ITCZ, Northern Pacific Ocean 9 Feb 2012 4:30 a.m. 03N46 141W36
At least I think we’re in the ITCZ. Last night we became becalmed, and cranked up the iron genoa. Then I heard Frank and Logan taking down the Fisherman for a squall, which ended up not bringing that much wind, so they put it back up. Then right when I came on watch at 1 a.m., the wind picked up, so we took it down again and turned off the engine. So far on my watch I had an hour of sailing at 6 knots, then an hour at 2 knots, and now an hour of 3-6 knots. Wind, no wind, wind no wind. Must be the ITCZ. All in all, we’re making progress and the wind appears to be mostly from the East. The squalls are not too aggressive.
I know why I’m not emailing daily even though we’re on passage. It’s this starboard tack business, makes for a very uncomfortable nav seat. To avoid tumbling into the galley, I have to brace myself with a foot, and sometimes a hand when a big wave comes. I’ve never been good at typing with one hand. I can sort of brace with the palms of my hands while the fingers fly, but it’s awkward.
Looking back, we’ve been on port tacks for two years – most of the way to NZ, and most of the way through the roaring 40s. But since we headed North, we’ve been mostly on starboard tacks. We may now have right of way, but starboard has it’s disadvantages.
Another disadvantage we recently discovered, is that it appears we may have a leak in the caps to the fuel tanks on the port side (our port and keel tanks). When we heel over they are often underwater, and seawater is getting in. This means the engine has stalled a few times, awaiting Frank’s fix, of tidy dry filters. So we’re consuming fuel filters at an unhappy rate. But the starboard tank appears to be high and dry, and looking at the weather, it appears that we may in fact be in a thin spot in the ITCZ, and in less than 24 hours we should arrive in a zone of 20 knot north-easterly winds. With winds like that from the North-east, we should make quick work of the rest of this passage, and we won’t need the engine much to charge the batteries (or power us through dead wind zones). So hopefully our starboard tank will see us through. Otherwise, we’ll have to start filtering the fuel before it gets to the prefilters…a messy business underway (yes we already have prefilters, and even pre-pre filters, so next is pre-pre-pre-filtering).
xoxomo