Forecast barometric 4 Feb |
The attention-grabbing TC's (what we call 'typhoons' in Hong Kong or 'hurricanes' in the Atlantic) are born in the tropics and - often with little notice - are capable of rushing south to the latitude of NZ in a matter of days.
Our pre-departure weather-watch through sites such as Passageweather considered both the TC threat and attempted to pick the best course going forward as the train of weather systems developed. Our shore team took over this task as the crossing continued, with daily (often twice-daily) updates by Satphone & HF.
Forecast winds 4 Feb |
The initial weather picture was complicated by the enduring ex-TC Oswald, still moving south down the Australian coast and reinforcing the advancing trough. We had started in an E'ly, and could expect the wind to back round the clock as the trough arrived and blew through. It was only a matter of how quickly it all happened.
A-watch on lunch duty |
But we were now days behind schedule. If we sailed the 100 nm further south of rhumb line to LHI we would be stepping off the 'slingshot' we were enjoying before the arrival of the next cycle of SE'ly headwinds, and with the forecast strong S'ly, we weren't even sure we would be able enter the Lord Howe lagoon to reach our mooring.
Decision made - let's press on.
From the logbook:
Tuna bake |
0610 Sunrise. 2 whales sighted, blowing
0900 HF sched with David, reasonable comms
1000 Wind dying, Eng on @ 1,400 RPM charging
1200 Eng off, full M&G. Prep reefs for later
Lunch: tuna bake with pot's & salad
1500 Still course 105 degs with NNE/15 kts
180 nm last 24 hrs
1755 Gen on
1800 HF sched
1900 Dinner: Jim's tuna fried rice
1930 NNE/15-22 kts. 1 reef in M&G, making 8.5 kts / cse 105 degs
Brilliant starscape, 2 satellites & appropriate accompanying music (Yann Tiersen, Ludovico Einaudi, Adele, etc) before moonrise @ 2205. This is what's it all about...
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