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The
Storm With Fiona's
Name On It |
December 2004
We had arrived in Falmouth, at the western end of England's Cornish peninsular, in mid-October, 2004, after a summer of cruising in Ireland, Scotland and the Baltic. The trip down the English Channel had been a beat against moderate southwesterly winds. But the winds had been strong enough to convince my youngest crew member, newly signed on in London, that ocean cruising was not for him and within hours of our arrival he booked a flight home. That left two of us, myself and Andrew, a lanky Aussie who had crewed previously, to continue to Portugal, Brazil and points south for the northern winter. We did try to recruit a local sailor for the leg to Portugal without success. Day after day the forecast for the approaches to the Channel was for strong to gale force southwest winds; very frustrating as we were eager to get south before the autumn gales set in permanently. After a week, it looked liked a window; northerly winds for a couple of days, the downside was an intense low in the Bay of Biscay which was tracking north. Ever the optimist, I thought if we headed into the Atlantic we might get to the west of low and pick up a tail wind for the leg south.
The Impending Storm
We left in pleasant weather on a Monday with a northwest wind
and set the sail to clear Lizard Point. Bent on the boom for the
first time was a brand new storm mainsail and a Genoa jib was
grooved in the roller furling gear on the headstay. By Monday
evening the wind had backed and we were only making good southwest.
Later we started the engine to motor-sail with a very light wind,
the tidal current was pushing us towards Ouessant, an area to
avoid, particularly with a storm coming. Once clear of the northwest
tip of France the plan was to lay a course across the Bay of Biscay
to Cape Finisterre and then sail down the coast of Portugal to
Lisbon. The wind came back on Tuesday morning from the sou'sou'west
and we had a great day under full sail, but the omens were not
good; obviously we were well east of the low center. The forecast
on the Navtex from the English station at Niton was gloomy, force
10 in meteorological area Plymouth, our location on Tuesday evening.
As the sun was setting we reefed the main and discovered a problem
with the new sail, supposedly copied exactly from my old faithful
storm mainsail that had seen Fiona three times round Cape Horn.
The aft reefing cringles had been installed a couple of feet too
high and the boom was canted up at such an angle that it was impossible
to reach it except near the mast. The wind had reached 30 kts
by midnight and the pressure had started an alarming slide down,
the central pressure of the low was reported to be 955 mb. On
our barograph the pen fell below 965 mb, the lower limit of the
instrument, and then stuck on the edge of the paper chart, something
I had never seen before.
Hove-to, Force 10
At sunrise on Wednesday morning the wind had backed to southeast
with a sustained speed over 40 kts and gusts to 55 kt. . We debated
tying the second reef in the main but decided with the boom so
high it would be difficult, if not downright dangerous, and we
forereached under the single reef with the jib fully furled and
the wheel lashed up. For the next day and a half we rode out the
storm, holding our general position with a boat speed of 1 to
2 kts but losing ground due to leeway. It was a rough ride. The
faxes we received from the Offenbach station in Germany were ominous;
the low was expected to stall on the southwest coast of Ireland
and then possibly drift southeast. If this turn of events turned
out to be true the storm was drawing a bead straight for us. Early
Thursday I switched the Navtex to the French station on the west
coast of Brittany at Corsen, their forecast confirmed that the
low would move south, right for the boat, which seemed unbelievable
if not downright unfair. Lows always moved to the northeast in
that part of the world, right? When it was light we set the spitfire
jib on the forestay; a very tough sail of only 40 square feet.
This was an attempt to get the boat moving again and sail as far
west as possible to keep the approaching low center to the east,
but in this we were frustrated as the wind veered to the west
so instead we tracked slowly south. It was a little encouraging
to learn from the Navtex that the low was filling; central pressure
had risen to 963 mb, at position 50ºN, 11ºW by early
Thursday. The seas had built up by this time and Fiona was pounded
by heavy waves that produced jarring crashes if they happened
to be breaking when we slammed into them. Water forced its way
through every crack, particularly the main hatch slides. The dampness
below was not helped by the water that streamed off our foul weather
gear every time we dropped through the hatch into the main cabin.
On Tuesday night I had locked the vane of the self-steerer but
foolishly not removed it from the clamp, finally the incessant
wind vibrated the vane so much that the locking pin sheared off.
Storms that Pass in the Night
Conditions began to improve a little just before sunrise on Friday,
the wind dropped below 30 kts and veered. This gave us a chance
to sail near the rhumbline for Cape Finisterre and put as much
distance as possible between the boat and the storm center, now
heading southeast. At lunchtime we unfurled a sliver of the jib
and led the sheets inside the shrouds so that we could sail close-hauled.
