Tuning the Violin–Randall

Madeira Cape Verde Leg

Day 4

Thursday, July 10

Noon Position: 23 25.2N 19 02.5W

Course/Speed: SW 6.5

Wind: NExN 14

Sail: Both headsails poled out full, wing and wing

Noon Miles: 155

Total Miles: 571

I came on watch at 2am to help Harmon raise sail. Winds had reached a steady 13 from the NE and it was voted by all aboard well past time to make the transition from engine to a more fitting, not to mention quiet, mode of transport. With wind on port quarter, we poled out the jib to port and made the main full to starboard.

The early night had been clear with a slight haze that served to illuminate the sky around the moon in a striking fashion. We both took scads of photos without ever quite capturing how the intensely bright lunar glow made the night feel even darker.

At 4am, a wall of cloud approached from astern whose tips were jagged fingers reaching toward Mo. In a different ocean and season I’d suspect a gale’s approach but here winds went from the low teens to the 20s when the front hit but settled back to high teens once it passed.

From then until now we have been under cooling cloud. Temps in the cabin are mid 70s and the varnish is no longer melting.

Sometime in the night we passed a heard of flying fish. Four were found in the lee scuppers in the morning, one to windward and one had, to its great astonishment, flown into the open head hatch where it lay on the floorboards until discovered by my bare feet in the wee hours.

A small fry, whose life was cut short by the big gray monster.

It is interesting to contemplate briefly what it is to be a flying fish. Imagine an entire life lived in the upper strata of an essentially infinite expanse, a room without walls or furniture to hide behind. Her body is an inverted triangle with huge eyes facing downward into the depths from which come all her enemies; once spied, her wings and motormount tail providing a quick escape into that weightless, enemy free zone, the air, until Mo lumbers by and scoops them up like butterflies in a net. Mo’s decks are newly painted and have a skin of what is essentially 80 grit sandpaper, which serves to descale the fishes as they flip and flop and gasp their way into that great ocean in the sky. May the Great Fish above accept his lowly fliers, for they did no wrong.

In the afternoon I transitioned us from the autopilot and back to the Monitor windvane (HELLO MONTE!) and immediately felt a sense of relief. I appreciate the ease of the auto as much as the next man, but the windvane feels like the proper mode on a sailing boat, which is, after all, an acoustic instrument. Tuning the rig, hauling and sheeting sails, setting a course for the tiller—these deserve the gentle, pulling accompaniment of a windvane. Because sailing the many strings of a boat is more like playing the violin than a Moog synthesizer.

Thank you to Mike and Suzy at Scanmar for setting us up with the right Monitor gear for this trip.

9 responses to “Tuning the Violin–Randall”

  1. I thought those flying fish would end up in Harmon’s fry pan instead of just laying there in the scuppers. Whichever, it is an ignominious end to a life of skipping from wave to wave around the oceans of the world. And damned be the autohelms woeful screams of pssht, pssht pssht – much prefer the silent movements of the wind vane. Sounds like sailing is great and speed on….

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  2. anthonyvlasto Avatar
    anthonyvlasto

    What a marvellous paragraph about the flying fish – thank you Randall.

    You (both) write so well and the book ( and let there be one) will be an easy end product.

    I feel privileged to be on the receiving end of your blogs – thank you!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Anthony, thank you. It’s enjoyable to know others get pleasure from your experience. I mean you, not the brave flying fish. Best!

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  3. Dear Randall,

    You may not remember your survey from eight or nine years ago of a steel boat in Grenada named Muirsgian before you found Mo, but that survey and a few emails with you convinced my wife and I to buy her and put our lives into her. She is now SV Poppycock and we have since sailed many miles and discovered many counties on both sides of the Atlantic. On route, we birthed two new crew members that…well I want to say help but I think that is still a few years away.

    We recently did the leg you are currently on (while just a little bit pregnant) and, after experiencing Brazil, will soon be in Uruguay. We’d love the chance to show you Poppycock again, be it in a different hemisphere, under a different name, and with her new family at the helm. I told you years ago that I was forever in your debt for your recommendation of this boat and we would love to pay you back with a proper meal after you clear into Uruguay.

    Cheers, Nathaniel Montague SV Poppycock

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    1. Hey Nathaniel, I remember you well, and David and the boat whose name I couldn’t pronounce. Quite a boat. We will be departing for Piriapolus near the end of the month with the intent of arriving before the end of August. The we’re both flying home for a month or two. Hope our paths cross. Best to you and the crew. -RR

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  4. Thanks Randall for the photos and descriptions. I can really get a sense of the moments you describe.

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    1. Skip, glad you enjoyed. Pleasure to see your name here. Hope all is well with you and your fine craft.

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  5. Are the flying fish edible?

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