Hasn't washed his trousers since Brighton
To be fair they were clean on the first time I went to Gatwick. And I've only worn them for a couple of night watches since then. Trousers don't feature very heavily in my life at the moment.
It does solve the 2 month old mystery. "Where did my head torch go", the pocket of my trousers obviously.
As I put in the Tweet I got Katrin to e-mail in before I left musket cove. The weather forecast for this passage was not good. Its been true to its word. Half way through that sentence I had to grab hold and cling on as the boat lurched violently. This morning's watch was almost pleasant. Only once did the boat broach violently and I only caught the wind speed going over 30Kn's once.
Don't get me wrong its still bloody rough. But evening yesterday my watch the wind was 24-35 knots with prolonged periods above 30. Oh and bloody rough. 3 Gerry cans (empty ones) were washed off there tie down spot by the leeward shrouds. I tied them on I think they broke their strings. I tied them so its probably my fault. But usually when I tie something it stays tied. Ask Matt. Once on his Dart Hawk we broke the spinnaker halyard cleat, actually we broke it quite a lot, but on this occasion I tied the spinnaker up the mast. It stayed tied doing quite a lot of damage to the rudders when we hit Ryde Sands.
 
Left to Right: Moonshiner, Perigriana,  Chisel, Aqualuna
Despite being a rally we don't often have mass exoduses. Its a shame. The Musket Cove people offered to shepherd us out the reefs since the Customs officers had come over to check us all out. About a dozen off us left at once. 7 in a full procession. We threaded through the reefs with Aqualuna, Moonshiner, Fia Tira, Perigrina, and chisel. I forget who we could see in front, Simaderel went out a different pass. Natiboo might have been in front too or it could have been Aspen.
Bright sunlight 20knots of breeze made for some good photographs, even with what is left of my camera. Hope some people shot some pictures of us.
Alice? Who the **** is Alice?
I dunno I think its and English thing. It happened once before, Germany Tall Ships Race, 95 or 96. The band on the dock were playing "Living Next Door to Alice". We (SV Marabu + SV Speedwell), obviously, as every pure bred English man does added to the chorus in the traditional way.
I don't think, the Germans, or their kids expected it. I guess its just a British thing.
It is just a British thing the Fijian band in Savusavu played it and were shocked and stunned, as were the Americans and the Canadians on the rally. Not sure about the Swedes I will ask. When, spontaneously, and without prior agreement the entire British part of the rally went "Alice who the F**k is Alice" at the top of their voices mid chorus. It is just a British thing then. Certainly came as a shock the Fijians.
In musket cove at present, its a tinny island resort. With hobie cats, I will never criticise a BSC Hobie again. Even green pea is both younger and better than these. Sorry Justine. Still could be worse could be one of their windsurfers....
Golf tomorrow. I have agreed to organise the rally hobie racing here. Thank god I won't have to sail one.
Sunset (having beaten the camera into working)
edit
Ahem.... For those bright sparks who noticed I'd crossed the 180 degree line, this has now been fixed for the eastern hemisphere. Lucky I'm not navigating.
Fiji the kid
Friday we were welcomed to Savusavu by the chief, I drank too much Kava.
Several people have thought on Twitter or FB that meant Cava. With my spelling its understandable. Kava is a root, long an spindly, know here as grog. Its ground up into a powder mixed with water and drunk, with some ceremony. Its technically a narcotic, as opposed to alcohol which is a depressant. I suspect it has a lot to do with the local political problems, which are ethnic. The Indian population keeps getting successful, and there for elected. Which doesn't go down well with the ethnic Fijians. Who spend far far to long sat on their arse drinking Kava.
Yesterday, politics aside, we raced dinghies, this is not me and Matt's idea of a good dinghy, there are no A-Class cats or 14s or 600s here. Just lasers and opies. Mostly opies. I begged not to be in an opie. I don't fit. If I were to stand up I'd be in serious danger of catching my testicles on the top of the mast.
I did end up in an opie, Brian had signed his kids up for the Yachties V Kids racing, despite Annie's inability to sail. The tide was more than the wind anyway. I ended up being ballast and trainer for her. We lost. 14+ stone of Tom will really slow down a boat the size of a washing up bowl. But at least she could steer while I bailed out.
To raise money for the yacht club kids training bets were being placed on the outcome of the races. Since we'd no idea who the good kids were, and as every dinghy sailor knows yachties can's sail for s**t, this was a safe money making scam. Hans off Natiboo did well in his optimist. But two local lads on port tack carved him up when it was his right of way.
I got back just in time for the last and arbitrarily "The Final" laser race. There was for once more breeze than tide. In the opie race I'd been ballast in the fastest thing on the water was Charile from Miss Tippy swimming along with her opie on a string.
