Pelagic
and Santa Maria Australis are chalk and cheese. By Wolf's own
admission, SMA, with her carpets, upholstery and veneers, is too
luxurious for purpose and surroundings, and certainly for the style
and taste of her mountain climbing captain. Pelagic is chalk. She's a
no frills, no shit, expedition boat, and enjoys a highly regarded
twenty five-plus year history. She's mostly sailing with TV
documentary crews and extreme adventurers for something around £1,500
per day. This isn't a tourist gig. The job for skipper, Chris, and
crew, Jamie, Steve and I, is delivery of Pelagic to Piriapolis, where
she'll sit out the winter.
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http://www.pelagic.co.uk/fleet_pel.asp |
To mix our experience, and lack
thereof, I'm paired with fellow Londoner, Steve, for shifts. The
shifts make up twenty-four hour watches. We're watching to keep from crashing
into boats, rocks, and other unfriendly or sharp objects. We also
watch wind speed & direction and adjust sails as necessary. Steve
and I take the first nightshift at 2000h. We're relieved at midnight and
will return at 0400h. Then we'll take the second of the two six hour
day shifts.
At some point during the day, Chris is
on deck, pulling or tieing or untieing some coloured rope, so I'm
pressed to take a radio call from a Chilean base station. At request,
I give details of our position and destination – choosing English
over patchy, badly broken Spanish, for the set protocol of these
communications – to which the Alcamar signs off with “Thank you,
Captain. Out.” This tickles me greatly. Back in the office, I was occasionally called
“Captain Pugwash”, after one afternoon, I had called in late,
giving the reason that there was insufficient water to return to
land.
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"Hello Dan, Could you tell Alan that I'll be a couple of hours late this afternoon. There's not enough water. Er... I'll send you a picture" |
Keeping the style of the yacht, pissing
etiquette is simply to shoot off the back of the boat. I'm told that
according to the law of the sea, as a Cape Hornier, I have the right
to shoot in any direction I please, whereas others would be restricted to
downwind. I tend to favour downwind in any case, but occasionally
exercise my right. In noteworthy rough sea, nearby Staten Island, I
find pissing off the back, sailing at a brisk 8 knots, to be most
colourful. We're being chased by a three, maybe four – certainly
higher than my pissing position - metre wave that is keeping pace with us. It almost looks to be offended by my action. Equally colourful, is the
green hue of Jamie's face. He and Steve are competing for the glory
of he who can throw up the most. Both are muscling through the illness,
but are punctual to throw up on an hourly basis, and neither can
muster an appetite. I, on the other hand, am having a lovely time and
retain an appetite that is comparable to the opening few seconds of
an game of Hungry Hungry Hippos. If I were even a
half decent sailor, I would be of some use here, but that's yet to
become the case. I've no idea what any of these ropes are attached
to.
At night, we're restricted to minimal
electricity. Only the kitchen and chart table are under dim red
light, so the night watch is exactly as it sounds. Pelagic has
Autohelm, so with the course set and steady wind, there's nothing
needing doing. For our only entertainment, we have a single, also
dimly lit monitor, with radar, an electronic chart, and a depth chart
that looks like the Predator has fallen asleep with heat vision still on. Absolutely nothing is happening on any of these screens,
nor out the window of the “dog house”, where we sit without great
comfort. In the last half hour, staying awake and alert is all but impossible for both of us. Every minute, my eyes are heavy and my head dips before jerking back up.
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