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Don't Worry about the Kraken

by Mark Malacek, July 19th, 2016



Day 10 - July 19
The morning of Day 10 finds us in sunshine and 20 kts of breeze. Another night has passed, and the crew is a bit tired but happy that the night is over and that a new day begins.  The attached photo of green shift is taken is at 6 am; sorry about the crappy quality but I had to reduce it to 50kb and don’t have any fancy compression programs.

The nights continue to be the toughest; however, we are now getting used to it and have a routine.  We have shortened our night shifts to 3 hrs (from 4) and have shortened the bench to 2 helmsmen per shift who switch every 30 min.  The biggest challenge to night sailing out here is the sea state.  We are presently on a port gybe flying a runner.  That is a spinnaker cut for running almost dead down wind.  This is a very challenging point of sail as the boat can get wind pressure from one side or another and can quickly become unstable.  An analogy would be skates, or a snow board.  Both are very stable on an edge but less stable on the flat. Because we are on a port gybe, we need to keep the wind slightly to port.  If it moves to starboard, the boom will come across and the boat will to gybe itself without our consent – this is bad and can lay us flat.  If the wind moves too far to port, the boat will be over powered, and we lose helm control and the boat will round up without our consent – this is also bad and will also lay us flat.  In a down-wind run the sail gives us a range of about 35 deg where it will behave.  Now add you need to add in the rollers.  We guess they are 8 to 12ft which isn’t huge but we must guide the boat through them.  The boat needs to surf down the wave also within a range of angels.  After it surfs down, it must get picked up and lifted by the next wave.  If the boat is broadside to the waves it won’t surf nicely and it won’t pick lift nicely, instead the wave will try to turn the boat sideways.  If the boat turns sideways the wind angle suddenly changes and bad things happen.  So the path that the helmsman has to steer has to satisfy the wave direction and the wind direction. Unfortunately, those two do not always play nice.  On average the waves are mostly related to the wind direction.  However, the waves are not always consistent and can come from unexpected angles, and the wind is not consistent and can suddenly shift.  Now the piece de resistance to this situation:  not only do you steer to the wind which is shifty, and to the waves whom are sneaky, but we also have a place in mind to go and must steer to a compass course to Maui (presently 214M)!

Last night we got our first taste of squalls.  These are little stormy clouds that like to form their own weather system over and above what is already there.  Suddenly (and by this I mean instantly) the wind changes direction by about 30 degrees and increases from the ambient 20 kts to 30.  And what happens to the poor unsuspecting helmsman if he or she can’t adjust quick enough - BAM sideways you go again!


When we were planning this trip, we all decided to bring a book for those long periods of boredom we would surely be experiencing being so long at sea.  Upon leaving the Victoria dock, I realised with distraught; sh*t I forgot my book!  I will not have internet, cable, and no book – how indeed will I survive; maybe I could share one with one of my cross shift sailing mates?  As it turns out, the amount of minutes anyone can put towards a leisurely past time over the course of this trip can be counted on one hand.  Half of your time is on deck on your shift; another 10% is on deck helping the other shift in an emergency or when we do PM checks.  Then there is cooking, cleaning, and that only leaves time for sleep.  It is amazing how fast the days have gone by and nobody has been bored even for a second.

We have now entered the realm of the flying fish; they sore high above the waves and swoop down to snatch up small goats and the occasional baby - LOL; no actually they are more akin to a large sardine attached to large locust wings.  They suddenly jump off of the water as we approach, and fly away a few feet above the surface.  Yesterday one almost landed on our deck ... we are waiting with a sushi knife little fishy ... come on, don’t be afraid ..

Life onboard – Segment 5

I had made mention in an earlier update of the challenges involved in using the WC.  I really didn’t want to get into it in too much detail, but it seems people are legitimately interested as I have received some inquiries on the matter.  So, here is the low-down:
First, our head (the nautical name for toilet ) is a small porcelain toilet mounded on the starboard side of the boat. It is maybe 1.3 the size of a normal toiled but it costs more if course. It operates with a hand pump to let flush water in, and then pump it out.  You can get electric pumps but it’s just another thing to break down.

There are a few fundamental design flaws:

1)The bowl is too small and shallow.  If the boat is heeled over, the toilet is tilted and the net volumetric capacity is reduced.  When it is rough, water (and contents) can, and do, get tossed out - yuck!.

2)If we are hard over on a starboard tack, the inlet valve is too close to the water surface and water will not pump in; so it does not work at all.

The solutions available are:

Options for No1:

1Pee off the back of the boat.  This is favoured by the younger male crew members who have good balance and dexterity.  The older guys will do it too as a last resort, the girl will not, but could if she had to. You clip in and hang it off the back; unfortunately Colin’s emergency rudder device has become the”hydrant” and collects samples.

2Pee into a hand held potty container and then dump overboard.  Our boat is fitted with a male and female version of this (they came with the boat, and we did not know at the time what they were for – now we do).  Nobody will use these!

3If the boat is not too healed over the toilet will work but it’s may be very difficult/impossible to stand and hit the target depending on boat motion.  The options are: take a knee (this is my personal favorite) or take a seat.  I don’t know what the other crew do, I don’t want to know.

Options for No 2:

1If the boat is not too heeled over the head works ok.

2If we are heeled over the toilet will not work at all. The only option that we have figured out, courtesy of Daryl’s cleverness, is to use a bag – yes a bag.  Daryl personally hand picked the bags to be bio degradable; maybe he consulted with Borat.  They are nice bags but are really big – not sure what he was thinking.  The bag fits into the toilet over the seat, and once complete you simply tie it off and toss it overboard through the companion way without hitting your mates on deck.  We do also have a fish scale in case you are “logging” the data.

Sorry, not a pretty description but you wanted to know ...

Notes from the Crew;

- VMG competition stands at 8.66 avg kts/hr over a single shift (Red shift leads with Skipper assistance)
- The max speed stands at a whopping 18.3 kts; and this one did not end in a wipeout!
- Answer to Steve’s question if the boom has knocked some sense into Mark: no, blow not nearly hard enough.  He still thinks this was a great idea!
-  Annette wants everyone to know that there are birds out here with long streaming tails; not sure how they get here.
- The Kraken Krew is proudly Monkey but free ... for now
- Alex is the only one who has bathed so far (once)
- Everyone keeps asking the Skipper “are we there yet?”.  Skipper answers: “if we were there you would not be asking”
- Crew beards will not be shaved off  “playoff beards!”  Colin is starting to look like Jeremiah Johnson.
Until next time, Kraken Krew out.

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