I was moored in
Chichester Marina, England when I decided to sell my twenty-six foot Westerly
Centaur. After a year of living aboard, it felt like she was shrinking around
me—I needed something a trifle roomier.
She was in
tip-top shape and sold quickly. The new owner, Steve, wanted the boat as a home-
away-from-home on the south coast of Portugal but had done little ocean
sailing. So he hired me to get her down there. It was mid-October when the two
of us set off—not the best time to be sailing these waters as the weather
tended to be a little unsettled.
Whenever we
encountered contrary winds during our passage along the South Coast of England,
we would put in to the closest harbour. Once on dry land, we’d seek out pubs
that brewed their own ales. Some marvellous examples of the brewer’s art were
quaffed. As might be imagined, it took far less than a gale to send us heading
for refuge.
Just east of Plymouth , on a bright
sunny day, the wind died to a whisper. We proceeded under power until, with a
horrible screeching, wrenching sound, the engine stalled. A glance aft showed a
thick piece of yellow rope trailing astern.
Donning a mask
and fins I reluctantly plunged over the side into the icy water. Despite my wearing
of a wetsuit, it was an unpleasant dip—made even more so by the fact that the
rope had fused itself so tightly around the propeller-shaft that my knife
proved absolutely useless. I swapped it for a hacksaw and managed—after about
four dives—to free the propeller.
Ahhh, thinks I,
clambering back aboard—takes more than a piece of rope to stop us intrepid
mariners. But I was wrong. When I tried to restart the engine, horrible noises
issued forth from its compartment. The engine rested on rubber mounts, two of
which had torn loose. The shaft coupling was also broken.
During the
afternoon, the whisper of a breeze arrived—just enough to ghost us into Plymouth ’s outer harbour
with the help of an incoming tide. We were within spitting distance of the yacht
basin, savouring the imagined taste of the ales in town when the wind died and
the wretched tide turned. Slowly at first, but with gathering speed, we were
carried back out to sea.
Throughout our
watches during that frosty night, Steve and I were able to observe the warm glow
of lights on shore and envision happy people sitting in front of crackling
fires in cozy pubs downing pints of delicious ales.
The next
afternoon we managed to drift into port, assuage our thirsts and begin to repair
the damage caused by the rope. Three days later we were on our way again.
It wasn’t until
we were well past Lisbon , Portugal with darkness closing in that
the barometer began its plunge. I thought of turning around and heading back to
Lisbon , but I
have this thing about losing ground. I sent out a radio message to any ships in
the vicinity and a Dutchman responded. “No storms in the area,” he assured me. Well,
thought yours truly, the Dutch are fine mariners so all must be well.
But it wasn’t. Perhaps
he’d discovered that his wife had enjoyed a fling with an Australian during one
of his voyages and I became the scapegoat. The bastard was probably laughing
into his Schnapps or Geneva
or whatever he was drinking as the barometer continued its plunge.
The wind came
howling in from the north, bringing with it a lashing rain. We were making good
time with just the small headsail hoisted, but it was a miserable ride with
waves breaking over the stern and sloshing into the cockpit.
A little before
dawn, the wind backed to the south-west but by this time we were south of Cabo
de São Vicente—the south-west corner of Portugal—so were able to push on toward
our destination of Vilamoura.
Cabo de São
Vicente and Ponta de Sagres—which is situated a couple of miles to the south east
of Cabo—tower almost vertically to heights of over two hundred feet. Huge,
confused waves generated by the storm were building upon each other and
battering against these fortress-like walls, sending clouds of spray over their
tops.
We’d hoisted a
reefed mainsail by this time and were trying to claw our way south, away from
those towering chunks of rock. But as if in league with the cliffs, the wind
continued backing south, pushing us toward them. Once we’d squeaked by Ponta de
Sagres though, we had sea room as the land begins to curve inward.
Paul sitting on top of the lighthouse |
By the time we
were approaching Marina Vilamoura, the wind had eased considerably and the sea
was beginning to smooth out. The entrance to the marina is through two stone
breakwaters that face roughly south. As we approached the shore, the sea-bed
began to shelve and the waves started building again. I started the engine,
lined us up with the port entrance and began to ride the waves in.
But I had an
uncomfortable feeling—something more than just surfing a twenty-six foot boat
through a rocky entrance, because I had Steve go forward to keep a lookout. We
were well inside the two breakwaters, surfing on a wave when he turned to me and
yelled, “There’s a chain across the entrance.” I jammed the tiller hard over and
gave the engine full throttle. Steve came bounding back to the cockpit and
flattened the headsail.
Almost on the beach |
If one of the
incoming waves caught the bow, the boat would have ended its days on the rocks
of the breakwater—but the Gods were merciful and gave us a little calm patch
until we were outside the entrance. Then three big waves came rolling in and
almost put us on the beach. Somehow we managed to claw our way back into deep
water and re-set our course for Cadiz ,
Spain —a harbour
with an easy entrance.
Arriving back
in Vilamoura a few days later, the Port Captain denied that there’d ever been a
chain across the entrance. But I later ran into Paul, a friend who’d been
perched atop one of the lighthouses at the end of the east breakwater
and had watched our entire performance. Yes, he told me—there had been a chain.
Why it had been
put there I have no idea.
Maybe the Dutchman got it right - Davina
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