I've not sailed a laser in years, and wasn't much cop then. Somewhere in the depths of the sailing club archives[1] is an old Gybesheet, the club newsletter, which contains the phrase "Tom Capsize Griffiths". Since then I've sailed 14's and my RS 600 both which make a laser a piece of piss.
So there's me slinging the boat around the tinny start line area. Roll tacking, leaning in to gybes and pumping out. Looking quite respectable. Didn't knock my head on the boom once. The Blue Water Rallyists had been drinking pretty steadily for several hours by this time. A lot of money was promptly put on me apparently.
There were only 2 lasers out. Me and a Fijian kid. Maybe 12, maybe a bit older. He had battens in his sail, I didn't. He got to the, slightly mobile, start line early and bore off down it. I arrived just behind him headed up and stopped rather than slide along it. He was defiantly over when the whistle went, but I had the pin end. So far so good. I was behind and to windward of him. He managed to tack ahead though. I rounded the top mark a couple of feet behind. In a panic cos it had a trailing line yanked the dagger board up in case bore off better than him and we were neck and neck downwind. My better bear off worked well. He didn't squeeze me as much as he should when I got the inside line at the bottom mark so I could do a good rounding. His mistake, I think he was trying to do my favourite trick of letting the inside boat run wide cos he can't actually turn till past the mark, but he left me too much space I did a good rounding. We finished lap one with me a boat length ahead. The guy's in the committee boat did seem to have different expressions this time. We tacked opposite ways, he called starboard on me as we crossed. I held my ground and there was at least enough room for a credit card between my rudder and his bow as we crossed. No doubt though he was gaining. Cos when we crossed next I was on starboard and he had to duck me. I enjoyed that. That was my fatal mistake. Cos even after ducking me he was still laying the top mark, I should have tacked already. So much for being horrible to Fijian kids rather than concentrating on the course. He rounded ahead of me, and better this time. I caught him again down wind. Right along side, my boom over his boat. Only this time he was set for the inside line on the bottom mark. Dang. My rounding was aggressive, this time you'd have got a rizzla between my bow and his rudder. Too aggressive. couldn't get the sheet in smoothly or fast enough. I tacked off, nothing to lose at this point, my only hope was he'd run out of wind on the right hand side of the course. He didn't my gamble just meant an extra tack to get to the line and he won.
On behalf of the members of Brighton Sailing Club, The Nuie Yacht Club (of which I am a member) and the the Rallyists I apologise he beat me. Not by much. I had a good time, and one thing I really miss on these trips is the dinghy sailing.
Much latter.....
The Guy driving the Committee boat says to me "Your a hell of a laser sailor", I thought that that was nice and said modestly said I wasn't. Didn't think much of it. I was, despite having a bi for the heats, given the second prize in the lasers. I just assumed it was chaotic organisation.
Some time later the Commodore was chatting to me, and said. "you had us worried there, you bloody nearly beat our national representative".
I feel much better now. I didn't lose to A Fiji Kid, I lost to the Fiji kid. So that's OK.
1 - The sailing club archives are box in the sail loft with both the consistency and smell of soft peat.
Blues Brothers
its three hundred miles to Fiji, we've a full tank of gas, half a pack of rolling backy, its mid winter and we're wearing sun glasses.
The fuel's gonna come in handy got 5 knots  of  nor  nor west breeze, hard on the wind at   west   nor west. Speed three knots.
I've as usual  an  iPod  touch loaded with Mash,  Dollhouse,    Futurama and movies. Its also got the iPhone version  of  Civ. If  you don't know  Civ. you  haven't   lived.
It should have the special edition of The   Secret of  Monkey  island. You do  know what   that is right? Unfortunately the download for that  failed  due Tonga   internet.
Obviously I   not playing or watching any of them. Catching up on  the blog  (on the  iPod)  and  listening to   tunes. Chesney's "I am the one and only", "Temple of  Love", "on the   ropes" the   wonderstuff.  Good  and little known track, spotify it. Not at all like  size of a  cow.  Waterloo  sunset  fades  out  and is replaced by Iggy Pop telling us he's a real wild  child.  Hmm I  think  Iggy might be    offended by me listening to him whilst only doing 3.8kns.
Tonga was brief and fabulous.  I've had a little more  time to get used to South Pacific  food.    I  know corned beef in Tarro leaves  when I see it. The  Tongan feast confused even me.  Freddie,    age  11, to his parents surprise ate some  tentacle.
hmm  Tentacle, wonder if I  can get DOTT    for  the iPod.
I think it might have been  starfish, stood  on something on  Sunday that   looked  like  it. The plates were banana tree stalks, the  bowls coconut  husks,  table cloth of   banana  leaves.  Mahi Mahi, battered. Fish Cakes in sweet and sour.  Chicken in   Tarro leaves. Pit  roast  pig. Tarro  root. Tentacle. Meat and swede like stuff. Tongan  clams  (not  my   favourite).
