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Captain Jan at the Helm
Captain Jan Miles

June 12, 2005

DATE:   Sunday June 12, 2005
LOCATION:   Odense, Denmark
ENTERED BY:    Captain Jan Miles  


Festival of the Sea

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We are still a part of the 200 year celebration of the birth of Denmarkâs icon story teller, Hans Christian Andersen. This celebration started in Copenhagen and has continued in the second biggest city in Denmark, Odense, the birth place and home of H.C.Andersen.  It is the last day of this Festival.  Weather has been abnormally cool for this time of the year, according to the locals.  Fortunately, the rain has been only sporadic and mostly at night.  We actually have had quite a bit of sun, but no real warmth.  Tonight, for their last performance, all ships will parade out.  Fortunately for PRIDE II, the weather appears to be going towards light winds from a favorable direction for the next leg to Gšteburg, Sweden, 150 miles away toward the north east.  We are not due till Tuesday morning/mid-day, so we have some time to use the weather under sail rather than fight it in an effort to arrive on time.  But it looks like more rain.  Depending on the weather reports given tonight, we may be able to spend the night at anchor before heading off tomorrow for Gšteburg.  Having a chance to anchor will be good, if we can afford the time, to provide a full nightâs comfortable rest before heading off on an overnight sail to Sweden. Maybe, just maybe, the rain will pass on by before we must set off.

Meanwhile, I decided to give the crew two days time off while we have been in Odense.  The weather outlook, as we made our approach to Odense, appeared a bit conditional for heavy maintenance during our expected time in port.  Plus the late evening sail to Helsingor from Copenhagen at the end of a full day of open ship last Sunday, followed by being open to the public the next day before sailing again that evening into the teeth of a developing northerly gale, making for a rough night of sailing westward toward Odense, really took the last reserves of the crew right out of them.  So, to hell with cosmetic maintenance, I say!  The crew have more than earned a bit of time off.  Now is the time to provide it and fortunately the schedule in Odense provided the opportunity to give it.  Today everyone is back ãon dutyä after their two days off in a row by watch rotation.  They have the appearance and attitude of being fully recovered.


However, instead of major maintenance for today, many of the crew has been dispatched to a friendly inter-ship competition with the other attending vesselâs crews in tug-of-war and multi-oar vessel rowing competitions.  These crew competitions have been designed by the Russian tall ship SHTANDART (www.shtandart.com) from St. Petersburg.  But the competitions include the crews of vessels from England (EARL OF PEMBROKE, www.square-sail.com), Germany (KIELER HANSEKOGGE, www.hansekogge.de), Denmark (NIDHUG, www.maritimtforsoegscenter.dk) and Sweden (HIORTEN, www.marinmuseum.se).   It seemed to me we would be seen as churlish if we did not participate because of my interest in getting some maintenance done.  My decision was made easier by the weather report last night promising scattered rain.  Still, we must continue to man the vessel for open house, so it is not all play for today.

Gale out of Helsingor

The northerly gale last Monday evening after departing Helsingor was predicted to come in late and go to as much as 30 knots.  This it did.  Sadly, I was not in my normal planning and preparation frame of mind.  If I had been, we would have departed Helsingor closer to 1600 rather than 1900.  Had we departed earlier, we might not have had to motor our way for two hours into 30 knots of wind and the short and steep Baltic Sea associated with the onset of the gale.  An earlier departure would have meant leaving some public standing on the dock because the open ship schedule advertised we would be open till 2000 hours.  As it was, rain came in and the public disappeared and we took off at 1900.  But we had to battle for two hours into rising seas with a ship that was not prepared as well as it could have been to force its way against such wind and sea.

I had made the second mistake of having some sail untied in the idiotic thought that we could demonstrate some sailing as we left (this in responds to the request to ãsee some sailä).  But the port of Helsingor is small and sailing out was out of the question.  As soon as we got out of the harbor, the wind was smack on the bow, but only at 10 knots.  I deluded myself further thinking we would be using the sail when we got north enough to get around the point of land north of Helsingor, only 10 miles away, and we would then head off the wind to the west.  So, when the wind intensified before we made the ãcorner,ä we had our hands full dealing with loosely stowed sail and large steep seas that the head rig was beginning to slice through as PRIDE II heaved in them.  I was none too happy with myself as I asked the crew to battle with the sails while I observed the head-rig going under the waves once in a while, along with the jib-topsail, which we would normally have taken in and stowed on deck for conditions like this; and the jib, which we would normally trice up for conditions like this to reduce the drag of the head-rig when it dips into a sea, as well as to protect the sails from the violence of the seas going over the head-rig.

The crew managed well, but almost half got sea-sick.  Even when we rounded the corner and struggled to set the foresail and the staysail, as well as stow the foretopsail in 30 knots of wind and a steep short sea on the beam; we were left with a rough ride to the west.  Moderation of wind strength began around 0200 in the morning, but remained around 25 knots till 0500 before moderating further.  At breakfast time, and because we were so far ahead of schedule with the fast sail westward, I decided to anchor in the lee of the island of Samso, which left us close to our destination.  We spent the next six hours napping and resting from our ordeal.  My apologies to all hands for the lack of proper preparation in Helsingor prior to the sail to Odense.

Odense, Denmark

We napped till 1600 and sailed away southwards Tuesday with only the square-topsail set in a dying northerly towards the entrance to the harbor of Odense.  The crew meanwhile turned-to on deck and cleaned the ship as Dutch electrical power windmills passed by.  With the dying wind came confirmation by weather report that we would be experiencing relatively clear, dry and warmer weather for the next couple of days.  So much for my analysis of ãquestionableä weather for maintenance during our stay in Odense!  Oh well.  The crew had surely earned the time off anyway.  So, after transiting the narrow channel into Odense and once PRIDE II was dockside Tuesday evening around 2100, it remained to prepare the ship for Festival activities and then dismiss them into watches, with one assigned time-off for 48 hours while the other waited for their turn to have 48 hours off.

Marine weather projections here in Europe are not made much beyond 24-36 hours.  Land weather forecasts can sometimes look forward 5 days, but is mostly concerned with rain.  Even with the short look forward, the accuracy is surprisingly hit or miss.  Whatever the accuracy, I have observed that since we have been in Danish waters, we have seen a gale of wind every 3-4 days.  Except for the time we anchored outside of Marstal and sailed across to Odense, we have been protected from any other gales because we were docked in port.  Tonight we depart as a show for the public and make our way either out to the Baltic Sea to get on with our passage to Gšteburg, or we go to anchor and get a nights rest before proceeding on our way. I am leaning towards more rest, if possible, especially for the inter-vessel competitors.  PRIDE IIâs crew has just come back from tug-of-war with a third, but they are exhausted!  So much for the time off provided in Odense.

We have re-met some old friends from PRIDE IIâs European travels in 1991.  The Russian vessel SHTANDART is captained by her builder Vladimir who met the 1991 crew and took some with him ãin countryä to see a vessel he was building.  We also re-met Misha, who has been to the States to learn boat building from Lance Lee at the Rockland BoatShop in Maine.  Misha took a small ãholidayä from the SHTANDART, where he was holidaying from computer installation projects in Moscow to sail with us from Helsingor to Odense.  While on board he was able to make repairs to Chausser, PRIDE IIâs deck boat that had received some damage during the Atlantic crossing.  How interesting it is to go so many years and re-connect with folks.  Back then, Russia was still Soviet.  Vladimirâs escorting of crew to the ãhinterlandä was technically against the rules for westerners.  But no one who saw the Americans on the train complained so nothing developed.  It is nice to see how things have developed for our old friends.

Cheers,
Captain Miles


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