Daily Log for Thursday
Day: 82 at sea (Day 13 from Cape Town)
Date: January 29th 18:00 Boat(Melbourne)/07:00 UTC
Distance from Oakville: 8355 nm bearing 291
Distance from New York: 8061 nm bearing 290
Distance from Cape Town: 1275 nm bearing 285
Distance from Melbourne: 4352 nm bearing 126
Distance travelled (Boat Log) 24 hours: 138 n.m.
Distance travelled in straight line 24 hours: 145 n.m.
Latitude: 42 45.209 S
Longitude: 043 24.124 E
Boat Speed: 6 - 15 knots
Boat Heading: 090 E on port tack, went 140 SE for 45 miles overnight Wednesday, while wind shifted
Boat Sails: #2 jib #4 reef main
Barometer: 1028.6
Beaufort Scale: 6
Sea State: 4 - 8ft. rolly ride
Weather Conditions: partly sunny
Wind Direction/Speed: NW 15 - 20 kts
Temp: Air: 12 C
Cloud Cover: 80% but thin, sun peeking through
From Doug S Thursday Morning:
Still on the rock and roll highway. Not much has changed since Wednesday. Waves have calmed down a bit, but still rocky. Winds are still around 20 kts. but are forecast to decrease.
I have mentioned before that we use Melbourne time as our boat clock, just to have a standard. But we are affected by local sun time for sleeping and eating. There will be 9 time zones to cross on this leg, and we just switched to UTC +3. ( 8 hours ahead of Ontario ). We started on Cape Town time which was UTC +2. Last night the sun set at 18:30 Cape Town time, then we moved the local time clock forward. Now it sets at 19:30. A few other places in this time zone are, Nairobi, Tbilisi, Baghdad, Kuwait, Riyadh, and Moscow. ( See our clocks and time zone map on right side of page ).
My night shift was a cool one. Very clear with lots of stars. The wind was shifting so we had to turn towards the SE in order not to " gybe ". That means if we would have continued East the wind would have passed from the rear right of the boat over to the rear left. It would have pushed the Main from one side of the boat to the other. This takes some work so we waited until sunrise so then two people could do it. I was headed SE with winds in the 20's. The auto helm was steering a very straight course so I didn't have to worry about an accidental gybe. The Southern Cross was right overhead and Orion is getting lower on the horizon. At least the wind was from the rear so no wind chill factor.
This morning as I was asleep the boys gybed over, we are heading East again. Lots of " ya-hooing " as they were surfing down big waves this morning. A new record of 15.3 knots was achieved by John and again by Doug G, this with only the #2 jib and #4 reef main.
Sailing the southern ocean, rocking and rolling with good speed! Cheers, Doug.
Day: 82 at sea (Day 13 from Cape Town)
Date: January 29th 18:00 Boat(Melbourne)/07:00 UTC
Distance from Oakville: 8355 nm bearing 291
Distance from New York: 8061 nm bearing 290
Distance from Cape Town: 1275 nm bearing 285
Distance from Melbourne: 4352 nm bearing 126
Distance travelled (Boat Log) 24 hours: 138 n.m.
Distance travelled in straight line 24 hours: 145 n.m.
Latitude: 42 45.209 S
Longitude: 043 24.124 E
Boat Speed: 6 - 15 knots
Boat Heading: 090 E on port tack, went 140 SE for 45 miles overnight Wednesday, while wind shifted
Boat Sails: #2 jib #4 reef main
Barometer: 1028.6
Beaufort Scale: 6
Sea State: 4 - 8ft. rolly ride
Weather Conditions: partly sunny
Wind Direction/Speed: NW 15 - 20 kts
Temp: Air: 12 C
Cloud Cover: 80% but thin, sun peeking through
From Doug S Thursday Morning:
Still on the rock and roll highway. Not much has changed since Wednesday. Waves have calmed down a bit, but still rocky. Winds are still around 20 kts. but are forecast to decrease.
I have mentioned before that we use Melbourne time as our boat clock, just to have a standard. But we are affected by local sun time for sleeping and eating. There will be 9 time zones to cross on this leg, and we just switched to UTC +3. ( 8 hours ahead of Ontario ). We started on Cape Town time which was UTC +2. Last night the sun set at 18:30 Cape Town time, then we moved the local time clock forward. Now it sets at 19:30. A few other places in this time zone are, Nairobi, Tbilisi, Baghdad, Kuwait, Riyadh, and Moscow. ( See our clocks and time zone map on right side of page ).
