Finally the winds have settled down now allowing me to write this piece. The sky is clear and filled with stars. I am guessing the Dolphins will be with us soon, they usually do come and pay us a visit at sunset. They’ll approach us like little torpedo’s from the side and joyfully play with the bow of the ship. I can’t wait. There is nothing like being greeted by dolphins early in the morning on a little ship on a lonely sea (I have only seen one other vessel for the last 50 hours), while watching the sun rise out of the water. It makes the 50 hour bull ride worth while J
The trip will come to an end on Mallorca. What started April 15th in Le Lavandou, ends after 1700 NM on May 16th 2007 on Palma de Mallorca. It´s been a great adventure and I have learned quite a lot. Not only about sailing, but also about people, the sailing way of life, the emotions that come with sailing, ocean creatures and how not to troll a line to catch Tuna (or have I been unlucky?). I have also met some interesting people, like Stephan that I met in Velletta, a 45 year old Swiss dude that is sailing around in his 8 meter sailing boat (a dheler) with aft cabin and shelters a little cat ‘Gatusso’. He has been sailing around the med, and is now planning on descending the east coast of Africa all on the plastic tip of a shoe string. What a Character… Solo on an 8 meter boat! I have been on the boat, and I can assure you, it feels like little more than the rubber Dinghy we use to get to shore when at anchor. But I do have to agree with him, “The worst day at sea, still beats the best day in the office!”

Or the Englishman I met in a restaurant in Cagliari that I had recognized from the Marina. He looked like someone that had been missing in action for a while and walked straight out of a Vietnam movie. You just don’t see that many people wearing a piece of worn down T-shirt as a headband anymore. But when I asked him about his story… Boy, was I in for a treat. You can read books about sailing, put people have to write them first, and it is a shame this man is just too lazy, or does not see an added value of writing one. But this is his story in a nutshell.. .
Apparently he had moved from the UK to North Carolina US and was working as a roofer and living out of a Van. Living out of a Van, might sound like an easy lifestyle, but you are not considered to belong to Society, well maybe somewhere beneath the lower part of it. Anyway, he was getting a lot of hassle from the police and it was tiring him. A colleague then suggested he needed a boat. A sailboat! If you

life in a sailboat, you are a traveller, and an adventurer and you move up the scale of society. Somehow he ended up with a Contessa 32 for 14 thousand yankee dollars. It worked, the hassle was over, and he lived on board for a couple of years before someone approached him, and told him he admired his boat, ‘ nice Contessa 32’. He knew nothing about boats, and was just using it to life on, but curiously he then searched after ‘contessa 32’on the internet, and discovered that his boat was worth three times as much in the UK than the price he had paid for it. A no brainer really, he needed to get the boat to England.
Now, the one liner in this conversation that did it for me was the what he said next, and I quote: “The first time ever I hoisted the sails on my sailboat -or any other sailboat for that matter- was when I set out to cross the Atlantic”. BOINK! Here I am, going of to South Africa to get RYA Certified, sailing 1700Nm in the med to get some experience because one day I want to sail around the world… this guy just sets of across the Atlantic with no experience at all to make a couple of bucks. 28 days it took him to cross it, he was given a handheld GPS with one waypoint and that was it. When I asked him if he stood watch at night he told me that he had an alarm set at 20 minute intervals. It would sound; he’d have a peak around outside and got back to sleep for another 20 minutes. This lasted for three nights. After that, he decided it was well worth trading the remote risk of a collision, for a good night sleep. During his 28 days he saw 5 other vessels ´Spics on the horizon´. He only ate Pasta by the way.

He never did sell his Contessa, he wouldn’t sell it for ‘No money’. He’s been across three times since, and now realizes how lucky he’s been first time round. He didn’t even know the existence of reefing back then.