This morning the Captain suggested as a treat we go ashore to a nearby resort for coffee without the younger more mutinous crew members, but it seemed we had dragged anchor a little over night and were too close to our neighbour (when you don’t need to yell or use the VHF to communicate with the nearby yacht, you are too close) so we would quickly reset. We forgot that nothing happens quickly on a boat.
Barely 5m of the 60m of chain out had returned to the anchor locker when our windlass came to a dramatic and violent stop as chain jammed against the guide that was designed to prevent such an outcome. That coffee slipped a little further away. A few tools were brought out and fairly soon the chain was free. The coffee was again in sight. Next our progress was measured in centimetres rather than meters as we snagged again. Abandoning the job was not an option as we inched closer to our neighbour; we didn't discuss the coffee which slipped further away as the odds of getting to shore any time soon dipped sharply. As I inspected the machine that was all that stood between the 12 tonnes of QuickStar floating at the whim of the ocean and our ability to secure her safely to the earth below, I commented to the Captain what a sensitive piece of equipment it is; he responded wryly that everything on the boat is sensitive. We set our expectations on achieving, at best, a precarious solution to the problem. Many tools and words of encouragement later our windlass was again moving and we carefully relocated, all the while whispering conciliatory words to this machine to keep going and treating her with the delicacy of a fractious newborn.
Miraculously, it was not yet midday (although a few hours had passed) and it was still possible to achieve a morning coffee, but the mood had shifted. It wasn't only the fact that it had taken much longer than expected to re-anchor, but the delay had also meant that Aqua Dolphin and Humbolt Squid were now itching to go ashore too. They hadn't found much pleasure in clearing the Lego strewn cockpit* of colourful bricks and returning them to the meticulously selected storage boxes that sort blocks by shape. Although the end result is a beauty to behold, or so it seems to my need for order**. So it is late morning when we four (rather than two) make it to the resort. It takes some time for the staff to work out if decaf is available, and when the drinks finally arrive from the restaurant up the hill, we are told that they are instant coffee*** as the machine has broken.
We return to QuickStar just before lunch. Our morning has evaporated as it so often can. Like provisioning in Lautoka on food stamp day (it took us half an hour just to work out you need to pair up with someone lined up at the checkout to secure a trolley), or collecting the mail from the post office (who knew this can only be done between 8 and 9 in the morning or 2 and 4 in the afternoon?), everything takes a little or a lot longer than expected on a boat. We are learning to reset our expectations and with as much grace as possible find goodness in whichever new direction we are pushed. It was our choice to defy the usual pull of life in Sydney that kept us swept along in its current for many years. It was an act of defiance to move against the flow, but now we find ourselves swept off in other directions beyond our control and we are learning to accept that. The difference is that now our energy is more focussed on fulfilling basic needs – ensuring we have food, water and safe shelter. We are working on maintaining our own well-being, not that of a corporate organisation.
The good news is, after lunch we had yet another amazing experience in nature. Three days ago we caught a fish which sustained us for many meals, two days ago we swam with Mantarays, yesterday we were blessed with perfect sailing conditions, and now today we found ourselves in the eye of a storm of tropical fish at a nearby reef. A few bits of bread were all it took to be engulfed in frenzy of thousands of fish swirling around us in mad storm of colour and movement. As they darted around with a synchronicity that defied our understanding, we dove and swirled through the water with them, feeling an intense closeness to nature as we became part of this new world. So if things take a little longer than expected and some mechanical repairs and instant coffee must be endured to experience such splendour and wonder in nature each day, then I’m ok with that.
*Dolphin and Squid up to day two of a one week ban on screens so we tolerate Lego everywhere.
**It should be noted that I believe Aqua Dolphin shares my love for systems. It turns out that she religiously keeps her pencils in the same colour order that I used to at her age! The Squid has total disdain for these protocols and as such, packing Lego in this way defies all logic and reason to him (I’m sure the Captain agrees).
***I can hear the gasp of horror reaching me against the trade winds from all the urban coffee snobs as they realise cruising the Pacific is more challenging than first thought now that instant coffee may be all that is on offer.
Bosun