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These are the voyages of the sailing vessel Pétillant. Her original eight-month mission: to sail from Baltimore to France via Florida and the Bahamas, to successfully navigate the shoals of the French douane, to boldly go where few Maine Coon cats have gone before was completed in 2008. Now she is berthed in Port Medoc and sails costal Spain, France, and the UK during the summer months.

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Lion Sighting in Milford Haven



We stayed in Kilmore Quay for 4 days, waiting for bad weather to blow thru.  It blew and it rained, and there was one sunny day, and one cloudy day.  We took a day trip up to Wexford and walked around a very nice town that seems to have retained its down-town shopping area quite well.  It would certainly be a destination for sailors if the entrance had not silted up, and made it extremely difficult to enter. The bus service was decent, and there was a Dunne’s in town that we used for a moderate shopping trip.


On our return, we tried to get a cappuccino at one of the local eateries, but even though it was a Lavazza (our favorite), it came out of a completely automatic machine, and did not taste very good.  However, we also took this opportunity to check out the local chandlery, which turned out to be extraordinary.  All sorts of parts and tools and equipment that were really useful, not just a pile of junk, and all at very reasonable prices.  It even had stainless steel pipe fittings, including small elbows and tees and valves in 316SS that were prepped for welding(!).  The guys at the counter said that they had a local fabricator who was very good at TIG welding, so with the demand there from the fishing boats, and a reasonable supply of labor, they supplied the parts.  Quite astounding, and impressive. One of us, at least, had some severe engineer envy about this place. We should have visited it sooner....

Crossing St. Georges Channel (August 26)

The harbormaster advised us to wait till 9AM to depart, on the theory that we would not have to fight the tide going out, but we decided to leave at 7.  There was a fleet of about 6 other boats from the UK  in the marina that had the same idea.  They had come over for a two-week holiday, most of them single-handing, and had gotten beat-up quite seriously, several times.  They wanted to get back and stop the beatings, and there appeared to be a short window of opportunity, so they were leaving at 6AM.  Since we were a bit bigger than they (32-38ft), we decided to have morning tea first. 

The sun had just coming up, and there was not a cloud in the sky when we left.  It was just before low tide, but we didn’t have any problems crossing St. Patrick’s causeway, which was covered with ripples from the tidal rips.  With a journey of about 75 miles ahead of us, it was important to make good time, so we motor-sailed the entire way, averaging about 7.5 kts.  The wind started off astern, but then it backed and by noon we were on a nice beam reach at 7.5-8.3 kts.  Without the engine we would have been doing about 6 kts.

We passed the flotilla of small boats about 2 hours after we left.  They did not seem to want to motor-sail, so they were only doing about 3-4 kts.  We think that they must eventually have started their engines – the clouds started to build after noon, and the wind, as well, and no one wanted to be outside Milford Haven that night.  The seas for this leg of the trip started “slight”, but eventually progressed to “moderate”, with swell heights of 1-3 meters.  Luckily for us, the swells came from the SW and had a pretty long period, so it was not at all uncomfortable.  The final leg into Milford Haven got a bit lumpy, as the tidal flow coming out of MH met the wind and the ocean swells, but once inside everything was flat. 

Milford Haven

Milford Haven is quite large, and the ships that come in and out are also quite large.  It is one of the largest tanker ports in Europe, with refineries on both sides and major ship berths everywhere.  Last year we stayed on a visitor’s pontoon that is put out each year by the Dale Yacht Club in the NW corner  of the estuary.  It was blowing a bit last year, and the pontoon bucked around quite a bit, so this year it was clear that we could not stay there in any sort of southerly blow, so this year we headed upstream.

We passed at least a dozen large tankers at their piers, probably 5 refineries/chemical complexes, and one significant ferry terminal, as well as a bunch of small-boat moorings and one marina (Milford Marina), before we reached our goal – the Neyland Yacht Haven.  By this time (5PM), the wind was starting to get up, but when we called the marina, they told us that they didn’t have any room.  Not even anywhere for us to raft up.  And the other marina back behind us was no longer available because of its tidal lock.  This is the first time that this has happened to us.