My night shift was a cool one. Very clear with lots of stars. The wind was shifting so we had to turn towards the SE in order not to " gybe ". That means if we would have continued East the wind would have passed from the rear right of the boat over to the rear left. It would have pushed the Main from one side of the boat to the other. This takes some work so we waited until sunrise so then two people could do it. I was headed SE with winds in the 20's. The auto helm was steering a very straight course so I didn't have to worry about an accidental gybe. The Southern Cross was right overhead and Orion is getting lower on the horizon. At least the wind was from the rear so no wind chill factor.
This morning as I was asleep the boys gybed over, we are heading East again. Lots of " ya-hooing " as they were surfing down big waves this morning. A new record of 15.3 knots was achieved by John and again by Doug G, this with only the #2 jib and #4 reef main.
Sailing the southern ocean, rocking and rolling with good speed! Cheers, Doug.

picture by John

picture by Doug G.
------------From John G. Thursday Afternoon 1400 UTC----
Subject: Day 82 (day13 from SA) at sea on board FGT Thu 29 Jan 09
Position 42 36S 044 42E lots of Albatross miles to Melbourne.
Wind 14 -22 knots SW.
Sea state 4' to 8'.rough Boat speed av 8.0 kts.
Av boat direction 90 -East on the highway.
Barometer 1028.2
cloud cover varies 0 - 80% Air temp 12C 1400utc
Greetings from the record breakers on FGT,
And the speed record goes to the Simrad Autopilot for 16.3 knots! And the water tight record goes to the Radford 14 Pilot house for withstanding a 3' green water wave over the bow and hitting the fron t pilothouse windows!
We are in 16 to 24 knots of wind from the aft port quarter ( NW for you purists) with NW waves. Perfect for surfin'. And we did, and we are still doing it.
Absolutely fantastic sailing. The SM took to standing on the helm seat whooping at the 20' holes in front of the boat as we started surfing. On course, right speeds.
Now for the naturalists - the whale has been id'd - very rare -
Olive Andrews (IFAW Samoa)this little fella is a quite plump Pygmy Right whale - Caperea marginata.(sounds like something belonging to the SM)
They're range is 31S to 55S, pretty much exactly in the kind of tack your mate was travelling between Sth Africa & Melbourne. He's quite a rare critter. Smallest and least known of all the baleen whales (5.5m - 6.5m). Nothing known of his population status.
Mouth too curved to be a Minke.
Thanks Olive(Samoa) - and Sharon Shaw, (Coffs Harbour) and Andrew Carroll National Marine Science Centre, Southern Cross University (Coffs Harbour)for this.
Long may the winds continue.
Cheers
Your crew
Subject: Day 82 (day13 from SA) at sea on board FGT Thu 29 Jan 09
Position 42 36S 044 42E lots of Albatross miles to Melbourne.
Wind 14 -22 knots SW.
Sea state 4' to 8'.rough Boat speed av 8.0 kts.
Av boat direction 90 -East on the highway.
Barometer 1028.2
cloud cover varies 0 - 80% Air temp 12C 1400utc
Greetings from the record breakers on FGT,
And the speed record goes to the Simrad Autopilot for 16.3 knots! And the water tight record goes to the Radford 14 Pilot house for withstanding a 3' green water wave over the bow and hitting the fron t pilothouse windows!
We are in 16 to 24 knots of wind from the aft port quarter ( NW for you purists) with NW waves. Perfect for surfin'. And we did, and we are still doing it.
Absolutely fantastic sailing. The SM took to standing on the helm seat whooping at the 20' holes in front of the boat as we started surfing. On course, right speeds.
Now for the naturalists - the whale has been id'd - very rare -
Olive Andrews (IFAW Samoa)this little fella is a quite plump Pygmy Right whale - Caperea marginata.(sounds like something belonging to the SM)
They're range is 31S to 55S, pretty much exactly in the kind of tack your mate was travelling between Sth Africa & Melbourne. He's quite a rare critter. Smallest and least known of all the baleen whales (5.5m - 6.5m). Nothing known of his population status.
Mouth too curved to be a Minke.
Thanks Olive(Samoa) - and Sharon Shaw, (Coffs Harbour) and Andrew Carroll National Marine Science Centre, Southern Cross University (Coffs Harbour)for this.
Long may the winds continue.
Cheers
Your crew