Our passage to our overnight stop at Porto Pollo was only 30 miles but was memorable for the size of the swell left over from the previous gale in the Gulf du Lion. Keen to tuck ourselves out of the undulations we opted to pick up a mooring buoy behind a reef and close enough to the shore to swim for our beer.
So, with money and shirts in a Tupperware, we emerged amongst the rocks and walked to a beach bar for our traditional libation.
With a 20 mile passage to our booked berth in the old port marina in Ajaccio and with no wind, I will be badgering the crew to start on the clean up so we may have some time in hand to seek out the rugby in the afternoon.
Paula and her two girlfriends arrive early tomorrow morning with the current crew leaving on the return flight so this will be the last missive from the âBeetham boysâ. We have had a very memorable 12 day cruise since they joined Hejira in Malta 575 miles ago taking in Comino, Tunisia, Sardinia and Corsica. In truth, it was an excessively âbullishâ itinerary but that has been a feature of my sailing this year and I never seem to learn. I justify the âwhistle stopâ nature of these cruises on the basis that they are tasters and I will return to indulge in the coming years. Carl has produced the most exceptional meals, sometimes in difficult conditions and we have only taken one meal ashore and that was on the day they arrived in Valletta. Tom has been great company and has picked things up very quickly. His blog inputs have been very entertaining and embellished the accounts with a more ecologically and socially responsible perspective.
Carl writes:-
Ahoy there, Shipmates! Here, in no particular order, are my maritime musings from the poop deck:
Sailingâs great fun but, within the Med, it happens surprisingly infrequently as there either seems to be too much wind, or not enough. Furthermore, no amount of Nickâs attempts to fill the sails with his own âwindâ seemed to do the job. Didnât stop him continually trying though.
And irrespective of the direction we were travelling, why was the wind always on our nose?
When the skipper puts his life-jacket on itâs sensible to follow his lead.
Scopoderm anti-sea-sickness patches are Godâs gift to the seafaring community.
Nothing about âthe headsâ (wc) can be described as comfortable but when you gotta go, you gotta go.
Serve the crew anything comprising onions, garlic and chilli and theyâll go to bed happy. Mind, fail to plan the meals beforehand and youâre planning to fail.
Lee Childâs âJack Reacherâ novels really are gripping page-turners.
Keep your eyes peeled and youâll be pleasantly surprised. We saw dolphins, flying-fish and a turtle.
Sailors are a friendly, welcoming bunch but woe-betide any other skipper who clatters their fenders a little too forcefully. Also, was the phrase âone-up-manâs-shipâ coined by the sailing fraternity as they seem extremely quick to criticise and take the mick out of othersâ vessels?
Irrespective of the supposed yachtsmanâs code concerning where/how to pass and who exactly has right-of-way, âmight is rightâ! Choose to argue at your peril.
Hejira is no gin-palace and sheâs a well-equipped, fine sea-faring vessel. Pity the same canât be said of her scurvy, malingering crew!
Live and let live on-board. Three men and a boat will result in three very different opinions but remember, youâre all in it together and there ainât room for petty arguments and sulking. Ultimately, what the skipper says goes, goes.
As it transpires, itâs not Job but Paula, long-suffering First Lady of the good ship Hejira that has the patience of a saint. The girl deserves a medal. And a divorce!
Technology seems to play a great, and increasingly prolific, role on board. Or perhaps thatâs just in Captain Hookâs daily life? The sextant remained in its box for the duration.
Keep things shipshape and Bristol fashion or itâs going to be a messy transit. Do the job once and do it right.
Our very own Captain Smollettâs blood pressure does tend to rise by several notches the closer we get to a mooringâŚ
The coastal landscapes of Sardinia and Corsica are truly stunning and I would want to return to both at some point in the future. Having said that, both islands have extremely dubious âfour-headed, blindfolded sailingâ flags that would undoubtedly fail muster with the PC brigade.
Sadly, topless bathing on the beaches of Southern Europe appears to have fallen out of favour.
Radio Fourâs âTodayâ programme remains the mainstay of daily news. Closely followed by Ed Reardonâs Week, Cabin Pressure, Dead-Ringers and Desert Island Discs. Thankfully, Iâll never be old enough for The Archers. Or golf.
Write drunk. Edit sober.
Wee Tom writes:-
Well what a time itâs been. Weâve had many highs and very few lows and I come away having learnt and experienced a great deal upon the bonny blue. Here are just a few reflections from the last 12 days.
Sailing is like S&M. It requires rope, knots, close-proximity and it ainât for everyone.
Luckily, I get it!
Like a cow with a calf, woe betide the person that gets between Nick and his blog!
The coats that invented Scopiderm deserve a Nobel Peace Prize.
Malta is nice, Sardinia is nicer and Corsica has croissants. No brainer.
Unless you want Captain Jack Sparrowâs judgement crashing down on you, look up what a lazarus locker or a transom is before you arrive â itâs like being bossed around by someone speaking tongues!
Heading west into a setting sun as the stars begin to twinkle in the fiery purple hues, is pretty special.
Who knew there were so many billionaires?
Thereâs few better way to travel than on calm seas with big winds.
Boats = freedom
If under sail, one has right of way, in theoryâŚunless theyâre bigger than youâŚor Italian.
The French and the Italians have got a lot of things right, socially we can learn a lot.
Plastic waste is bad, especially in the sea.
If encountering officialdom in Tunisia, be sure to brush up on D Trumpâs âArt of the Dealâ, beforehand.
If Captain Hook offers you passage on the Hejira, snap his hand off (just leave his keyboard finger intact!), you wonât regret it.
I have really enjoyed this blog. You three are very amusing and descriptive You set the mood extremely well!