Any Mooring in a Blow (August 26-28)

We looked around at anchoring options in the river, and noticed a number of empty mooring buoys on the other side.  One of them seemed to be substantial, but not like something to be used by a commercial vessel, so we picked it up for the night.  We think it may have been put out by either a yacht club or a chandlery on the south side of the river, but since it is bank holiday season here, no one came out to collect any fees. 

We spent two nights on this pontoon.  The wind mounted thru the night, and the rain started the next morning, and it was great weather to just sleep in.  We did not have any internet connection, at first, but we did have good reception of UK TV stations, so the main amusement at first was boat chores/mods and UK TV.  Then, we discovered a significant house insurance crisis that needed to be resolved, and spent the money to connect to the internet to be able to send/receive documents to our agents. 

The Ubiquiti Bullet external antenna that we mounted this year is quite outstanding for this sort of thing, and we cannot say too much nice about it.  Sitting in the middle of the river, about ¾ mile from the access point in the marina, in a blowing rainstorm, it provided great connectivity.  We have even figured out how to use it and one computer to provide internet connectivity to multiple devices inside the boat from one paid connection.  We used to be able to do this with the Vonage router, but ISPs do not seem to like to feed thru the Vonage box.  After a while they cut off the connection.  So, a “virtual router” application on one computer that is connected to the Ubiquiti Bullet does the trick.

The only downside of this is that it takes a bit of AC power, so we had to run the genset for a few hours while we got things sorted out, to keep from running down the ship’s batteries too much.  The windmill was putting out quite a bit of power, but the solar panels were ueless, so we were training the batteries.  At least with the genset running we could also heat water and run the microwave with no reservations.

Neyland Marina (August 28)

Today we changed the plan (again).  We had planned to leave Milford Haven at 4AM, headed to Padstow.  The goal was to make the opening of the gates at Padstow (from 2:30 to 5:30PM), and tuck in for the blow that is coming tomorrow.  However, on the way over from Kilmore Quay we noticed that the leech of the jib had blown out.  We don’t know where/when this happened, but it was not a minor tear that we could patch up.  We needed a sailmaker, and there is one here in Milford Haven, right across from the Neyland Marina. So, the plans change again.  We will stay here till Friday, when it appears that the winds will finally turn in our favor.  The sail is being repaired, and should be done on Thursday.  We will leave early on Friday AM, and try to make it all the way to la belle France in one shot.  We should be able to do it in about 36 hours, and get in somewhere before dark on Saturday.  If the conditions are good enough, we may even try to get down to Glenans.

Dante and the Lion

Our gentle readers are probably wondering at this point when we are going to explain the title to this post.  Well, we have been hearing on the TV for the last few days a story about a sighting of a lion in Essex (a country northeast of London), and our first reaction was to check that Dante was still on board.  He was.  He hasn’t left the boat since Howth.

Great British Journalism
The TV reported that all of the normal sources of lions (zoos, circuses, etc) could account for all of their animals, and no one had been allowed to own one privately in the UK for quite a while.  So, we made a lot of jokes to one another about how maybe they had seen a large Maine Coon cat.  Well, it turns out that the jokes were spot-on (as they say here). 

Milford Haven Lion
And, of course, with the sensitivity about lions invading Britain, Dante caused quite a stir here in Milford Haven.  He jumped down on the pontoon as soon as he could, and wandered off to the stern of the boat next door, where he found a great stern platform to plop down and consider the great questions of the feline world (whatever they are).  He also seems to have wandered a bit further down the pontoon, and was spotted by several people who reported him to the harbor-masters, who came around to check out the situation.  They said that they had never seen a boat carrying cats, so the sight of a very large cat prowling around their marina was a new experience.  And, a very nice lady on the boat ahead of us was also quite surprised to see him, but since she is a cat person, she knew how to admire and adore him in the manner to which he has become accustomed. 

All-in-all, not a bad place to wait out another blow that is expected tonight.

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