The little spitfire was still pulling gamely. The wind remained
about 30 kts, with pouring rain, for a while the pressure dropped
a few millibars then it slowly climbed. The boat was sailing well
at about 5 kts and making good a course over the bottom that was
only 15 to 20 degrees shy of the rhumbline. I began to feel that
that the worse was over. Just as we were eating supper about 1930
hr a squall of over 40 kts hit the boat, but we were a little
tardy getting on deck as there was nowhere to safely put down
our plates in the violent motion we were experiencing. When we
did climb through the hatch we saw the jib had torn above the
clew from the leach horizontally for several feet. We furled the
sail and in order to give some drive forward of the mast I decided
to hand the spitfire and set the staysail. I had been hesitant
to set the staysail before because short-handed in high winds
the staysail boom can be a lethal club as the sail is being hoisted.
We cast off the gaskets, hanked on the halyard and began to haul
up the sail. After a few feet it jammed and would not go up or
down. To keep the staysail boom under control during this phase
we had rigged a vang with a four-part tackle, so at least the
boom was not crashing about with the sail half up. In the fitful
glow from the spreader lights and our flashlights we discovered
the halyard had fouled the port spreader and seemed firmly stuck
in the notch holding the shroud. Fortunately by standing on the
forward end of the staysail boom Andrew was just able to reach
the halyard snap shackle, no mean feat on the pitching bow in
the dark. He attached a short line to the halyard and then unshackled
it. By leading the halyard aft I was able to free it with a few
vigorous shakes and we then hoisted the staysail, taking care
to keep the halyard taut. A glance at the diagram showing the
track of the storm and Fiona's position makes it clear the storm
center must have passed us that night heading sou'sou'east and
a few miles to the west, although we did not realize this at the
time.
Free at Last
As the storm headed to the east our wind veered to the nor'nor
'west and we were able to make good the rhumbline course of 220º
magnetic and even ease the sheets. It was still blowing 35 to
40 kts as dawn on Saturday revealed a dramatic seascape of long
foaming waves with spindrift and low, grey clouds scudding across
the sky. Fiona galloped for Cape Finisterre like a racehorse,
but the weather was still atrocious, despite the freeing of the
wind. The Meteo-France forecast predicted winds to force 9 with
very rough seas, conditions we experienced in spades. After lunch-time
on Saturday severe squalls forced us to disconnect the Aries self-steerer
and hand steer in 30 minute shifts. With only one reef the Aries
was overpowered by the weather helm. Stinging spray swept across
the cockpit. More disturbing was the sight of the furled jib.
The Dacron above the tear had not fully rolled up when we furled
the sail and now the strong wind worried and tugged at the piece
of cloth so that slowly the tear lengthened and the upper part
of the sail began to unwrap. As I contemplated this gloomy scene
a sleek jet roared out of the overcast at little more than masthead
height. It was a French maritime reconnaissance aircraft. I shouted
below to Andrew to give them a call on VHF, he assured them in
his broad Aussie twang that we were OK and just to make sure they
made two more passes. I wonder if they understood his accent?
As they finally winged away I imagined the nice, dry cafeteria
waiting for them with a cup of coffee somewhere in France when
they touched down Then I wrenched myself back to the reality of
a wet, storm-tossed boat with 150 miles to the Cape still to go.
Perhaps those pilots in their hermetically sealed cocoon envied
us, perhaps not. The storm careened on into central Spain with
the low slowly filling to 1005 millibars. As it moved away the
wind decreased to 25 kts and we had a great sail to Cape Finisterre
We jibed over about noon on Sunday for the run down the Iberian
coast and shook out the reef in the mainsail when the wind fell
to 15 kts.
The Storm's Parting Shot
Although the wind and sea conditions were quite manageable, the
storm continued in an insidious way to inflict damage; the upper
part of the jib continued to unwind and disintegrate into tatters.
I made the unwise decision to get the jib off the headstay and
set the Yankee. But when we unrolled just a few turns on Sunday
afternoon the tear simply extended and left an even bigger area
flapping in the breeze. We rolled it up again but the damage was
done and the jib slowly flogged itself to pieces. We tried to
restrain the flapping remnants by wrapping a line around using
the spare halyard to raise it, but that did not work. Apart from
the damage to the jib, which was deemed irreparable when we finally
got it down in Lisbon, the boat suffered little long-lasting effects
from its maiden voyage across the Bay of Biscay. But the storm's
evil eye, that spotted Fiona as it headed north and then came
back to chase us certainly added to the Bay's reputation as a
heavy weather proving ground.
.
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Crew member Andrew, who is 6 ft 4 ins, stands beneath the reefed storm mainsail. The boom is canted due to an incorrectly located reef cringle. |
![]() The barograph chart, Tuesday to Wednesday. When the instrument reached its lower limit of 965 millibar the pen jammed. |
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A fax received from the German station at Hamburg showing the situation at noon on Wednesday. |
![]() Diagram of the storm track, Wednesday to Saturday. |
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The jib hangs in tatters off the headstay, shredded by the wind. |