Blowing a Hoolie

Posted by Julian on Monday May 3, 2010 Under On Board

Just arrived back home after a weekend of sailing in the Irish Sea. My first sail this year. I lifted my boat ‘Ragamuffin’ out of the water in March thinking I only had to fix a couple of small leaks and add a splash of antifoul paint. Not likely, in fact she needed some serious repairs, hence the delay to my sailing season. But thanks to some brilliant help from a couple of good friends (Duncan and Richard), she is now ship shape and ready to sail.

By way of a thank you, I arranged to take them sailing over to the Isle Of Man the day after the launch. Unfortunately I can’t control the weather and we found ourselves with very little wind and by the end of the afternoon we were becalmed. The port we were heading to on the Isle of Man has an entrance which only opens between certain hours around high tide. With the lack of wind it was obvious we were not going to make it in time before the gate shut, even if the wind picked up. We’d still had a good time with plenty of laughs, so we decided to head back home.

With the wind due to pick up soon, we decided it was the time for something to eat – tinned curry. I’m sure tinned curry would taste horrible at home, but somehow on a boat just about anything that is hot and filling tastes wonderful. Then sure enough, half way through tucking into Chicken Tikka Masala the wind picked up which meant one hand on the tiller and the other hand on the fork – time for the auto pilot.

The forecast was for an “occasional force 6″. I’m not sure which page the weatherman was reading from but pretty soon is was consistently blowing a force 7 and a short time after that we were having gusts at 55 knots. I’ve only sailed bigger boats in winds like these, so my heart was pumping a bit fast. She might not be a Class40 but for a small boat, ‘Ragamuffin’ was quite composed. And apart from a good drenching, I enjoyed it.

I’ll just finish by giving a huge pat on the back to Richard. It was only his second sail and although it was as rough as hell and at night, he remains keen to go sailing again (despite being hit in the face by a flying grill pan!). Nice one Richard.

Cheers, Julian

7 Responses to “Blowing a Hoolie”

  1. Kathie Says:

    Am ashamed to admit I had to look up the Isle of Man’s exact location on the Internet. I’d heard of Manx cats (do the island’s native BeeGees count, too?).

    Weather and flying pans notwithstanding — lucky it wasn’t a boom! — I’m sure everyone still had a lovely outing. Fresh air does whet the appetite, huh?

    Look forward to reading of more of your maritime adventures, now that sailing season is starting to get into full swing.

  2. Kathie Says:

    Any thoughts on this Saturday’s USA-England World Cup match? England surely has more stars, so USA’s only hope is to offer more cohesive teamwork.

    Oh, and Força Portugal!

  3. Julian Says:

    I predict a draw ;-)

  4. Kathie Says:

    Julian, your hindsight is positively 20-20!!!

  5. Kevin Megson Says:

    Hey Julian

    Great Achievment.Good to see you are living up to the family goals.I have broadcast your news to your rellies here in Australia and no doubt you will be a positive for all. Cheers your uncle Kevin

  6. steve Says:

    far out

  7. TLD Says:

    Found your website through Digg. I’ll be signing up to your feed.

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