We had a dream crossing! We expected it to take 16 days (with a max of 20), but it took 13.5 days. The weather was great and our new spinnaker (which we used for the first time) was fantastic!
Let’s go back a bit, though.
We knew we needed to arrive in Cape Verde (from the Canary Islands) on or before November 29th. Two of our friends (one was our former sailing instructor) were meeting us at the marina in Mindelo, Cape Verde on the 29th. We arrived on the 26th.
We spent the days prior to the 29th prepping for the crossing so we didn’t have time for any fun. đ We cleaned Seahike inside and out, updated our insurance, hired a weather router, did some provisioning (we’d already bought quite a bit of food and beverages but needed more), swapped an empty butane tank for a full one, re-inventoried all of our boat supplies, inventoried our food and beverages (after buying more), changed the engine oil and gear oil, and had some work done on Seahike:
- New main halyard
- New spinnaker halyard
- New genoa furling line (we’d already gotten a new one but it turned out to be too thin – we needed a larger diameter)
- New AIS (ours was still working, but not good enough)
- Cleaned her bottom
We’d had our life raft inspected in the Canary Islands. It has now been certified for three years.
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