Hope all is well, lots of love.

All well on day two

Conditions have now settled down. Wind has dropped to 15/20 Knts. Temperature is 24 degrees, mixture of sunshine and cloud, such weather for late November. These conditions are forecast to continue for the rest of the week with the wind gradually going lighter. Our notional interim way point is 25 degrees North, 25 degrees West. You should be able to see our position any time on the YB tracker. No rain, so with deepest sympathy for all at home we ran the water maker. We are planning showers for all tomorrow.
The sea state is easier. We have set the main as well as the twinned poles. We gybed twice just to keep the crew busy! Des's competitive instincts were teased when we heard on the SSB radio net that one boat had caught a tuna and another had caught two doradoes. Now we are fishing as well! However most of the crew felt we should take something from the deep freeze, that is those of little faith! Sam and Des are competing with a line each, Des is using a pink squid and Sam is using a green fishy. Hope to tell you tomorrow which is more appealing (I don't mean Sam or Des!)

We discovered that running the generator interfered with our transmissions on the SSB radio. Other boats can now hear us loud and clear as we make sure it is shut down when we are using the SSB. The radio net starts with a call over and we each report our position, speed conditions etc. Then we get the gossip. One boat lost its rib, presumably it was hanging off davitts at the stern and clearly not strapped down.

The fleet has dispersed and we can see just one other, a Norwegian Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 54.

All well nobody sick, all ok, again no reply or acknowledgement. Even though this is to lots of people it counts as one email but any individual reply counts against our credit.


Ever hopeful I have delayed this email as long as possible but alas dinner from the freezer is now served.

Tuesday 24 November 2015

Update from the Alpaire (Day 1)

We left the marina just after 11:00 on Sunday morning. There was a great fanfare of boat sirens and a band playing as we exited the narrow entrance.  Wind was 20 to 25 knots from the NE. Our course was to leave Gran Canaria to Starboard and then to head Westwards at the Southern tip of the Island. There was a lumpy sea running so most competitors stayed under the shelter of the breakwater until the last moment. We started on the line just SE of the Marina and Breakwater. We were 20 seconds shy of the line, because Des did not want to set the jib to be sure to be sure. There is a three hour penalty for being over early. Our intended rig for the voyage is to have two identical jibs goosewinged out for blue water downwind sailing. We had each sail hoisted in the groves of the forestay. At the start the wind was too much on our port quarter to carry that configuration. We tied the two clews together. So we were off to a stormy start at 8 knots, under doubled jib and full main. Th  e sky was overcast and the temperature about 20 degrees. We had the odd shower with a squall.
We are in very good shape. Alpaire has been thouroughly checked from stem to stern. We are fully provisioned with scrumptious frozen food, enough to get us to the Antartic and back! But I want to turn right at the bottom of the island. I think that the others want to go South. Angela, Eleanor, Margaret and Joe have prepared the most delicious meals. So thank you to everyone who has helped.
AS we sailed down to the East of the island we got to the wind acceleration zone at the airport. The largest mountain on the island rises to 1700 mtrs. It is a feature of sailing here that we can expect zones of accelerated much stronger winds and then also wind shadow effects. These extend to 150 miles South of each island. So at times we have had 30 knts down to six. Our highest burst of speed down the 4 mtr waves was 11.2 knots. At the corner we dropped our main and set the two poles. The boat is very stable with that rig.
By dawn the fleet began to seperate. However we see our neighbours on the AIS.

We have limited email capacity on satellite phone. So no need to reply to this or acknowledge it. We get weather up dates daily as well as the position of each boat. We can download a weather grib file and run our own routing thanks to Jan who is our external router. We have a scheduled Radio call with the fleet controller at 13:00 each day. Each boat has a YB Races tracker device. If you download the App you can follow our progress and the fleet.

Messages to the crew (Part 2)

Cathal D'Arcy

Des and company,
I've just checked in on your progress. You're scooting along at 7.8 kts on a heading of 248 degrees as I type this. Not a bad clip for a cruiser!  

Wishing you all well on your journey West. Fair sailing!

Julie Rowan

Hi Des, Sam, Drewry and you other boys.

As far as I can make out you are making great headway and clipping along. Well done. You seem also to be eating like Lords. Any tuna yet? A little bit of fresh sushi would go down a treat! and I bet Angela remembered to include the wasabi.
We are having very mixed weather here. It was gorgeous on Sunday, crisp with blue skies and bright sunshine. Then yesterday-grey and rainy.
Thanks for keeping all your avid followers in the loop, I for one am so glad to be watching your progress from the comforts of home, and toast your safe journey at regular intervals.

Mind yourselves.


Monday 23 November 2015

Some pictures from social media

Hi all,

We'll be checking in on the crew's social media feeds and posting updates here when we see them. Here are some photos from the adventure so far.

Our last night ashore
Hard Work
Our floating island
Rib aye...
Sam
Gathering supplies

The A (Alpaire) Team
The fleet departs
Away we go
See you all in three weeks

Some messages to the crew (Part 1)

Tim Carpenter

It looked like heavy boat weather to date and for the next week or so. Just one patch of light winds on the rum line thursday/friday.
Your heading went to 320 at around 1716?

I hope the crew is working well together!

Robert Dix

God speed.

Dave Byrne

Hi Des,
Good luck and safe passage from Dave Daniel,and Florence on Forgone Conclusion. We will keep watching you .

Jeffrey Ryan

Watching your progress on the tracker.
All looks good !
Hope you are all settling into  a routine and enjoying the trip!


Safe sailing!!!

Thursday 19 November 2015

The 1st Post

Hello everyone,

This is going to be a blog about how everything is going aboard the Alpaire on our trip. We'll try to add photos where we can but for the most part this will be text based. If you want to get in touch with the ship then please do so by emailing vulture@marco.ie Please put "Alpaire" in the subject line.

We will then post your messages here on a daily basis Monday to Friday so that the crew can see them.

Here are a few photos from our time away so far.

Not what it looks like. Just training to deal with a choking crew member.

Dinner
Sam enjoying a coffee

The week starts

The fleet