So another year has passed – it’s true, the older you get
the faster that happens, damn scary!!!
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Towing the wind surfer - passenger in space blanket |
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Brushing up on knot tying |
Graeme and Michelle joined us for short stints over
December as they both did their Day Skipper course with Atlantic Yachting, 6
days of theory and 6 days of practical during which they had to live on the
yacht. They both passed both their RYA
and SAS Dayskippers, no mean feat, even becoming heroes when they rescued a
stranded and fairly hypothermic wind surfer on day two of their practical
course.
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Two new captains |
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Brine water being pumped out |
The water maker (desalinator) arrived mid-December but
much patience was still required as it was silly season, blah, blah blah and it
was eventually installed mid-February.
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It tastes really good |
Kevin and Graeme were quite convinced
that a thing of such beauty should be put on display for all to see in the
cockpit but the aesthetics committee won and it was installed in the engine
compartment where it merrily churns out 60 litres of water per hour when in
use, water which, when tested, is purer than bottled water – now we’re in
business!!!
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Making roti is a bit more complicated |
One of my birthday presents was a unique cooking experience
in Bo-Kaap, Cape Town. Chrissy, Jenny and
I (Michelle was sadly unable to join us, she was otherwise engaged learning to
navigate herself around tides and currents and charts) arrived at a Blue House
in Bo-Kaap,
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Making samoosa's, delish! |
where Gamida gave us a lesson in cooking a traditional curry, sambal, chilli bites from scratch, roti’s and samoosa’s, then we got to eat it
all, delicious, we spent a fortune at the spice shop across the road afterward
– clever marketing ploy, then champagne and a pedicure, still a memorable
birthday.
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Small spaces! |
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Thankfully it didn't stay here |
We also finally installed that electric toilet (might have
nagged a LOT about this) and it is fabulous, just hold down a switch and
everything disappears, no more bicep building with the manual pump, well on
that loo anyway, the port one will remain manual, it’s a contingency plan.
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Carving the gammon |
Christmas day was spent in the harbour at Yachtport, a fun
wine pairing to start, piles of good food and wine and a really great day was
had by all.
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Warm enough to swim |
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Graeme makes it look easy |
New Year was spent on anchor at Kraal Baai, all three of
our boats squeezed in with very many others from Saldanha, Cape Town and
further afield. We even had a chance to
dust off the hammocks, nowhere near as easy as they look to get into, I might
have provided a bit of entertainment for the neighbouring boat when I was
unceremoniously spun and dumped onto the trampoline!
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Heading for the neighbours in the tender with snacks |
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Snoek and braai broodjies |
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The view from this restaurant is unbeatable |
Lots of fun followed by a dash to the airport to drop
Graeme and Michelle and fetch Juanita who had decided to come and see how the
other half lives for a couple of days.
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This guy was hilarious |
We had some fun on the West Coast, not least of which was a
lunch at the open air Strandloper Restaurant in Langebaan, a true seafood feast
– 9 courses eaten over 4 hours with the most amazing sea views and hilarious one
man band to aid digestion.
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Cooking crayfish |
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Kylie recons this is the best way to use a SUP |
Juanita left and Kylie arrived, the weather was good so off
we went to Kraal Baai again for a couple of days, we dusted off the SUP (Stand
Up Paddle) board and had some good laughs and spills, and also got some of the
cobwebs out of the tender boat.
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Helping Henko harvest mussels |
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How you eat them |
Alan is a bottomless source of information regarding edible
marine life.
He has patiently shown us
how to harvest, clean, filter, cook and most importantly eat fresh
mussles. He started while Henko and
Nicole were here
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Filleting Angel Fish |
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More harvesting, the hard job |
and while Kylie was here the two of them cooked up a culinary
delight fit for royalty. Ulva seaweed
(sea lettuce) served fried into crisps, blended with a number of interesting ingredients
to make pesto and inside savoury scones with various toppings including
Angelfish sushi, followed by Moules Mariniere (fresh mussels cooked in wine and
onion) with freshly baked bageuttes. The
whole thing completed by fresh fruit panacotta and truffles – huuuuuge.
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On the beach at Jacobs Baai |
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Evita se Peron |
Time to introduce Kylie to the West Coast too, the San
people, Olives, Wine tasting, plate smashing at a Greek evening at Mykanos, beer at Darling Brewery and
a really fun show at Evita se Peron – Peter Dirk Uys’ Theatre in Darling, at
nearly 80 he is still a brilliant entertainer.
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Last shot of Alan up the mast |
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The retrieval was not easy |
Kevin splashed out and bought himself a drone, the DJI
Spark, we call it Sparky π Sparky has taken some amazing footage and
photos of MaXScene (and other yachts) at anchor in Kraal Baai and had just had
its cupboard of accessories upgraded when disaster struck. On filming Alan up his mast Sparky ended up
between 2 masts causing interference to and subsequent dropping of the GPS
signal, the result of which saw poor little Sparky fly at full speed (around
56km’s per hour) in reverse, straight into the wall of the Yachtport building,
landing on the roof rather badly injured.
Frighteningly, on investigation, this seems to be a
software problem inherent in these drones, when they loose GPS signal, instead
of hovering, they shoot backward at full speed and while it was astounding that
Sparky managed to do this without touching any of the rigging that it barrelled
through, if it had then hit a window or person at that speed it would have been
a really serious matter. We are waiting for
an answer on this from DJI where poor Sparky is currently in hospital getting
its broken bits reattached.
Down the road from the Drone hospital is a bar called
Barristers and on the first Friday of every month at around 13:30 beer is
delivered in barrels on a beer cart pulled by a cart horse (well in this case a
Percheron called Stompie – coz her growth was stunted and she is really small
for a Percheron) so no need to ask twice, we were there and it was gorgeous, I
loved the horse and Kevin loved the free glass of beer handed out to all
onlookers.
The cockpit cushions have finally been made and all is
starting to look really neat and together, this ship is just about completely
in-shape, been waiting so long to say that, now we can start doing what we
dreamed of from the start – cruising…
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My hero |
While sewing the covers together one of the pieces of
material went with the wind, landed in the water and floated out of reach, cue
the hero of the day, Kevin hopped on the SUP board and went and rescued it for
me.
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Diving off the boat |
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Shore entry
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Kevin has fortunately been able to find a bit of downtime
in Saudi to have some fun, he and a couple of his work colleagues have been
doing some scuba diving, they are on the Red Sea after all, firstly an atoll a
long 30km boat ride out but apparently worth it
and secondly from Dream Beach -
shore entry dives. Its so warm no
wetsuit is required, water temp 27deg.
Might be a tad jealous π
I recently attended a “Celebration of Life” of an old
friend and it made me think - we should actually be celebrating life everyday,
we only have one life, we need to live it!!!!!!!! So cheers to life and a really great 2018 to
all...
So much fun to read, as always, and now I actually know what (and who) you're talking about. Thanks again for a fab little holiday! That last picture wasn't perhaps taken on my drop-off to the airport? ;)
ReplyDeletePS: It's started snowing here about 2 hours ago, freezing cold and makes me think that wearing a light jersey at Strandloper was way over the top! Thanks for not posting the full singing video!!! LOL