Tenerife to La Gomera to 12 Nov

If Knot Y Knot
Patricia Day
Sun 12 Nov 2006 12:41

TENERIFE TO LA GOMERA

 

Thursday 9 November 2006

 

9am I left Los Gigantes.  I was going to anchor in Los Cristianos, but if the wind goes S then this is not a good place to be.  My fuel filters will be there, but I would have to get the dinghy out to go and get them.  So I headed for Gomera and motored all the way.  The wind picked up a little for the last 10 miles and I put the genoa out, but it did not make a lot of difference.  Arrived in the marina 1.30.  There was no room, so I had to raft up, I am the third boat out.  I am in the queue for a pontoon berth.  I think there was a berth on the reception pontoon recently vacated, but that is on stern lines and I would rather hold out for a finger. 

Met four guys on a delivery trip with a new boat.  They took the last place on the reception pontoon.  I took their boat papers and passports back to their boat for them so that they could go to town.  I did not know whether to keep the key or drop it through the open small hatch; I decided to keep it just in case they did not have another one.

Only the first boat was attached to the pontoon, the other two of us were just attached to the next one, which was not good.

Inflated the toy dinghy, which is only just holding air.  I was trying to take lines to the pontoon and avoid the constant going across the other boats.  I fell in, which I took very well.  I pushed the dinghy ahead of me across to the pontoon and then had to get in it to be able to get out onto the pontoon.  I attached my rope and then was able to pull myself back and then went back with the electricity cable.  This was very taught and so I added the extension and I was all sorted.  I still needed a rope at the front to the pontoon, but would have to wait for the guy next door to get back.  I had to get round his self-steering gear and thought he might like to do that bit. 

7pm the inside boat decided to tell me that they were going at 4 in the morning.  They had been working on the boat all the time I was beavering away, could they not have said something before.  Had to be quick as it was about to get dark. 

The guys from the delivery boat came for their key, they did not have another one.  I explained that I had to move the boat and I would let them have the key when that was done.  Behind me there were only two boats rafted up and so we moved the boat back a row and I am now tied up properly to the pontoon and to the boat next to me.

Pascal my new neighbour invited me to T Punch with a French/English couple on his boat.  I mentioned the fact that I had been in the water and was getting better at this; they then told me about the barracuda, only about 2 feet, they had seen in the marina.  My irrational dislike of going in the water now seems justified.

Everybody is getting ready to leave in the next few days, all with slightly different itineries depending on their time and their inclinations.  I am sure I will meet up with some of them further down the road.

 

Friday 10 November 2006

So, I am in Gomera and my filters are just across the water in Tenerife.  The weather seems fine.  I could have stayed one more day and picked them up, but maybe they had not arrived; the shop has not phoned me to arrange delivery.  Pete said he knew the Volvo garage that they came from was only 10 minutes up the road from the shop – by car. 

Spent the entire morning still attending to the last minute bits.  Pascal is sunbathing on his boat, he is ready to go.  He should have left today, but is staying a day or two more.  I have greased all my padlocks and sorted out the keys.  I have no padlocks without keys, but I do have some keys left over – I am sure one of them is to the steering wheel lock I had for my car years ago.  I should be able to padlock everything to deter the opportunist thief, but it won t stop anyone that comes equipped. 

I have had a final tweak with the engine.  I am tidy and ready to go shopping after lunch. 

I did have a first go at making pitta bread and it is not bad.

I have exchanged my empty gas bottle for a full one.

Went to the supermarket and I bought 6 and not a lot else.  Met the guys from the delivery boat in the supermarket.

Bought 4 new pillows for me, they came in 80cm and 90cm, I bought 90cm and they are too long for the cases.

I did buy another 20 litre diesel can, that means I now have 4.  So much for giving away 4 in March.

Looked round the delivery boat, still mostly covered in bubblewrap inside.

Went to the internet in the evening.

 

Saturday 11 November 2006

Took my 4 pillows and the two ergonomic (hard) ones and covered them in vinyl.  I now have two chunky arm rests for my pilot seat.  They nicely fill up the 6” gap either side between the seat and the arms.  My steering position now looks like a big comfy squashy armchair and it is.

Went shopping and bought 4x80cm pillows for bedding.  I am keeping the 4x90cm ones for, well I m sure I can turn them into something.

Found some milk dated Mid March so I bought 4 and a bar of chocolate that was on special offer.  I will have to keep going back to stock up, maybe take the trolley next time, for the milk and water not the chocolate – that I can carry.

I am trying not to buy any more diesel cans, they will be in the way and I cannot carry enough fuel to motor to the Caribbean, but perhaps a little more would be a good idea.  I have to admit that I then went on a tour of the wastebins.  I wanted sturdy bottles like for bleach or fabric softener, but I have ended up with 3 5 litre water bottles as well.  Perhaps I did not need to buy the extra cans, but one had a broken funnel and a dodgy top anyway.  I gave away 4 in March and of the 2 I kept one was duff,  I may have another scrounge before I make it a final, final fill up. 

