Encounters South

Day 42
Noon Position: 41 51S 133 44W

Course/Speed: ESE 6 – 7

Wind: NW 15 – 25

Sail: Twins, poled, half reefed

Bar: 1014

Sea: NW 10

Sky: Overcast, ragged

Cabin Temp: 67

Water Temp: 55
Miles last 24-hours: 172

Miles since departure: 5567

It drew my attention at first because it hung there over the wave as if suspended by wires. Not a petrel, I thought. Petrels have such a crazed need for speed that if the wind isn’t providing, they will flap furiously with long powerful strokes that give the impression of a winged primate swinging through an invisible jungle. An entire race of birds so maniacally focused on fast that I half expect to see them leave trails of feathers ripped from wings by the strain. 

Not this bird. It remained suspended for a time, and then without any apparent adjustments, the body slowly tilted, descended into the nearest trough and with equal slowness and a sense of gravitas utterly foreign to petrels, it ascended the next wave, making a perfect arc before again seeming to pause on top of the wind. 

And the size of it! Well, the only things to compare it to out here are petrels and me, and it was much closer to my size than it was to those spitfires. Long, slender wings with a distinct elbow joint and whose tip gave the sense of a hand. A certain mottled coloration, though mostly white. A chunky, heavy body. A fleshy coloration to its face and beak. 

And then it was too far away to take from it more detail. Except that I could see it arcing and pausing almost to the horizon.

My first southern Albatross. I presume juvenile Wandering!

All night it blew from the NW, a steady 27 to 33 with gusts to 35. At one point the sky cleared for a time. I could make out stars through a kind of haze. Orion very high and erect; the moon, then just rising, yellow, and the thin cloud it illuminated raced by with a speed that made me shudder. 

Before starting my sleep cycle, I had put Mo dead before the wind, and propelled by the two twin headsails a mere half their usual size, she rolled and churned and the boat creaked and locker contents slammed and I got little sleep. 

In the morning, the sea was a boulder garden. Waves, too new to have formed a train, ricocheted around, crashing into each other and mushrooming out. And the temperature had dropped another four degrees. In the afternoon, the wind went west and increased. Then the Albatross. And I thought, we’re really in the South now.

I’ll admit, I’m afraid. I feel vulnerable, exposed. The power of choice has been left in the north; this is not a mountain I can now decide not to climb. No running for cover. No control, except of my tiny capsule. No way to gauge the power of what’s next against my capacity except to keep going and see.

I know I am not an expert sailor. I know my planning and preparation was imperfect. I know how tough I am not. How much will all that matter?

By noon the waves had begun to mature. They’d grown–maybe to the height of three story houses–but had lost some of their steepness. Troughs now had the aspect of valleys that were beginning to elongate.

After lunch I put more south in Mo’s course for two reasons. All evidence to the contrary, this sector is about to develop an east/west belt of calm. If I maintain too much easting, I may get stuck. Also, the low that just passed over us is redeveloping in the northwest and is soon headed this way. If possible, I’d like to be below its power when it embeds into the westerlies. I’m unsure of this second strategy and may go back to a more easterly course in the morning. 

12 Comments on “Encounters South

  1. Wow, great honest reporting! You should be scared to stay on top of things; if you weren’t you’d be in trouble. Keep us posted this adventure of yours keeps me sane in light of the political crap going on over on this side of the planet

  2. Not sure if this is worth it. The steepness of the waves creates so many precarious, dicey situations. Think we’d all be re-assured, if you had second thoughts and decide to head NW around globe. Just know that our heart and prayers fly wing-on-wing with you!

  3. Sheer poetry in the way you observe the world around you…in even the mundane day to day activities. But the descriptions of the petrels and albatross is unlike any I have heard before. Thank you for dragging us along through this adventure.

  4. Hemingway is reading your prose in heaven. Just picked up your thread and fascinated. Good luck! By the way I’m a G.I. doc and if you have any problems that I could help you with email me at rosenheck1@comcast.net

  5. You are in my daily thought & prayers, you will do the right thing I know.

  6. And Mom said, after her first sip and getting the other eye open: “Now this is why strong men go to sea, and little dogs stay home and admire their Courage.” And she told me to write it with a big C!

  7. Randall,
    You are a man of few cut from fabric unknown to even less. Taking it to the ultimate edge is where life is truly alive.
    Courage is built in, and fear is just a four letter word.
    You’re down on the court of life and we as spectators. Your audience cheers you on to a summit beyond belief.
    Hoping that you enjoy every breath, every wave and the plentiful amount of Albatross that’ll escort you along the way.

  8. You’ve demonstrated great courage! Sometimes courage is altering course for the best outcome.
    You’re running scenarios, about what to do if “X” happens. is exactly what we do as cops, and it’s what creates “muscle memory” in challenging situations. You will intuitively act. I don’t think any of us on this virtual journey, have any doubts of your courage.
    Like the Petrels, the mystery of successful flight & sailing-just is.

  9. Randall, This post is beautifully written. Wonderful imagery and honesty. Keep on truckin’ and keep on writin’.

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