16N25
45W39
Sleeping onboard is a complicated business. It´s warm. It´s
noisy. The engine is huffing and puffing. The generator generates large
quantities of heat, and that is a blessing in the northern parts of the
Atlantic but here, on the way to the equator, the extra warmth feels quite
redundant.
The fans were a help to begin with. Everybody installed their newly
bought fans when the mercury slipped over twentytwo degrees Celsius. Frosen
vikings were thawing in the warm night. They didn´t realise that
this was just the beginning. Temperature rose steadily. Twentyfive, twentysix,
twentyseven. Today it´s a degree or two above thirty. Hot, a slight
wind, everything but cool. It was pretty much the same yesterday, and the
day before that. Now the fans are useless. They only wisp around hot air
and makes the cabin feel like a bakery.
The photographer got desperate on night and hauled out his matress
on deck, trying to find sleep. Only to discover humidity. 85%.
Second engineer has solved the problem by sleeping everywhere all the
time. You find him draped across whatever there is of sofas, benches, relatively
soft corners. It´s a bit annoying to stumble over him all the time
but I´m sure it´s a working strategy. At least he´s very
seldom awake.
But nothing helps against the noise. An extra pillow to cover the other
ear, hamburgerstyle, softens the roaring and after a while you get used
to it. Or deaf.
We´re compensated with extra time. Every now and then the clock
is put back one hour. It gives us an extra hour to savour the next morning.
It´s much appreciated. And comforting. What I loose in nocturnal
quality is returned in quantity.
12N52
68W55
We have left the island of Margarita on the coast of Venezuela and are
staying on a small, uninhabited, group of islets - Isla des Aves. It is
one in a stretch of atolls. Divers come here for the clear waters and beautiful
coral reefs.
Many of the islets are just barely a patch of pure white sand on the
surface. Others are larger with lagoons and large quantities of birds nesting
in the peace and quiet.
We crept in there with our little dinghy, manouvering in the mangrove
and shallow water. The birds looked surprised. Turning to each other I
could imagine they were making an irritated comment.
-And this used to be a decent neighbourhood.
The white, downy chicks flapped their wings and wondered where on earth
the food was. The running of our engine mixed with the sounds of birds
and insects and water lapping gently against the roots of the mangrove.
Finally one bird mustered the energy to attack us and the photographer
got a spotted t-shirt. But it didn´t go much further. The lazy, peaceful
atmosphere took over.
But now our lazy days are coming to an end. We´re leaving for
Panama. Four days to go. The wind is in our back and the old boat is rolling
in the sea. Life´s back to normal, catching cutlery and china on
their way through the galley. Not making to much sauce to the fish since
it will only run out the door anyway. Tying the fish tight in the pan too.
Being a galley slave on this old wreck is surely not something for weak
souls.
08N56
79W29
Panama - here´s the complete and totally false story of how we
managed to go through the Panama channel.
Gatun lock blues
it started on a friday
a friday, the thirteenth
all hell broke loose
when we got loose
in the Panama canal
cook quarrelled with the captain
and the mate was shouting too
and engineer got fired
a couple of times or so
then on there came a pilot
a gruesome sight to see
he haven´t changed the gear he´s in
since christmas ninetythree
he said
ho ho ho ho
gonna get you right thru´
hey hey hey hey
Gatun lock blues right for you
engine gave up working
in the midst of Gatun lake
the jungle coming closer
with lepards on the make
cockroaches came on flying
sizzling through the air
and mosquitos started nibbling
our skin so bright and fair
we used some spray we´d stolen
and some got pretty pale
and several got malaria
but pills were on the sale
the whole crew started fighting
when the swede did something crude
she occupied the norse chair
and started talking rude
she said:
ho ho ho ho
gonna sit here right thru´
hey hey hey hey
not even the devil cares about you
it´s just a filthy armchair
outworn and much to sat in
it´s not the Norway embassy
besides it´s made in Sweden
they fished her up
in the Gaillard cut
the locals were complaining
she scared the fish away
red and green to go by
what good was that to us
the captain was asleeping
mate couldn´t see that much
he didn´t have good eyesight
he lost it on the way
he had a nasty girlfriend
who beat him night and day
the pilot said:
ho ho ho ho
gonna get you right thru´
hey hey hey hey
not even the devil cares about you
we almost missed the next lock
it´s called the Pedro Miguel
but had to wait till pilot
was out of San Miguel
we were so sick and tired
and fed up with this game
that when he finally woke up
we bashed him blue and lame
Miraflores was our savior
and Balboa the best sight
we´ll never go back at any time
it gave us a terrible fright
and the pilot said
ho ho ho ho
see I couldn´t make you stay
hey hey hey hey
no one wants you here anyway
00S00
93W41
This was much better than New Years Eve. Some of us even stated
it was better than the Millennium. And maybe they´re right. I mean,
how many passes the Equator every day on a journey from Egersund to Avatiu?
