At noon today we were at 32 56S 162 10E steering 300M, sailing under no main and storm staysail at 5 knots. The wind was 22G35 from the E. Our noon to noon distances were 107nm by the log and 120nm over the ground. Overall we'd logged 692nm and 719nm respectively. Our distance to go was 544nm.
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| Gybed to head NW |
Yesterday afternoon winds stayed E 20G30. Seas were up to 4m and we were still being side-swiped occasionally. At 1730 we gybed onto starboard. We had hopes of passing close to Lord Howe Island and initially were heading straight for it when it was 250nm away.
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| Early morning sun |
At 1930 we changed up from the storm staysail to triple-furled yankee as the wind eased to 20G25. That lasted all night and we enjoyed the full moon with only a few clouds in the sky. We did cop one rain squall which gave us a gust of 38 knots but passed rapidly.
This morning the wind built to 22G30 and we changed down to the storm staysail again. The low/aft position of the staysail produces a much smoother ride and only slightly slower speed. Well worth it to keep us rested. We took one side-swipe which dumped enough water on deck to let some through the dorades. Not supposed to happen!
This morning we've been lifted so it looks like we'll leave Lord Howe Island well to port. We'll see. The mostly sunny skies are keeping our house battery bank well charged. We've been seeing albatross and a couple of other sea bird types occasionally. No more whales since Three Kings thankfully!
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| Rainbow! |
This morning we've been lifted so it looks like we'll leave Lord Howe Island well to port. We'll see. The mostly sunny skies are keeping our house battery bank well charged. We've been seeing albatross and a couple of other sea bird types occasionally. No more whales since Three Kings thankfully!
Trust all's well where you are.





