Emergency repairs at sea whilst on passage are a crews worst nightmare and especially if it involves ingress of water or rig failures, either standing or running. Following on from the forestay swage repair job admirably carried out by a Galapagos roadside engineer, the starboard intermediate shroud (rod) parted one evening shortly before sundown en route from Ua Pou (two posts) in the Marquesas to Tahiti. Coming on to night with light fading fast, we needed to make a quick fix to get us through until daylight next morning......and without the mast collapsing!..........something you definitely do not want when sailing in far oceans!
Standing rig failure due to broken shroud |
'Making good time sailing into the advancing twilight of yet another magnificent tropical evening, all is well with the world and she is feeling quite grand, settling in for a good nights’ progress toward Manihi. Skipping along on a port tack, her cutwater effortlessly slicing through the faintly ruffled but slinky water, she knows she is cutting a fine image, and just faintly irritated she has no gallery of onlookers to acknowledge her finery. Her crew appreciate the show, but some recognition from others would do wonders for her self esteem - she likes to show off just as much as the next ship!
Pride always comes before a fall and with no warning whatsoever and certainly with no foreknowledge on her part or the crew a thundering crack shatters the evening calm. Her captain and sibling crew race up the companionway to see Len staring skyward at a lazily swinging starboard intermediate shroud. It has parted at the upper spreader tang, dropped into a half hoop and now drooping out to starboard. Aghast, her crew stare at one another. Having heard and read many stories of yachts losing their rigs at sea, thousands of miles from the nearest yard, because of failed rigging, they are speechless for a few moments. The scene before their eyes spells disaster if they cannot effect a solution quickly. She brings her head around through the wind, and into the hove to position. She is most remorseful but hasn’t time to worry about that now.
Over an obligatory nerve
settling cup of coffee, her shaken crew discuss the problem. Firstly, Manihi
Atoll being sparsely inhabited and therefore unlikely to be of assistance is
struck off the itinerary. Her course is altered to Rangiroa Atoll which has the
greatest population in the Tuamotus’. Fishing is the mainstay income earner for
most of these atolls and that means boats, ropes, cables, wires, will be in
abundance – sailors are the same the world over! Into their second cup and with
their minds more settled with some reasoned thinking, the major implications of
the problem appear to recede for the moment. Given that if all things remain
equal, most of her sailing will be on the port tack the entire way to Tahiti,
where they know all things marine are available. They are carrying a
considerable length of spectra rope and this will be fashioned into a replacement
shroud tomorrow. This Spectra line has an even lower stretch factor than Kevlar
and if it can be drawn down tight enough over the spreaders and onto the deck
fittings it may suffice until they make landfall in Papeete.
When Mother Nature is in the frame, nothing is equal. She carries out her vocation at her discretion. Running a printout from the weatherfax shows no alteration in the weather pattern anywhere in the area of the ocean they are sailing – just the steady SSE trades the whole way across this sector. Within an hour of their mishap however, cloud covers the night sky, blackening out the stars. The rising wind backs, bringing rain with it, and our little ship is continually buffeted. It is suddenly squall like, with winds up to thirty knots and likely to come from any direction. Thirty minutes into these conditions, the captive hoop of steel wrestles itself free and commences a pattern of wild arcs amidships. Its main target is the mainmast and every few seconds this eleven millimetre diameter steel punch wants to embed itself into the aluminium spar. The tang originally attached to the end has long since disappeared into the sea with a loud hiss, leaving a lethal steel rod hell bent on penetrating anything in its swooping path. Aluminium, wood or a skull would make no difference, in that all would accept the flying projectile to a depth dependant on its own physical resistance.
