After an evening of catching up on life, the universe and everything, we walked around the city with Andrew and Linda. The centre is still in chaos with lots of building work after all the trouble with the trees that were removed sneakily by the council. We so hope it is worth the upheaval and cost - personally we think they have to flatten most of the ugly postwar shops too. However, it is easy enough to escape to the Hoe (the waterfront area) and to be tempted by the coffee and sweet treats at the favourite stall near the Mayflower steps. We resisted this time though:.
Optimising the tide times for a trip to Lymington meant a late afternoon departure. As most marinas want you out by noon, we asked in the office if we could have a short stay berth from noon until around 4:30. The nice folks told us we could just stay there, nothing to pay. Apparently they don't evict visitors until 3pm anyway. We always love the friendly and helpful reception there.
So, after another wander, a raid on the local Lidl shop and a very full rucksack for Andrew, we returned to prepare the boat for departure. The Border Force craft on the outside of the breakwater was abandoned by the crew, the fenders were riding up onto the pontoon and the hull was rubbing nicely against the timber:
We decided not to try tucking them back as we are sure there would have been CCTV images of us that could have been misinterpreted. Mind you, seeing something that we buy with our taxes being treated like that was not nice. So, we headed out and enjoyed the last bit of sun and a fair tide heading towards Salcombe. We had purposefully put in a couple of waypoints well south of there as we knew it was an area rife with fishing pot markers that we would be transiting through in the dark. Sure enough there were plenty of them, even 2.5 miles offshore. The FLIR was busy, this image just giving you an idea of how the wave pattern looks:
Once clear of the pot area, things were easier, we settled in to doing watches and that was simpler for us than normal as Andrew did some as well. The sea was calming down nicely, the stabilisers were not working hard at all and things were going well with only a few fishing boats who had turned off their AIS system to track on the radar. Somehow they always seemed to be close and a nuisance when the crew was on watch.
We arrived south of Portland Bill in perfect time for some strong tidal help as you can see from the plotter image:
For non boating folks, the yellow / red arrows are showing the tidal strength and direction, in other words going with us and a good 2 knots or so. Lovely assistance, at some points we were managing more than 10 knots over the ground. Things stayed quiet until a glorious sunrise - here seen through a grubby windscreen:
You can see the early morning condensation on the deck, it hadn't been raining or rough enough to splash sea water up there. Just off the Isle of Wight is a narrow channel passing the Needles rocks and an area known as the Bridge - seeing the big cardinal buoy there made us think that we were nearly back in our old stomping ground:
The tide carried us nicely up the Needles channel to Hurst castle:
and then into the Solent itself. We were well before noon which Lymington harbour quotes as the earliest possible arrival time but we called them on the radio, hopefully. It was our lucky day - the Dan Bran pontoon was almost empty as the Saturday overnighters had all left to take the tide east. We could head straight in and moor, passing the little yacht race hut thingy that has stood at the river entrance for many many years:
Suitably tied up on the pontoon we managed lunch, showers and then a walk into town. Lymington has changed a fair bit recently, it looks a little less prosperous but still very appealing. We did struggle to see how anyone could drive a car down this entrance though - Andrew stood in the picture to give you an idea of size:
After a very good dinner in the Kings Head pub, we returned to the boat just as it was getting to be dusk. Quite an atmospheric and calm evening:
All in all pretty good weather and company.
Maintenance news:
Well....... Ages ago, the Ultra pump switch for our main bilge packed up and refused to turn on the pump. We were in sunny Northern Ireland at the time and getting a like for like replacement was mission impossible. The only ones in the UK were 12v not 24 volt units. So, the captain got hold of and fitted a little Whale switch instead that worked just fine. Captain Rae, the slightly famous owner of Albatross, another Nordhavn 47, helped get a new Ultra switch from the USA for us. It was a painful process but not the fault of Capt Rae, more the US Postal Service.
We were going to fit the new switch during our annual liftout fun but fate wanted it done earlier. The little Whale switch didn't want to turn off the pump after kicking it into life. Bad news.
So, the captain and our most helpful and practical guest Andrew went to swap it out for the brand new Ultra switch, like this one:
The slight challenge was that the wiring on that was very different to the wiring on the original - the factory had clearly played around with things. We had real fun (yes, that was British understatement) checking the wiring, connecting up the pump, figuring out why the switch was properly powered up but the pump would not run and finally cracking it. What should have been an hour's job at the most turned into a much much longer process. A learning opportunity indeed, but not one we wanted. Poor Andrew.
Anyway, the thing is installed and working properly and the little Whale sender seems to be OK - it had some contamination on it which upsets the senders. Cleaned up it worked fine when tested. We now have a spare. We hope never to need it. Several hours bent over the little hatch playing with the switch and wiring were plenty enough in one human's lifetime. Our knees and backs said so.