Happy Christmas from Khujada 2 in Chatham Bay!

We are spending Christmas Day in Chatham Bay, a quiet corner of Union Island.
We are so used to everywhere not in the middle of the ocean having (if often only ropey) wifi that it was a bit of a surprise to find no connectivity here – no mains electricity and not even a mobile ‘phone signal, if an intermittent weak one from the beach which we’re hoping will serve later today for calls to family.

So for anyone wanting to contact us today your options are limited, although the satellite ‘phone will be on for the rest of the day.

We hope all our friends and family have a great day, whether in the UK, France, Martinique, with us here in the Grenadines, or elsewhere. We miss you all.

The Smart family.

Posted in 2014-2015 a family adventure, Caribbean, Destinations, Latest position | 6 Comments

We have arrived!

We crossed the finishing line at around ~0600 UTC.
We were welcomed by:
– a flotilla (well, the committee boat and the photographer’s rib),
– a salute (not 21-gun admittedly but a signal horn to announce our arrival to the world),
– cheering spectators (perhaps not 000s but intermittent cheering, whistling and whooping followed us as we made our way around the marina), and
– a welcoming committee on our pontoon of at least a dozen, possibly twenty friends and ARC team members – brilliant that they stayed up until (or got up at) two in the morning to welcome us to Las Palmas – thank you all very much!
The welcoming party included a local welcome of rum punch for the adults, cola for the children – whom we roused, they were very happy to see a friend, Max from Rosea, there to welcome them – as well as a very generous and thoughtful bottle of fizz from Vagaris, which we enjoyed at our leisure once everyone else had gone to bed. Thank you again.

Safe, sound. Arrived.

Lots to do tomorrow, but for the moment let’s relax! (Or perhaps, “smile mon!”)

Khujada 1 Khujada 3 Khujada 5 Khujada 6

Posted in 2014-2015 a family adventure, Caribbean, Destinations, La Transat / the Atlantic Crossing, Latest position | 10 Comments

The one that got away!

As we approached land, it was time for a bit of grooming on board. Skipper’s beard was unsightly and James’ hair needed shearing.
As skipper rinsed off under the deck shower a fish decided to take a bite. After yesterday’s success this was different. The line went out quickly so I tightened the clutch to slow it down. A lot of line was taken on an ever-tightening clutch until it slowed and soon it was time to start reeling in.
Yesterday’s small tuna was fairly easy but this was a very different experience, with the fish on the end determinedly taking line back for the next half hour or so as I tried to reel it in.
After about 45 minutes to an hour it was within 20-30 feet of the boat, with crew identifying it as a big tuna.
It made one last bid for freedom – I’d adjusted the clutch quite high and considered easing it to allow it some line. The rod bent, the line pulled, but then we continued.
I didn’t ease the clutch, with the whole crew impatient for me to bring it in so close to St. Lucia.
Two minutes later it made another last effort. The fluorocarbon snapped just (about 10cm) above the lure. We’ll never know just how big it was.
I suspect it may be a classic beginner’s mistake, because even on the first last big pull I considered letting it take some line – if only to ease the pressure on my left bicep!
I won’t make the same mistake next time, although having stopped the boat for an hour within 50 miles of Saint Lucia, there was some relief around the cockpit when it got away and we got back under way.

Posted in 2014-2015 a family adventure, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Our final Atlantic crew member

In the rush of getting ready for the start of our Atlantic crossing, we omitted to mention the arrival of our final crew member, Stephen.

When we arrived in Las Palmas two months ago we were planning to cross en famille, just the five of us. Whilst we were tired after the passage from Lisbon to the Canaries, we reasoned the Atlantic (~2800 miles) was 4x the distance from Oeiras to Las Palmas (700 miles), and we could handle 4x what we’d just completed.

As more ARC boats arrived in Las Palmas and as we took stock of the relatively vast numbers of crew on comparable boats, we reflected on the toll the crossing would take – what if we sustained a serious injury, how would we cope with the fatigue of children, squalls, reefing, 24-hour watch? Maybe not as simple as 4x?
We discussed whom we might ask to accompany us. Our criteria: first and foremost, a friend, someone who’ll cope with the children (and the adults!), an experienced sailor and someone who knows the boat.
We came up with a short list of one. Stephen was at the top of this list. There may be more people we might have asked but we couldn’t think of anyone.

