Archive for January, 2011

The Pirates are Winning!

Friday, January 14th, 2011

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Well, we didn’t catch the 11.1.11.11 -train. But it appears that we will finally start tomorrow on our final 5,000nm voyage getting back to the Mediterranean, which we last left 11 years ago. The trip will take us from Thailand to the Maldives (1,600nm), then across the Arabian Sea to Oman (1,000-1500nm depending on route), through the Gulf of Aden (GoA), the strait of Bab-el-mandeb into the Red Sea and further to the Suez Canal and Port Said (1,000+nm). The last leg from Egypt to Turkey is only 500nm I guess.

As you know, the real challenge on this route is piracy. Until recently the most dangerous area has been GoA, between Salalah in Oman and Aden in Yemen. We have been focusing on this challenge and mentally prepared us for this roughly 700nm long stretch. Unfortunately, the rules have changed! Since November 2010 the pirates have successfully used at least 5 captured ships as mother-ships enabling them to operate several thousands of miles from Somalia. Some of these hijacked ships have completed multiple patrols since they were captured.

Only about a year ago (November 2009) the eastern boundary of the High Risk Area was considered (www.riskintelligence.eu) to be around 62E. See map below.

Just a few days ago (January 10, 2011) Nato Shipping Centre issued an alert map showing recent positions of pirate attacks as north as 21N and east as 64E. See map below. Eye witnesses describe attacks in small fast skiffs with larger (mother ships) in the vicinity.


Click on map for larger copy

According to the Danger of Piracy guide lines published by The International Sailing Federation ISAF, in co-operation with the MSCHOA (Maritime Security Centre – Horn of Africa) set up by EU NAVFOR (EU naval force) Operation ATALANTA, the risk area stretches all the way to 10S and 78E (which is the southern tip of India)!

I find it impossible to understand why the coalition forces, formed by dozens of battle ships from many countries, cannot stop these mother-ships. They are giant freighters, for crying out loud, impossible to hide and easy to identify. Why don’t the navies just drop a bomb on each of them? Anybody in command of a highjacked ship must be presumed to be guilty of piracy. As a matter of fact, I think the pirates have made a mistake by implementing this new strategy. This should give the counter-piracy forces new opportunities, which, sadly, they do not seem to be taking advantage of.

Ok, if the pirates are using hostages as shields, maybe we cannot shoot the ships to pieces, but it should be a piece of a cake, with modern technology, to either put a shadow on each ship or put a tracker on them by satellite. Knowing the exact position of these bastards should make it easy for the coalition forces to be in the vicinity and prevent attacks.

I borrowed the title of this blog post from a great review by Jeffrey Gettleman in The New York Review of Books.

11.1.11.11 – even better!

Sunday, January 9th, 2011

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An even more promising departure date, don’t you think (see previous post)? Only 11.11.11.11 would be better, but early November is not a good time to start on this passage – the weather would not be suitable.

Our departure from Phuket to the Mediterranean has been delayed several times now. Interesting how these last minute problems (and misfortunes in general) happen in clusters.

We’ve had both medical and mechanical incidents.

First I got this inter vertebral disk injury; a terrific pain in the small of my back combined with severe electric-shock-like pain running down my leg, which lasted for maybe 10 days although I ate 2000mg of ibuprofen a day. Then I fell over on a slippery concrete dock (with a big bag of groceries in each hand) and hurt my elbow. A week later thick, yellow, sticky fluid started to drip from the wound. Some kind of cell fluid I guess, didn’t look like abscess. I decided to start an antibiotic cure to be on the safe side anyway. Next, I flew out of the dinghy in the surf at a beach and landed on my back on the hard sand (not the same side of the back as the previous back injury). Moving around is very painful, but I hope it’s only an impact on a muscle. Luckily the dingy and outboard didn’t submerge, as they did last year in the same spot.

A severe touch of lip herpes didn’t help making my mood much better.

One of our mechanical problems worth mentioning is the break down of the engine control. Again a prime example what corrosion between two dissimilar metals (aluminium and stainless as usual) can cause. What always amazes me, however, is how skillful machinists you can find almost everywhere. Pretty much anything can be fabricated in a machine shop with basic tools.

Look at the photos. To the left is the original lever (or what is left of it) of my Morse-control. To the right is the new piece a Chinese machinist made me in a couple of hours for €35! The photos below show a close-up of the stainless set-screw which broke the cast aluminium handle, and our temporary control-arrangement.
Click here for larger view of left photo.
Click here for larger view of right photo.

Back to the heading of this post: Our latest take-off date is now 11th of January 2011 at 11:00, the day after tomorrow.

Insha’Allah.

1.1.11.11

Saturday, January 1st, 2011

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No, the header is not data code, and Happy New Year to all.

As you may know cruisers tend to be superstitious. For instance, you never start on a voyage on a Friday. We have recently had some bad luck, so we thought it would be wise to choose a good departure date on our journey across the Bay of Bengal, The Arabian Sea, The Gulf of Yemen and the Red Sea, much of the route known today as Pirate Alley. We decided on 1.1.11.11, which of course is the code for 1st of January 2011 at 11am.

Unfortunately Murphy appears to be persistently aboard Scorpio lately. On New Years Eve our bilge pump broke down and as if that wasn’t enough, our primary navigation/communication computer started to have trouble with respect to conflicts between the com-ports of our chart program (running C-map) and our communication program (Airmail controlling SSB-radio via SCS Pactor 3 modem).

Therefore we didn’t succed with the 1.1.11.11, instead I spent 5 hours in the bilge this day installing a new bilge pump, that I had bought as a spare unit “just in case” (excellent planning, if I may say so myself). Problem was, that I had not been able to get an identical pump, here in Thailand, to the old one. This one had 3/4″ (19mm) hose connection ports instead of the 1″ (25″) ports on the old one, and all hoses around the bilge are 1″. For the best part of our nearly 20 years of sailing I have been carrying around an enormous amount of pieces of various hoses “just in case”, but during our recent refit I decided to free up some space and threw them all away. Bad planning!

Fortunately I had some step-up/step down hose connectors on board, but I desperately needed half a metre of 3/4″ hose to be able to connect the pump to the thinner side (3/4″) of the connectors. Just a few weeks ago I had replaced the hoses to our showers’ sump-tank pumps, which actually are 3/4″ in diameter. I decided to cannibalise on one of these (we have both manual and electric pumps in all locations anyway), but in the end I didn’t have to sacrifice the sump-tank pump. It turned out that I had used about half a metre too much hose on it and was therefore able to cut of just the piece I needed without compromising the sump-tank pump.


This is sailing

What about the computer problems? Well, I hope to get them sorted out on the way. Charts and communications are pretty important on the route we are taking during the next 3-4 months. There’s no help to be found on that track.

Anyway, we’ll try to set sail towards the Maldives again tomorrow, even though there’s little magic in the date. But it’s better than waiting until 2.2.22.22.