Yes, it really is this green |
Crew, seeing the black shape slumped in the port scupper think he has given up or been hit. He rises again, this time with the port side halyard loose in his hand and following several misses manages to catch the tip in the slack halyard, whip the cord around the steel as many times as possible, draw it down taut and fix it to a port side pad eye. Job done, he straightens and scuttles back into the cockpit grinning from ear to ear. No doubt he thinks he is a hero now, not realising that it was a pure stroke of luck the shroud caught in the halyard on its wildly gyrating path. However, the possibility of any further immediate damage being eliminated, she is content, allowing him to bask in his thirty seconds of fame. Tomorrow is another day, when options will be examined, but for now cosy bunks are awaiting. Filled they are, leaving the remaining crew on watch to ponder what might have been.
Gently swinging from her mast head, her captain surveys the scene all around him. A brilliant tropical morning, swept fresh and crystal clean by the overnight rain, leaves a scintillating picture. Three hundred and sixty degrees of perfect and sparkling blue disc encircles her, holding her permanently captive, dead centre. Swivelling his head, he marvels at the outrageous extent of it. Endless, like a womans’ love, the blue ocean seemingly stretches to infinity. The canopy overhead is without blemish, but for several fluffy and harmless looking thunderheads dotted low on the horizon in the south west quadrant. Probably hovering over some distant speck of land, but being so far off, cannot be seen over the horizon. For the rest, a broad canvas of wide shades of blue, lightly brushed with glittering sparkles as the sun reflects from the wave tips in the wispy breeze. No camera, restricted as they are to a small window, will ever be capable of capturing the overall uplifting feeling of seeing and being part of such a scene. Pumped full with a tranquil joy of being alive, her captain turns his head to the job at hand.
Dawn breaking, as it had this morning, into a beautiful unruffled day with only a light breeze on her stern, her captain had decided a trip up the mast was in order to see what could be done about her errant shroud. He would also inspect Miguels’ swage on her forestay.
‘Waste of time even looking at that!’ she says, ever practical, ‘good or bad, what does he imagine he could do about it out here?’
Human nature being what it is, there was no way he wasn’t going to be hoisted up the extra height to the truk for an inspection. Apart from anything else, that is as high as he can go on her and he will go there! Normally at sea, a trip up the mast would only be contemplated in an emergency. Five degrees of movement on deck translates to a fifteen to twenty degree arc up here. It is imperative that the mast is clamped firmly between the thighs of the climber to avoid swinging out and slamming back into the spar. These youngsters doing a round the world race, go up in all weathers – the fearlessness of youth no doubt propelling them. One becomes a little more prudent with age.
Miguels’ engineering masterpiece is of course flawless and he feels a spurt of affection for that moustachioed man and the product of his craft. Three thousand five hundred nautical miles in their wake, toiling he will be still. Drinking in the view, lingering as long as is practicable without the crew on deck becoming suspicious, distracted (it’s a twenty metre drop to the deck!) or just leaving him up there, he hails the deck to lower him to the intermediate spreader. Hooked to his belt is the spectra line, and in his pouch a replacement tang. Glancing down the whole length of rope all the way to the deck, he is momentarily fascinated by the convoluted gyration it takes from in close to the mast, to way out over the sea. With its woven diamond blue and white pattern it looks much like a very long and very lazy python, snaking all the way up to his rear end!
‘Come on’, she checks him, ‘get on with the job!’
It is relatively easy to double
loop the spectra cord through the tang, hook it into the keyhole in the mast
and drop the two loose ends down to deck level for attaching to the deck
fitting. On the way down he checks the leather spreader end covers for wear. Back on deck with several inner thigh skin burns,
the results of which are deposited somewhere up and down the mast, the episode
is shared over a cooling beer – cannot rush these jobs at sea!
Tere Moana healthy starboard shrouds |
‘Men!’ she thinks, ‘they’re so easy!’
The completed assembly, without too close an
inspection, looks passably shipshape. Strong enough for fair to moderate
weather anyway, and her crew admire their resourceful handiwork from her
cockpit. Both she and her captain pray for the Trades to hold until Tahiti....?'
You can read about many other such incidents and adventures at sea in my ebook 'Sailing Adventures in Paradise' by downloading it from my website www.sailboat2adventure.com