Not many that I know of. And suddenly we didn´t feel like that motley
crew any longer but like seafaring adventurers on an exclusive trip around
the world. The cameras were clicking and running. Mate were pulling the
horn. The GPS and the radar slowly ticked over from 00N00 to 00S00. We
were over.
But it was actually a special moment in more ways than that. It was
a grey and cloudy day. The temperature was down to 18 degrees Celsius.
Water temperature barely 19. After the hot and humid bandage the Caribiens
wrapped us in this was really cool. How could this be?
We pondered about it for a long time when suddenly the answer popped
up. Global cooling.
We´ve all been reading a book written by a norvegian, Erlend
Loe. Disappointed in not being born to discover anything new like America,
or building anything of importance like the Eiffel-tower, he decided to
discover a new theory. And one winter afternoon, skating on a small inland
lake, he suddenly saw it clearly. Thor Heyerdahl was wrong. This was how
the indian people got to Polynesia from Chile and Equador. They skated
over the frozen sea. Possibly on golden skates.
And here we were, able to confirm he was right. There is actually an
ice age coming on so there must have been one before. And with this rapid
cooling it´s just a question of time before the whole sea freezes
over. But before that we´re going to be baptized by Neptune so put
your warm pullovers on boys. This is going to be a cold shower.
08S55
140W05
Three weeks from Panama we started to run out of fresh water. It pleased
the captain no end and he said:
-Well, well, maybe we have to stop at Nuku Hiva in the Marquesas after
all. It´s against all regulations because we really have to go through
Tahiti first, but it´s starting to look like a real emergency, doesn´t
it?
-Oh yes, we agreed. Full-blown catastrophy almost.
Captain has been telling us so much about the Marquesas, about the
people - proud and generous, putting up resistance against french bureacracy
and idiotic ideas from the central authorities in Papetee. We felt strongly
for them.
And he was right. They were really that kind. They drove us around
Taiohae, the capital with 1200 inhabitants, helping out in every way they
could. When they turned on the fresh water on the dock to fill up our tanks
the rain came. The dry period had lasted for seven months, and they didn´t
have much water themselves. It felt like a true blessing when the rain
poured down on us all.
They didn´t want money for the water so we gave them mahi-mahi.
That almost touched them to tears.
-We don´t catch mahi-mahi any longer, they said. The japanese
come here with floating factories and big nets. They´re emptying
the sea.
Fortunately the marquesians have something that the japanese can´t
catch with nets - noni. It´s an extract from a wild apple tree and
it has an curing effect on cancer. Now it´s just a question of getting
the production started and hopefully keep the bureaucrats in Paris and
Papetee at bay too.
15S15
147W00
Since we left Egersund at the end of august I´ve learnt a lot
about my norvegian brothers. I didn´t know they were so skilled in
every way. The stewardess Grete - who prefers to think of herself as a
Cook Islander and not an Oslo girl - have had a lot to say about her fellow
men.
-They think they´re the salt of the earth, she spat out one day.
Swedes are known to be the bad conscience of the world, but it seems
like the Norvegians are doing all the rest of the good work.
-I had no idea, I said flabbergasted.
-Well, that´s the way it is, Grete said furiously. They hold
the world record in being the best.
And that´s why we have an original innovation onboard this cargo
wessel. A sail. One hundred square metres of green tarpaulin on a boom
made from two telephone poles. The best sail in the world of course, but
maybe not the worlds most durable boom. It gave away for the pressure in
the first twentyfour hours of use. Next morning mate put an bandage on
and raised it back up again.
Then one windy night one of the tackles broke. The photographer were
almost swept overboard running around on the hatch trying to haul one hundred
squaremetres of sail in the gale all by himself.
But apart from these misadventures the sail is really appreciated.
This old wreck only does eight knots on its own. With the sail we can go
a little faster.
-We´ve been going fast for a while, the first engineer John said
this morning. Nine knots for a long time, but then it went down to seven
all of a sudden.
We looked enquiringly at him.
-We didn´t notice that the wind turned tonight, he said a bit
embarrased. We sailed backwards for a while.
-Oh, norvegian art of sailing, I said with awe. You always learn a
trick or two from these guys.
Astas arkiv
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