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Wednesday, 7 November 2012

Fixing Insulation on refrigerator compressor

We are in warm climes in spite of the current 'wet spell' here in Gib. Locals assure me that winter here is sunny so fingers crossed. Greg thought the weather had turned for the worse because he woke up complaining that his feet were really cold. The temperature inside the boat ( without any heating ) is 23 degrees. Just a little investigation and the mystery was solved:

The compressor coils leading to the fridge were iced to about 2inches in diametre - little wonder Greg's feet were cold because the coils are beneath his bunk!
An hour later and there are the coils!  Greg had found some offcuts of insulating foam at the boatyard and brought them back...
Voila! Coils nicely insulated and Greg's pinkies are pink again - RESULT :O)

Sunday, 4 November 2012

Cannot let today pass - it's three months since we left Fowey!

It's three months exactly since we left Fowey. We arrived in Falmouth harbour at 10.30pm on the 3rd August 2012 to a grand firework display :O)

We have travelled 1,347 nautical miles from Fowey to Gibraltar. The equivalent of 1,550 land miles or 2,495 kilometres by sea. That's cause for a small celebration I think as we have travelled without incident and our boat has performed beautifully all the way. We will spend some time over the next week or so servicing the Volvo Penta engine that has been just as reliable as Lerryn Lady and the rest of the season making ready to set sail again in the Spring. We hope to install solar panels so that we can get off the grid and anchor without worrying about power supply - no shortage of solar 'rays' in the Med methinks.
            We will make the most our our time in Gibraltar in the meantime. We are expecting our eldest daughter to join us for Christmas and have another friend coming to visit in January.  We would very much love to see all of you here if you feel you can come over. Here's two links for possibly the cheapest and nicest B&B in Gibraltar and it's only 20 metres from our berth:
 http://www.tripadvisor.es/Hotel_Review-g187510-d1591107-Reviews-Con_Dios-Gibraltar.html

http://www.gibraltarbedandbreakfast.com/condiosco/contact-us/

I went to check it out last week, it's lovely accommodation - and they promise never to untie the lines from the moorings!

This Blog will be kept up to date over the coming months and I hope you will find our predominantly land based antics interesting as well ;O)

Greg has chilled an Oyster Bay Savignon Blanc so here's to us, here's to Lerryn Lady and here's to you for following us!  According to Blogspot Stats we've had 2,743 hits on Sailaway since leaving Falmouth - THANK YOU!


               
 

This quote found me today :O)


“I must be a mermaid. I have no fear of depths, just a great fear of shallow living.”
Anaïs Nin
    

Pictures taken from another boat - of us heading round Cape Trafalgar

Woohoo - this shows you the height of the Atlantic swell that day -we're almost out of view!
Rolling along...
Clouds cometh, we're the blip under them...
We're that tiny blip just to right of centre horizon - enormous sea and sky...
This was earlier when we had one reef in the main ready and waiting...
We're a little blip again, right of centre horizon, I remember that cloud, like something out of the Independence Day movie...

The sea really built up while we were under that cloud, seemed an age before we had it all behind us and were out in the sun spangles once again.

This is one of many lovely surprises at sea, other sailors photograph you. Much later in time ( when they spot you in a Port somewhere) they come along with their Memory sticks or scanned disc or external memory chips and leave them with you to download; returning later in time to recover their property. It's a great way to make friends too. We've had The League of Nations (oops, defunct, read United Nations)   onboard our boat in the last three months. The photographers above are German, Jok and Ushi. The main photograph at top of Blog was supplied courtesy of Jacques from Normandy.

Saturday, 3 November 2012

What do you do on a wet Saturday afternoon on a boat in Gibraltar?

For Becks! You marinate Salmon in Mirin and sesame ready for the evening meal ...
If you're Greg you watch Man U beating Arsenal 2- 1 then...
Norwich beating Stoke 1 - 0 then...
 
I sit in my cosy little corner...
 
(For Mark Phillips) Doing the Times Crossword - what on Earth is 44 Across?
And then Greg watches ANOTHER match - West Ham v Man City and he's going to watch Match of the Day tonight as well :O) The sun is due back tomorrow!
 
 
 

Friday, 2 November 2012

Halloween/Samhain evening on our boat

This is tissue paper over our anchor light suspended in the cockpit...
The little lanterns I made earlier - it was breezy on the pontoon so I had to use rubber bands to stop the lanterns blowing off the jars - a freaky bondage thing going on now I look at them...

And expected weather in UK for Halloween. Hope it didn't deter your little trick and treaters, we had ten turn up :O)
 

Wednesday, 31 October 2012

Halloween/Samhain day time Gibraltar

There are quite a few liveaboard children here.  Today I've been busy making lanterns for our pontoon and buying sweeties!

First British Airways flight of the day - it's quite a spectacle watching these babies head for the Rock...

A little cutie on Main Street...
 
On the trail of Bigfoot...
 
 
I'm not sure if we have these in the UK anymore...

Fags are duty free in Gibraltar!

Sunday, 28 October 2012

Onward to Gibraltar

We left Barbate just before sunrise...

Cape Tarifa - reknown for winds in excess of 30 knots most days of the year, also the Windsurfing Capitol of the World. Today a pussycat not a Lion...

So kool to be able to see north Africa and Spain simultaneously. Morocco to Starboard as we entered the Straits...

And the first sighting of the "Rock' in the distance...

