San Diego to Nuka Hiva Day 6-7
http://kosmos.liveflux.net/blog/2007/05/04/san-diego-to-nuka-hiva-day-6-7/
Position and Time: N 20-34 by W 124-24 at 2155 UTC, 818 miles from San Diego
Speed and Course: 6.0 knots, 210 degrees true, 1450rpm
Wind: 12 knots at 150 degrees relative
Waves: 6-8 foot swells at 10-12 seconds, 3-4 foot wind waves.
We are almost one third of the way.
The routine has pretty well set in. Doing watch, eating, sleeping, doing
engine room checks, checking communications, etc. The obvious fact that we
are about hundreds of miles from the nearest land (Mexicos Guadalupe
Island) occasionally comes to mind. The seas have picked up, and there is no
doubt we are on the open ocean. We get a combination of a swell and wind
wave about every minute or so gives us some strong roll, even with the
stabilizers. We estimate these waves to be about 8 feet or so. Anything
requiring moving around takes extra concentration and careful timing between
rolls.
We are currently in the tropics, but you would never know it from the
weather. We had a couple days of warm days with bright sunshine with
scattered clouds earlier in the week, but it has reverted back to the gloomy
gray and cold that we had the first three days out.
None of us aboard have been on a passage this long, as few people can say
they have aboard a small powerboat. So honestly we are not sure how we are
going to feel as the passage continues. Ready for land? Sure. Crazy? Dunno.
Exhausted or rested? It is hard to say at this point.
We have the paravane poles out, but we have not put out the stabilizing
fish (search the site for paravanes for more info on them). We are in
following seas, which means the waves are going our direction. The paravanes
do a nice job in such conditions, so we are considering deploying them. The
only catch is they cost some speed, so it is a tradeoff of speed or less
roll.
Speed is related to our range. The latest calculations give us a total
conservative range of about 3700 nm. We need to make it about 2900 for this
passage. We are burning about 1.8 gallons an hour at 1450rpm and averaging
about 5.6 knots. We did 135 miles the other day. We tried running at 1500
for bit, but 1450 appears to be a sweet spot. We would be happy with a bit
more speed, and thankfully we are now getting pushed more by the seas and
wind, and our speed has been closer to 6 knots. We have had between 12-18
knots pushing us. We will see how we do in the next 24 hours. We are
predicted to have favorable weather.
We put out a fishing line for several hours. It is a hand line, which is
pretty much a rope with a lure at the end. Alas we have not caught a fish
yet, but we will keep trying.
Lets see if we can answer some questions from the blog
Jaime, we got a Bauer Jr. II dive compressor driven by an AC motor, so it
requires we run the generator to operate it. We can fill to 3200 psi with
our current setting. We have steel 80 liter tanks which nicely fit
vertically in the laz. We look forward to diving with you!
Damien (and Jaime), we plan to be in Australia Oct/Nov, hopefully for about
1 month. We will likely arrive in Cairns and move north from there. We hear
there is a small reef in the area with some diving along Australia. ?
X we will have to get you an up to date pilothouse photo. A few things have
been updated. One notable cosmetic change is the Stidd chair. In that
picture is has a black back. It now is matching red. The black did not look
bad, but we decided on the matching color. The helm chair is really nice,
but it is the single most jaw dropping expensive item relative to what it is
on the options list for the boat. We tried a few different chairs and almost
did not get one. But we are glad we got the Stidd. We added a few more items
to the panels. A current picture would reveal a water maker control,
Ethernet/USB port, and a 7 inch Furuno unit. And all we can say about the 43
is we think it is wonderful boat.
Just when we thought we were not going to see another ship, we saw one.
Another night sighting, and she got with 8 miles of us. We really can only
see about 12 miles out with the radar. AIS goes maybe about 12 miles as
well. Then, amazingly, this morning we saw 2 more ships. One was quite big,
294 meters long, the other about 150 meters! They were close together with
only 2 miles separating them. The AIS said closest point of approach to us
was 0.3 miles to the smaller one. But both changed course to give about 2
miles of space. Believe it or not based on our position, we had the right of
way. While we have heard of the law of tonnage out here and expect to have
to dodge some big guys, this time we did not have to change course. We
called them on the radio to confirm they were changing course because of us,
and they said they indeed saw us and would give us a couple miles. The
person on the radio had a Russian accent and was very courteous. We wished
them a pleasant trip. Quite the traffic jam out here! We are really glad for
the AIS to help sort out the names of the vessels.
People may be wondering what we are eating. We are stocked to the hilt with
a large variety of things we both like to eat, ranging from ready to eat,
easy to prepare, and ingredients for more elaborate meals. On this trip we
have solely been eating the ready to eat and the super easy to prepare
items. We are eating a lot of fresh fruit, bread, eggs, yogurt, peanut
butter, almond butter, and frozen foods.