Europe have just  launched into "the final countdown" even I can't  take  that    NEXT >>
"Coco  Jambo" Mr  President, so much for my reputation, just when you  thought I was     showing some  taste.
INTERMISSION - boat wakes up genoa away engine on etc.
'However far   away I will  always love  you' Lovesong, not the original by the cure the Punk    version by Jack off   Jill. Bet  spotify  doesn't have it. Sorry lads.
Were was I oh sod it.    I'm going to paste this   into one  of the  fields of one of my contacts so it syncs with my pc.    Apple FAIL, there is a sync   option  on iTunes  for iPhone/pod notes but no programs    supported.
Click Here for the Sounds
in my head as I rode
Cruft
I just found this: "State of Decay" and it made me think of giving Windows 7 a review.
Verity Stob writes insightful but techy articles for the register. She? I assume its a she. Uses a Beaufort Scale of cruft to define, just how bad your PC has got. Now I accumulate cruft at a slower rate than most people. I know enough NOT to allow any installer to run without using the "custom" option. But I also use the PC alot.
For instance my home PC is at cruft for 7 (known as a yachtsman's gale in the real scale).   It     has a boot menu of many options, left to its own devices it boots to a kernel panic of a   missing     presumed dead version of Dapper Drake Ubuntu Linux[1].  It  crashes    regularly,  partly cos windows is very unhappy at being installed on a AMD Athlon  (64bit), and   being  run on a  Second hand P4(32bit) mainboard thrown out by work. It is held   together by  physical  willpower.  Since that  is a contradiction in terms I'll explain, bits of  it  are 13 year  old second  hand such  as its 3.5'  drive bought third hand off Matt in 97. I've  found  its best to  only connect  the bits I  need at any  given time, rather than running it with  its  full compliment  of hardware.  This physical  care (and  the odd thump) are not sufficient to  make  it work. You've  heard the  phrase "A watched  kettle never  boils", well this PC doesn't  boot with  out you sat at  it. Your  brain has to will it  on. Before it  got that second hand  mainboard off  work it was cruft  mark 8-9.  It is a marvellous  machine, with  partition tables by  M.C.Esher, and  a pile of odds and  ends (half  height firewire  card bent  straight, second  network card  additional hard disks and  chepo video  capture card[2])  piled on  top to be inserted as  needed.
 The reason my desk top is in that state is its become largely a test bed and backup of the      laptop[3]. By this time into my last trip my laptop, running XP    on   excellent but old IBM X series  hardware. Was at cruft mark 4-5 symptoms different, but no    longer   visible due to the smashed  screen. Errr I'm going to start the next paragraph with a    shock out   burst I'm going to say  something nice about M$. Gusting 3 maybe.  Shit that's good. Boot  times are lower than the loss in battery   performance.   The only nasty I  could find in the event log.  was: I've really only just thought about it but its behaving bloody well indeed. Windows 7 good. Verity being a normal person has only gone as far as cruft force 10. Normally that's as high   as   you go. Hopefully that's as far as you go. Extreme weather is catered for with 11 and 12,   though   yachts people aren't supposed to survive it. Force 12 = Hurricane strength. If you want  to  know   what cruft 11 looks like try these pictures. Cruft 12  I  hope I   never encounter, some re-search as been done into the phenomenon however, by the  brave,  but  foolish  el reg  ventblockers.   My old Laptop
Cruft Force 2
Faulting  application  name:   Dreamweaver.exe, version:  10.0.0.4117, time stamp:  0x48c874b4
But  no  particular   significance can be associated to  that cos I just tried to  open a webpage  downloaded  with flash   get on Tongan internet and, more  importantly, dreamweaver is  made by  Adobe. Its not  like   dreamweaver was ever a beacon of stability  before adobe got their half   arsed hands on  it.
Its power management - never great, is  worse. But windows laptop  has  ever worked   properly,  this one didn't when new. Crashing aps  (usually due to removing the  hard  drive it was   reading  video from), irresponsible undocks etc  cause the brightness controls  to die  till you re-  boot.  Which is annoying, but other than that its  fine.
Better  than fine, the  reboot   is fast,  by this stage a re-boot on XP on my old  laptop was heading for  15 minutes.  If you    could get the  bloody thing to actually shut down at  all. its had the same  uses as the old one   its  been used in  multiple internet connection sharing  configurations,  dinghied, dampened and   pickup trucked. It  still boots fast and smooth. Windows has  developed no  nasty habits. Bar the   cashing the brightness  controls.
1 - OK I'm being optimistic its  probably  Breezy Badger
2 - Etc. Etc. Etc.
 June		 
        				 	
		August
		June		 
        				 	
		August  
 
	 
      
    
 
     
     
 
 
 
 
    WALLPAPERS
 WALLPAPERS PHOTOS
 PHOTOS