 Then a weird cloud - well it is England :O)


Out of the blue ( grey?)  we were hit broadside by a squall, 35knots gusting to 38 - I thought that cloud looked dodgy...headed into it, dropped our sails and bashed across the Bay...

Past several big pieces of steel...

To a blue sky again. One view from our current position...

 And panning to Starboard :O) Now to get out of wet clothes, shower, hot meal and some much needed shut eye!




 

Friday, 26 October 2012

Weather last night

Glad to report no lightening last night just rain and more rain. I thought we had a few hundred Flamenco dancers on the roof! This morning all we can see through the sea mist is that spirit sapping drizzle...hey ho, there is blue sky above it all I know there is.

Thursday, 25 October 2012

Holed up in Barbate Marina ( there are worse places to be )

And this folks is the view from one of our windows! Three months of blue skies and now this - at least the decks are getting a good wash and rinse out there. Last night we had a non-stop thunder storm with massive flashes of green lightening : Never knawed a night like it. We lay in our berths consoling ourselves with the thought that our little mast was probably the shortest in the fleet here in Barbate Marina therefore unlikely to take a direct hit. Greg was worried our onboard technology, so carefully installed and nurtured by him these past months, would be 'ZAPPED' with squillions of volts by some stray lightning bolt. The rain has continued all day long, sometimes coming down as it does in the Tropics, and as I type it is making yet another appearance. It's almost midnight so fingers crossed the lightening won't reappear tonight. I love the storms, lying in the boat listening to the mayhem outside is strangely comforting, but I am oh so glad we are not out to sea in it. We hope to have a wind and weather window to head down to Gibraltar sometime this weekend, but if not, there are worse places to be than Barbate :O) Here comes the rain AGAIN...

Almadraba Tuna Fishing Barbate

As the Almadraba fishing fleet diminishes so this anchor grave yard grows near the Marina in Barbate! There are at least two hundred anchors - each about five feet high - each a rusting testament. Greg and I have been frequenting a Tapas bar called El Atun Rojo ( the Red Tuna). A couple of days ago they had quite a rowdy local crowd of OAP's in at lunchtime. After lunch they all trooped into the bar area and plonked themselves down on stools. The bar man then set up a DVD which was a film featuring the Barbate fishermen and the history and fate of the Almadraba fishing - even though it was in Spanish it was not difficult to understand. The old folk around us the witnesses to what has happened in their community over the last thirty years. They were keen for us to watch the film and kept talking to us about their old lives.
It was odd because early that morning we attempted to leave Barbate for Gibraltar, on the way out we saw a few Almadraba boats being towed in ( they don't have engines), then that very afternoon we found ourselves sitting with these old fishermen and their wives watching a fantastic DVD about it all.

http://jennykean.wordpress.com/2009/03/19/the-ancient-art-of-tuna-fishing/
 Have a read of Jenny Kean's blog re this ancient Phoenician fishing method, it is fascinating.
 

Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Flying our Code Zero

This is us flying the Code Zero on Lerryn Lady recently. Me at the helm. In light winds we can usually pick up an extra knot or two with this sail. Been lousy Internet access lately so busy sorting photographs to get back on track with the blog...bought a Dongle today hoping this will improve comms onboard. Currently in Barbate Marina after two attempts to sail to Gibraltar this week. On both occasions good forecasts! Beaten back both times by nose on 25knot winds, hoping third time lucky this Sunday when light westerlies forecast...fingers crossed everybody.

Monday, 15 October 2012

Here we are in Rota, Bay of Cadiz

We are now in Rota on the north of the Bay of Cadiz. The marina is much nicer than the one in Cadiz which is highly industrialized. There apears to be a problem spotting us on Marine Traffic . This may be in part due to the fact that we are bang next door to the Mediterranean base of the American Naval Fleet - security et al. So don't despair, perhaps once we head off to Barbate ( in a few days) we'll be back on the map! Yesterday was a peaceful sail from Chipiona to Rota. We had fifteen knots of apparent wind right up our chuff - so goosewinged the main and Genoa most of the way which took just three and a bit hours. Rota old town is charming. My camera battery gave up after three shots last night. Photo above is from the square of Castillo de Luna.

Shadows before sunset.


Inside the Castillo de Luna last night.
 

Chipiona quick stopover

Tallest lighthouse in Spain - they need this one as the shoals run out for nearly two miles.

Typico exterior in old town...
 
Sorry to report the Internet access is total b******cks today so will try and upload more later.

Friday, 12 October 2012

Selection of decorative tiles around Huelva today

These are copper plated...

Pretty, I think so...

More copper plating - these decorate whole buildings.

Not up to speed this morning

So I bought a box of beautiful brown eggs from the shop to go with the smoked bacon for breakfast...

Completely ignoring the word 'cocidos' on the box ( means cooked). Went to crack them into the sizzling pan and ... we had cold hard boiled eggs with the bacon LOL. Coffee was fantastic though :O)

Flying from Ayamonte to Mazegon yesterday

 
Cannot get whole sails in but you can see we flew the Code Zero outside and the spinnaker staysail inside yesterday in light winds and got an average of 6 knots !
 
And so I lay on the deck to get this shot which includes the main, spinnaker staysail, Code Zero, Cornish and Spanish flag :O) When we arrived we had 23 knots and a 2m sea so fairly 'flew' into Mazegon with just the Missen up!