The marina have been a bit naughty.  It is my third day and I was supposed to have a finger yesterday.  The boat I was next to originally is here for 2 weeks and every time he asks they tell him there is no space.  There are spaces and boats have come in and taken them up.  Some boats have left the reception pontoon, but they put new arrivals in the spaces.  So much for a queueing system.  I don t want to make a fuss, but it is not fair. 

Tomorrow the boat next to me and the two in front of us should be leaving.  That will put me one away from the pontoon.  The boat is empty and so I will be able to cross without disturbing them, but I struggle a bit getting over the guard rails.  I keep getting my shorts caught, it is like when you catch your handbag strap on the door handle.  Then I might have someone rafted up on the outside of me, which I would not like.  The boat deck is carpeted with felt, which is a bit of a novelty, presumably he is protecting his paintwork from people tramping across it.

I spent the evening trying to get my Weatherfax to work.  This means connecting the computer up to the radio.  So far I can receive a fax, but it is not of a quality that I can do anything with, I cannot even tell what it is supposed to be.  I also tried the Navtex option and it worked away, but could not process the signal.  It could be where I am, Gomera does not have goodradio reception.  We can now get an English radio station transmitting from South Tenerife.  This is good and if it had been operating last March I would have known the time and would not have missed the ferry and nearly the plane.  I have now changed all clocks back the hour, including radios, both GPS and the binnacle instrument.  I put my handheld GPS in a biscuit tin to protect it from lightning strikes and that could be an hour out, I will check it when I load up the box with everything else.  This will not be until I buy a bigger box, Monday shopping.  I do not know if it will actually work, but you have to try.

 

Sunday 12 November 2006

The boat next to me is leaving and I would have had to move to let him out, so I asked the marinero if I could take the spare berth on reception pontoon.  He said I had to ask the office.  I asked the office and they said they would have to check with the marinero.  Sunday morning all the little dinghies for the kids come out and I did not want to be manoevring with little dinghies and canoes about, so I wanted to move soon.  The guys from the delivery boat said I should just do it, so I blame them.  I felt a bit bad because  the boat that was here before me should have had the space first, but he cannot get out until the other two boats next to him go about noon and by then someone might have come in and taken the space.  He is at least next to the pontoon, so he has land on one side and the marina are supposed to be giving him a berth today, I just hoped it was not the one I took.  The delivery boat is going today from reception and the French/English boat is leaving from the marina, so he should get a berth.  I have some information for him on where to get something in Tenerife so I shall give him that and apologise and hope it is ok.  Yes, I feel guilty, but not enough to give up the berth.

Pascal left which vindicated me.  The other two boats left and so the German could now move.  The delivery boat had just left and there was a space on reception pontoon.  The man was very angry and had been to reception.  They thought he wanted a place in the marina, I think the reception pontoon is pretty much grab a space if it is there, which is fair.  They had said he could have the berth the delivery boat was in, but he didn t want that one because it was on the end and everybody walks past on the road and looks into the boat.  If it had been empty when I needed to move I was going to take it, some people are just a bit too fussy.  I don t know if he asked or told the marina, but he came back and has moved into a berth opposite.  The berth next to me will be empty tomorrow, people are coming and going all the time.  The Polish boat came back in and took a space opposite, despite the marinero saying no. If I had not taken this space I may well have lost out.  When the marinero went past after I had moved he just shrugged, so I am going to sit here.  Would it be bad manners to complain of the swell here.  The rafting up direction is actually better, but I will put up with the jerking.

I had only one job left to do on the boat and that was the gel coat at the bow and I had drilled a hole bigger which needed sealing.  I decided for now to just use sealant on the gelcoat that the fishing boat had cracked.  However, I did notice some cracking on the deck by the cockpit.  This is air bubbles under the gelcoat.  I took a punch and started tapping and then a chisel and a hammer and soon had a piece of deck 6”x1” which needed fibreglassing and I had to work fast before it went off.  I had to put a second coat on the biggest dip and I was a bit generous with the fibreglass and now have to sand it back to apply the gelcoat.  The position is a bit awkward and the raised antislip pattern makes it a bit difficult, but I just have to get it filled and coated now and can take more time later. 

I might have more time now, because it will be a couple of days before I get my filters and I think the weather is going South.  I have no intention of tacking my way across the Altantic, but it may be ok for Cape Verdes.

Oh dear, in the time it took to write that the German had moved to a berth opposite, he has moved and is now in the berth where the delivery boat was, the one he would not take up.  I am not sure if now is the time to go and give him the information on Tenerife. 

I am going to include a photo of my new seat for your admiration.