Stephen is one half of the husband and wife team of North Sea Maritime, UK agents for Alubat, manufacturer of Ovnis, through whom we bought Khujada 2, an Ovni 395. From the specification, where he was a valuable foil and sounding board for ideas and key decisions – we didn’t make many mistakes in the design – through to commissioning, where he accompanied us before we set sail for home on the maiden voyage, and into ownership, Stephen has often been the first person we’ve turned to for questions or obstacles, and is always ready to help. Not only does he have experience (already with transatlantic crossings under his belt) but also expert knowledge of our boat, as well as being a handy engineer in case of issues whilst under way, not to mention being a good guy.
All of this added up to the ideal (only) candidate so we were delighted when he accepted our rather last minute invitation to join us on our crossing.

Stephen arrived just over 36 hours before the scheduled start of the rally, bringing everything we expected – expertise, energy, orderliness, ideas and our wish-list from the UK of items we couldn’t source in Spain / Portugal. Three weeks later we’re now most of the way there, noone’s fallen out and we’re delighted we decided not to go it alone, and will say fond farewell as Stephen returns home to the UK for Christmas with his family.

Posted in 2014-2015 a family adventure, L'équipage, La Transat / the Atlantic Crossing | Leave a comment

SMS from 881631523759@msg.iridium.com

I am here Lat+14.129500 Lon-060.227633 Alt +34 m GPS Sats seen: 05 http://map.iridium.com/m?lat=14.129500&lon=-060.227633 Sent from my Iridium handset

Posted in 2014-2015 a family adventure, Latest position, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

A fish!

A fish!

Big white hunter land’um big’um fish’um.
Fresh protein tonight. An additional special 12th birthday treat for Hugo.

Tuna.

At last.

Posted in 2014-2015 a family adventure, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

SMS from 881631523759@msg.iridium.com

I am here Lat+14.165416 Lon-059.490633 Alt +1 m GPS Sats seen: 04 http://map.iridium.com/m?lat=14.165416&lon=-059.490633 Sent from my Iridium handset

Posted in 2014-2015 a family adventure, Latest position, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Happy birthday!

# birthdays celebrated on board: 1
Hugo turns 12 today, and we’re celebrating in style. Albane’s had the oven on baking for 2 hours and the Moet is in the ‘fridge.
It’s a good thing too since we’ve been becalmed for most of the last 24 hours. Within 200 miles of our destination, it’s asking a lot of the whole crew in terms of patience. Pootling along at 2.5 knots in 5 knots of wind, the parasailor is just about up, pulling us along in approximately the right direction, under a brutal sun – sunbathing the order of the day this morning.
We had better arrive in the next two days or so since there are two more crew birthdays coming up, we’re low on gas, and birthdays MUST have cake!

# Christmas trees decorated: 1
The tree has been up since before we left Las Palmas – a priority not just for the children but the whole family – far more so than stowing all the provisions.
Parents finally yielded and allowed them to decorate it on the 1st December, and it’s the perfect size for the interior.

# shooting stars: 1000s (no really!)
Last night was our Christmas light show.
Clear night of countless (dozens – too many to count – in one hour on watch) shooting stars, sometimes two flashing by at a time, with fewer flaring for a second or more as they arced across the night sky, decorating Orion, Lepus then later Ursa Major.
The fireworks carried on through until sunrise where the last few persistent trails were eventually blanketed by light of the rising sun.

Posted in 2014-2015 a family adventure, Uncategorized | 4 Comments

SMS from 881631523759@msg.iridium.com

I am here Lat+14.290783 Lon-058.063150 Alt -2 m GPS Sats seen: 04 http://map.iridium.com/m?lat=14.290783&lon=-058.063150 Sent from my Iridium handset

Posted in 2014-2015 a family adventure, Latest position, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Happy birthday!

# birthdays celebrated on board: 1
Hugo turns 12 today, and we’re celebrating in style. Albane’s had the oven on baking for 2 hours and the Moet is in the ‘fridge.
It’s a good thing too since we’ve been becalmed for most of the last 24 hours. Within 200 miles of our destination, it’s asking a lot of the whole crew in terms of patience. Pootling along at 2.5 knots in 5 knots of wind, the parasailor is just about up, pulling us along in approximately the right direction, under a brutal sun – sunbathing the order of the day this morning.
We had better arrive in the next two days or so since there are two more crew birthdays coming up, we’re low on gas, and birthdays MUST have cake!

# Christmas trees decorated: 1
The tree has been up since before we left Las Palmas – a priority not just for the children but the whole family – far more so than stowing all the provisions.
Parents finally yielded and allowed them to decorate it on the 1st December, and it’s the perfect size for the interior.

Posted in 2014-2015 a family adventure, Hugo, Les enfants, Life on board | 4 Comments